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ANZUS

The Australia, New Zealand, United States Security Treaty (ANZUS or ANZUS Treaty) is a 1951 non-binding collective security agreement initially formed as a trilateral agreement between Australia, New Zealand, and the United States;[1] and from 1986 an agreement between New Zealand and Australia, and separately, Australia and the United States, to co-operate on military matters in the Pacific Ocean region, although today the treaty is taken to relate to conflicts worldwide. It provides that an armed attack on any of the three parties would be dangerous to the others, and that each should act to meet the common threat. It set up a committee of foreign ministers that can meet for consultation.

Australia, New Zealand, United States Security Treaty
ANZUS member states
AbbreviationANZUS
Formation1 September 1951; 72 years ago (1951-09-01)
TypeMilitary alliance
PurposeCollective security
Region
Pacific Rim
Methods
Membership

The treaty was one of the series that the United States formed in the 1949–1955 era as part of its collective response to the threat of communism during the Cold War.[2] New Zealand was suspended from ANZUS in 1986 as it initiated a nuclear-free zone in its territorial waters. In late 2012, the United States lifted a 26-year-old ban on visits by New Zealand warships to US Department of Defense and US Coast Guard bases around the world. New Zealand maintains a nuclear-free zone as part of its foreign policy and is partially suspended from ANZUS, as the United States maintains an ambiguous policy whether or not the warships carry nuclear weapons and operates numerous nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and submarines; however New Zealand resumed key areas of the ANZUS treaty in 2007.[3][4]

ANZUS was overshadowed in late 2021 by AUKUS, a trilateral security partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. It involves cooperation in nuclear powered submarines that New Zealand did not support. Australia and New Zealand "are poles apart in terms of the way they see the world. ... I think this alliance underlines that they're going in very different directions,” said Geoffrey Miller, an international analyst at the Democracy Project in New Zealand.[5]

Treaty structure edit

The treaty was previously a full three-way defence pact, but was disrupted following a dispute between New Zealand and the United States in 1984 over visiting rights for ships and submarines capable of carrying nuclear arms[6] or nuclear-powered ships of the US Navy to New Zealand ports. The treaty became between Australia and New Zealand, and between Australia and the United States. While the treaty has lapsed between the United States and New Zealand, it remains separately in force between both of those states and Australia.[7] In 2000, the United States opened its ports to the Royal New Zealand Navy once again, and under the presidency of Bill Clinton in the US and the government of Helen Clark in New Zealand, the countries have since reestablished bilateral cooperation on defence and security.[8]

While ANZUS is commonly recognised to have split in 1984, the Australia–US alliance remains in full force. Heads of defence of one or both states often have joined the annual ministerial meetings, which are supplemented by consultations between the US Combatant Commander Pacific and the Australian Chief of Defence Force. There are also regular civilian and military consultations between the two governments at lower levels.

Annual meetings to discuss ANZUS defence matters take place between the United States Secretaries of Defense and State and the Australian Ministers of Defence and Foreign Affairs are known by the acronym AUSMIN. The AUSMIN meeting for 2011 took place in San Francisco in September. The 2012 AUSMIN meeting was in Perth, Western Australia in November.[9] AUSMIN continues to meet annually, most recently in 2023.[10]

Unlike the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), ANZUS has no integrated defence structure or dedicated forces. Nevertheless, Australia and the United States conduct a variety of joint activities. These include military exercises ranging from naval and landing exercises at the task-group level to battalion-level special forces training, assigning officers to each other's armed services, and standardising equipment and operational doctrine. The two countries also operate several joint-defence facilities in Australia, mainly ground stations for spy satellite, and signals intelligence espionage in Southeast and East Asia as part of the ECHELON network.

