Bipartisan eulogies for Australian ex-general Jim Molan

Written by on January 20, 2023

This week has seen nauseating eulogies, throughout Australia’s political and media establishment, on the death of Liberal Party senator, ex-army general and ardent militarist Jim Molan. He died on Monday, aged 72, of prostate cancer.

Liberal Party Senator and ex-army general Jim Molan [Photo: Defence Department: Corporal Jason Weeding]

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described Molan as “a man of principle and a politician of conviction” who “lived his life in service of our country.” Defence Minister Richard Marles declared Molan had been “a fierce advocate for our nation” with whom he held discussions on their “shared interest in national security.”

Liberal-National Opposition leader Peter Dutton hailed Molan as “a patriot, a decent, honourable man.” His Liberal Party deputy leader Sussan Ley said the parliament had “lost an intellectual giant.”

The Australian’s foreign editor, Greg Sheridan, labelled Molan a “hero” and “army general turned politician.” In an editorial, the Murdoch newspaper praised him as “a disciplined leader and a strategic global thinker.”

Molan was one of the country’s most prominent war hawks. He is notorious for his direct command role in the US devastation of Iraq, particularly the massacres and levelling of the city of Fallujah in 2004—which has been buried in all the media tributes.

In ruling circles, Molan was highly valued for his long record of ruthless service to their imperialist interests, and his strident advocacy of the need to take a similar approach to military, ideological and political preparations for a frontline role in a potentially catastrophic US war against China.

He was also a key figure, among others, in the increasing militarisation of Australia’s political elite—one of a number of ex-military commanders elevated into parliament or high office over the past decade.

His service to Australian imperialism included being appointed as Australia’s military attaché in Indonesia amid the 1998-99 economic crisis that ended the three-decade US-backed military dictatorship of General Suharto. Molan formed a close relationship with the brutal Kopassus (special forces) general Prabowo Subianto, Suharto’s son-in-law, who is today Indonesia’s defence minister.

Molan was then dispatched to Indonesian-ruled East Timor, where he urged military intervention in 1999 to back Timorese secession in order to protect Australian imperialist interests in the strategic and resource-rich half island. As a military officer, Molan clearly had political connections at the highest level. According to Sheridan’s glowing tribute, “Jim advised then prime minister John Howard over the phone that Australia should send in peacekeepers [to East Timor].”

In 2004, Molan was deployed to enforce the barbaric US occupation of Iraq, where he was installed as deputy chief of operations of coalition forces. That gave him direct command over the savage suppression of Iraqis who rose up against the occupation in cities such as Fallujah, Ramadi, Tal Afar, Karbala, Najaf and Basra, as well as in the working-class suburbs of Baghdad.

Under Molan’s direction, the month-long siege of Fallujah became one of the most symbolic crimes of the ferocious US occupation. Until the 2003 invasion, Fallujah, home to the 300,000 people on the Euphrates River, was one of humanity’s oldest continuous urban settlements, and known as the “city of mosques.” By the end of 2004, unknown thousands of people had been killed or had fled. The city was left a depopulated rubble. Of its 200 mosques, 60 were destroyed or damaged, along with some 39,000 homes and other buildings.

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