During the 2010s, New Zealand and the US resumed a close relationship, although it is unclear whether the revived partnership falls under the aegis of the 1951 trilateral treaty. The Wellington Declaration of 2010 defined a "strategic partnership" between New Zealand and the US, and New Zealand joined the biennial Rim of the Pacific military exercise off Hawaii in 2012, for the first time since 1984. The US prohibition on New Zealand ships making port at US bases was lifted after the 2012 exercise.[8]

History edit

 
Australian, New Zealand, and United States aircraft during a military exercise in 1982

Origins edit

In the years following the Second World War, Australia and New Zealand began pressing the United States for a formal security guarantee. The two governments felt threatened by the possibility of a resurgent Japan and the spread of communism to their North.[11][12] Additionally, the fall of Singapore in 1942 had demonstrated that their traditional protector, the United Kingdom, no longer had power in the region. This added to their sense of vulnerability. The United States was initially reluctant, offering instead an informal guarantee of protection. But the need to strengthen the West against communism grew with the communist victory in the Chinese Civil War in 1949 and the 1950-1953 Korean War. Additionally, the United States wanted to gain Australian and New Zealand approval for a 'soft peace' with Japan. The treaty allayed antipodean fears that such a peace would allow Japan to threaten them again.[13][14]

The resulting treaty was concluded at San Francisco on 1 September 1951, and entered into force on 29 April 1952. The treaty bound the signatories to recognise that an armed attack in the Pacific area on any of them would endanger the peace and safety of the others. It stated 'The Parties will consult together whenever in the opinion of any of them the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened in the Pacific'. The three governments also pledged to maintain and develop individual and collective capabilities to resist attack.[15]

Korea, Malaysia, Borneo, Vietnam, and the War on Terror edit

 
U.S General Westmoreland talks to the commander of the New Zealand artillery battery alongside Australian senior officers in Vietnam, in 1967.

The treaty itself was not a source of debate for over 30 years, with New Zealand participating as part of the British Commonwealth Forces in the Korean War and the Malayan Emergency, followed by the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation, and directly as part of ANZUS in the Vietnam War. The Vietnam War was the first conflict New Zealand entered that did not involve the British or any other Commonwealth countries outside of Australia. As an ANZUS member New Zealand contributed military and non military assistance to the United States war effort in Vietnam from 1963 until 1975. New Zealand and Australian combat forces were withdrawn in 1972 and New Zealand non-military medical aid continued until 1975.[16]

In response to the War in Afghanistan, New Zealand sent transport aircraft, maritime patrol aircraft, and frigates to the Persian Gulf, as well as a very small number of soldiers, SAS soldiers, medical and assorted and peace-keeping forces, to Afghanistan in 2001. Despite Prime Minister Helen Clark being openly critical of American justifications for the 2003 Iraq war, New Zealand did send engineer troops to Iraq following the 2003 invasion.[17] These troops were however officially engaged in reconstruction under UN Security Council Resolution 1483 and were non-combatant.

Australian reservations about the MX missile edit

In 1983, the Reagan Administration approached Australia with proposals for testing the new generation of American intercontinental ballistic missiles, the MX missile. American test ranges in the Pacific were insufficient for testing the new long-range missiles and the United States military wished to use the Tasman Sea as a target area. Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser of the Liberal Party had agreed to provide monitoring sites near Sydney for this purpose.[18] However, in 1985, the newly elected Prime Minister Bob Hawke, of the Labor Party, withdrew Australia from the testing programme, sparking criticism from the Reagan Administration. Hawke had been pressured into doing so by the left-wing faction of the Labor Party, which opposed the proposed MX missile test in the Tasman Sea. The Labor left-wing faction also strongly sympathized with the New Zealand Fourth Labour Government's anti-nuclear policy and supported a South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone.[19][20][21]

To preserve its joint Australian-US military communications facilities, the Reagan Administration also had to assure the Hawke Government that those installations would not be used in the Strategic Defense Initiative project, which the Australian Labor Party strongly opposed. Despite these disagreements, the Hawke Labor Government still remained supportive of the ANZUS security treaty. It also did not support its New Zealand counterpart's ban on nuclear-armed and nuclear-powered ships. Following the ANZUS Split in February 1985, the Australian government also endorsed the Reagan Administration's plans to cancel trilateral military exercises and to postpone the ANZUS foreign ministers conference. However, it still continued to maintain bilateral military ties and continued to share intelligence information with New Zealand.[21] Unlike New Zealand, Australia continued to allow US warships to visit its ports and to participate in joint military exercises with the United States.[22][23]

New Zealand bans nuclear material edit

In 1985, the nature of the ANZUS alliance changed significantly. Due to a current of anti-nuclear sentiment within New Zealand, tension had long been present between ANZUS members as the United States is a declared nuclear power. France, a naval power and a declared nuclear power, had been conducting nuclear tests on South Pacific Islands. Following the victory of the New Zealand Labour Party in election in 1984, Prime Minister David Lange barred nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed ships from using New Zealand ports or entering New Zealand waters. Reasons given were the dangers of nuclear weapons, continued French nuclear testing in the South Pacific, and opposition to US President Ronald Reagan's policy of aggressively confronting the Soviet Union.[24]

Given that the United States Navy had a policy of deliberate ambiguity during the Cold War and refused to confirm or deny the presence of nuclear weapons aboard its warships and support ships,[25] these laws essentially refused access to New Zealand ports for all United States Navy vessels. In February 1985, a port-visit request by the United States for the guided-missile destroyer USS Buchanan was refused by New Zealand, as the Buchanan was capable of launching RUR-5 ASROC nuclear depth bombs. As this occurred after the government unofficially invited the United States to send a ship, the refusal of access was interpreted by the United States as a deliberate slight.

According to opinion polls taken before the 1984 election, only 30 per cent of New Zealanders supported visits by US warships with a clear majority of 58 per cent opposed, and over 66 per cent of the population lived in locally declared nuclear-free zones.[26] An opinion poll commissioned by the 1986 Defence Committee of Enquiry confirmed that 92 per cent now opposed nuclear weapons in New Zealand and 69 per cent opposed warship visits; 92 per cent wanted New Zealand to promote nuclear disarmament through the UN, while 88 per cent supported the promotion of nuclear-free zones.[27]

United States suspends obligations to New Zealand edit

After consultations with Australia and after negotiations with New Zealand broke down, the United States announced that it was suspending its treaty obligations to New Zealand until United States Navy ships were re-admitted to New Zealand ports, citing that New Zealand was "a friend, but not an ally".[28] The crisis made front-page headlines for weeks in many American newspapers.[29] David Lange did not withdraw New Zealand from ANZUS, although his government's policy led to the US's decision to suspend its treaty obligations to New Zealand.

An opinion poll in New Zealand in 1991,[30] showed 54% of those sampled preferred to let the treaty lapse rather than accept visits again by nuclear-armed or nuclear-powered vessels. The policy did not become law until 8 June 1987 with the passing of the New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987, more than two years after the Buchanan was refused entry after the US refused to declare the presence or absence of nuclear weapons, and a year after the US suspended its treaty obligations to New Zealand. This law effectively made the entire country a nuclear-free zone.[31] Despite the ANZUS split, US Secretary of State George P. Shultz maintained that the ANZUS structure was still in place, should NZ decide in the future to reverse its anti-nuclear policy and return to a fully operational defence relationship with the US. President Reagan also maintained in NSDD 193 (National Security Decision Directive) that New Zealand still remained a "friend, but not an ally".[32]

On 10 July 1985, agents of the French Directorate-General for External Security bombed the Greenpeace protest vessel Rainbow Warrior in Auckland, causing one death. The lack of condemnation by Western leaders to this violation of a friendly state's sovereignty caused a great deal of change in New Zealand's foreign and defence policy,[33] and strengthened domestic opposition to the military application of nuclear technology in any form. New Zealand distanced itself from its traditional ally, the United States, and built relationships with small South Pacific countries, while retaining its good relations with Australia, and, to a lesser extent, the United Kingdom.[34]

The suspension of New Zealand in ANZUS has had significant effect on New Zealand–United States relations and on New Zealand domestic policy. The anti-nuclear policy has been a part of New Zealand political culture for years now. However, that has not stopped United States politicians from trying to change the policy. [citation needed]

Afghanistan edit

 
Australian Prime Minister John Howard and US President George W. Bush on 10 September 2001. Howard was in Washington during the 11 September attacks.

Australia and New Zealand both provided military units, including special forces and naval ships, in support of the US-led "Operation Enduring Freedom" for support for anti-Taliban forces in response to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks. Providing 1,550 troops, Australia remains the largest non-NATO contributor of military personnel in Afghanistan. New Zealand committed 191 troops.[35]

East Timor edit

Between 1999 and 2003, the armed forces of Australia and New Zealand deployed together in a large scale operation in East Timor, to prevent pro-Indonesian militia from overturning a vote for independence on the region. The United States provided only limited logistical support but the USS Mobile Bay provided air defence for the initial entry operation. The operation was taken over by the United Nations.

Taiwan edit

One topic that became prominent in the 2000s was the implications in the case of a hypothetical attack by the People's Republic of China against Taiwan, who would likely receive American support. While Australia has strong cultural and economic ties with the United States, it also has an increasingly important trade relationship with mainland China.

In August 2004, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer implied in Beijing that the treaty would likely not apply to that situation, but he was quickly corrected by Prime Minister John Howard. In March 2005, after an official of the People's Republic of China stated that it may be necessary for Australia to reassess the treaty and after China passed an Anti-Secession Law regarding Taiwan, Downer stated that in case of Chinese aggression on Taiwan, the treaty would come into force, but that the treaty would require only consultations with the United States and not necessarily commit Australia to war.[citation needed]

1985 to present edit

Annual bilateral meetings between the US Secretary of State and the Australian Foreign Minister replaced annual meetings of the ANZUS Council of Foreign Ministers. The first bilateral meeting was held in Canberra in 1985. At the second meeting, in San Francisco in 1986, the United States announced that it was suspending its treaty security obligations to New Zealand pending the restoration of port access. Subsequent bilateral Australia–US Ministerial (AUSMIN) meetings have alternated between Australia and the United States.

The alliance engenders some political controversy in Australia. Particularly after Australian involvement in the 2003 Iraq war, some quarters of Australian society have called for a re-evaluation of the relationship between the two nations. Nonetheless, the alliance enjoyed broad support during the Cold War[36] and continues to enjoy broad support in Australia.[37] One commentator in Australia has argued that the treaty should be re-negotiated in the context of terrorism, the modern role of the United Nations and as a purely US–Australian alliance.[38]

Australia is also a contributor to the National Missile Defense system.[39][40]

In May 2006, US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia, Pacific Affairs and Northern Atlantinc Ocean Christopher Hill, described the New Zealand anti-nuclear issue as "a bit of a relic", and signalled that the US wanted a closer defence relationship with New Zealand. He also praised New Zealand's involvement in Afghanistan and reconstruction in Iraq. "Rather than trying to change each other's minds on the nuclear issue, which is a bit of a relic, I think we should focus on things we can make work" he told an Australian newspaper.[41]

While there have been signs of the nuclear dispute between the US and NZ thawing out, pressure from the United States increased in 2006 with US trade officials linking the repeal of the ban of American nuclear ships from New Zealand's ports to a potential free trade agreement between the two countries.[42]

On 4 February 2008, US Trade Representative Susan Schwab announced that the United States will join negotiations with four Asia–Pacific countries: Brunei, Chile, New Zealand and Singapore to be known as the "P-4". These countries already have a FTA called the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership and the United States will be looking to become involved in the "vitally important emerging Asia-Pacific region". A number of US-based organisations support the negotiations including, but not limited to: the United States Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers, National Foreign Trade Council, Emergency Committee for American Trade and Coalition of Service Industries.[43][44]

In 2010, the United States and New Zealand signed the Wellington Declaration in Wellington, New Zealand, during a three-day visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The signing of the declaration ended the ANZUS dispute of the past 25 years, and it was later revealed the US and New Zealand had resumed military co-operation in eight areas in 2007.[45]

On 16 November 2011, US President Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard met in Canberra, Australia to announce plans for a sustained new American presence on Australian soil. 2,500 American troops are to be deployed to Darwin, Australia.

New Zealand and the United States signed the Washington Declaration on 19 June 2012 "to promote and strengthen closer bilateral defense and security cooperation".[46] On 20 September 2012, while on a visit to New Zealand, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta announced that the United States was lifting the 26-year-old ban on visits by New Zealand warships to US Department of Defense and US Coast Guard bases around the world;[47] US Marines had trained in New Zealand and New Zealand's navy took part in the RIMPAC maritime exercises alongside the US earlier that year.[48]

The Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) invited the United States Navy to send a vessel to participate in the RNZN's 75th Birthday Celebrations in Auckland over the weekend of 19–21 November 2016. The guided-missile destroyer USS Sampson became the first US warship to visit New Zealand in 33 years. New Zealand Prime Minister John Key granted approval for the ship's visit under the New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987, which requires that the Prime Minister has to be satisfied that any visiting ship is not nuclear armed or powered.[49] Following the 7.8 magnitude Kaikōura earthquake on 14 November 2016 the Sampson and other naval ships from Australia, Canada, Japan and Singapore were diverted to proceed directly to Kaikōura to provide humanitarian assistance.[50]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 'ANZUS treaty comes into force', URL: https://nzhistory.govt.nz/anzus-comes-into-force, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 5-Oct-2021
  2. ^ Joseph Gabriel Starke, The ANZUS Treaty Alliance (Melbourne University Press, 1965)
  3. ^ Alexander, David (21 September 2012). "U.S. lifts ban on New Zealand warships, New Zealand keeps nuclear-free stance". Chicago Tribune.
  4. ^ Kristensen, Hans (23 September 2012). "In Warming US-NZ Relations, Outdated Nuclear Policy Remains Unnecessary Irritant". Federation of American Scientists.
  5. ^ McClure, Tess (16 September 2021). "Aukus submarines banned from New Zealand as pact exposes divide with western allies". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 27 March 2023. Aukus submarines banned from New Zealand as pact exposes divide with western allies: Experts say Aukus military deal underlines Australia's increasingly close alignment with the US on China – and New Zealand's relative distance.
  6. ^ The test for ship access was decided as nuclear capability not actual proof of nuclear armament by a NZLP 1984 committee of President Margaret Wilson, Chair of the Defence and Foreign Affairs Committee and MP and former President Jim Anderton and MP Fran Wilde ,
  7. ^ King M: 2003, The Penguin History of New Zealand, Penguin Books (NZ) Ltd, Auckland 1310, New Zealand. p426 and pp. 495–6
  8. ^ a b "New Zealand: U.S. Security Cooperation and the U.S. Rebalancing to Asia Strategy, government report, 8 March 2013, Congressional Research Service" (PDF). FAS.org. 8 March 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  9. ^ "AUSMIN 2011, media release, 14 September 2011, Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs". Foreignminister.gov.au. 14 September 2011. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  10. ^ "Fact Sheet: 2023 Australia – U.S. Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN)". U.S. Department of Defense. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  11. ^ "Milestones: 1945–1952 - Office of the Historian". history.state.gov. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  12. ^ Cohen, Michael (2022). "Different fears, same alliance: Multilateralism, assurance and the origins of the 1951 United States–New Zealand–Australia alliance". Journal of Peace Research. 60 (2): 322–336. doi:10.1177/00223433221077302. ISSN 0022-3433. S2CID 250472154.
  13. ^ David McLean, "Anzus Origins: A Reassessment," Australian Historical Studies 24#94 (1990), pp. 64-82.
  14. ^ "ANZUS treaty comes into force | NZHistory, New Zealand history online". nzhistory.govt.nz. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  15. ^ William David McIntyre, Background to the Anzus Pact: Policy-Making, Strategy and Diplomacy, 1945-55 (1994)
  16. ^ 'Surgical and medical support', URL: https://vietnamwar.govt.nz/nz-vietnam-war/surgical-and-medical-support (VietnamWar.govt.nz) Accessed 22 December 2022
  17. ^ "NZ PM backs Blair's Iraq conduct". BBC News. 11 July 2003. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  18. ^ Samantha Maiden (1 January 2012). "US planned to fire missile at Australia, secret Cabinet papers from the 1980s reveal". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  19. ^ "US rocket plan became Hawke's first setback". Sydney Morning Herald. 1 January 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  20. ^ . The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Library. 6 March 2013. Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  21. ^ a b Carpenter, Ted (1986). . Cato Institute Policy Analysis (67). Cato Institute: 4–5. Archived from the original on 13 May 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  22. ^ "US Ships to Visit Sydney", The Southland Times, 22 February 1985, p.1
  23. ^ "US Ships to Visit Australian Ports", The New Zealand Herald, 22 February 1985, p.1
  24. ^ Amy L. Catalinac, "Why New Zealand took itself out of ANZUS: observing "opposition for autonomy" in asymmetric alliances." Foreign Policy Analysis 6.4 (2010): 317-338.
  25. ^ "The Operations Coordinating Board (part of President Eisenhower's National Security Council) established the US policy in 1958 of neither confirming nor denying (NCND) the presence or absence of nuclear weapons at any general or specific location, including aboard any US military station, ship, vehicle, or aircraft."Morgan, J.G. Jr. (3 February 2006). "Release of Information on Nuclear Weapons and on Nuclear Capabilities of U.S. Forces (OPNAVINST 5721.1F N5GP)" (PDF). Washington, DC: Department of the Navy – Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  26. ^ Disarmament and Security Centre: Publications – Papers 14 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Disarmament and Security Centre: Publications – Papers 13 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Lange, David (1990). Nuclear Free: The New Zealand Way: Books: David Lange, Michael Gifkins. Penguin Books. ISBN 0140145192.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 February 2011. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  30. ^ . Green Left. 12 June 1991. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  31. ^ "Nuclear-free legislation – nuclear-free New Zealand". Ministry for Culture and Heritage. 30 August 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  32. ^ 'U.S. Policy on the New Zealand Port Access Issue', National Security Decision Directive 193, 21 October 1985, Federation of American Scientists Intelligence Program, accessed 22 October 2012, https://fas.org/irp/offdocs/nsdd/nsdd-193.htm
  33. ^ Keith Sinclair, A History of New Zealand Penguin Books, New Zealand, 1991
  34. ^ Nuclear Free: The New Zealand Way, The Right Honourable David Lange, Penguin Books, New Zealand,1990
  35. ^ corporateName=Commonwealth Parliament; address=Parliament House, Canberra. "Australian Defence Force in Afghanistan". www.aph.gov.au. Retrieved 10 April 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ ASSDA – Opinion Poll – M0004: Morgan Gallup Poll, May 1984 (Computer Reports) 6 November 2004 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ "Destined to stay with the USA – OpinionGerardHenderson". smh.com.au. 30 March 2004. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  38. ^ "It's time to trade in, and trade up, the outdated ANZUS treaty – On Line Opinion – 15/4/2004". On Line Opinion. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  39. ^ U.S. and Australia Sign Missile Defense Agreement – AUSMIN 2004 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ . Foreignminister.gov.au. 4 December 2003. Archived from the original on 18 December 2006. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  41. ^ Geoff Elliott (22 March 2007). . The Australian. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  42. ^ . Newsweekly.com.au. 2 November 2002. Archived from the original on 15 April 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
  43. ^ Office of the United States Trade Representative 28 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Recent Events 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ . Television New Zealand. 20 December 2010. Archived from the original on 18 September 2011. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
  46. ^ "Washington Declaration". United States-New Zealand Council. 19 June 2012. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  47. ^ "US lifts ban on New Zealand naval ships". The Telegraph. 21 September 2012. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  48. ^ Alexander, David (20 September 2012). "U.S. lifts 26-year-old ban on New Zealand warship visits to U.S. bases". Chicago Tribune. Auckland. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  49. ^ "US warship USS Sampson heads to New Zealand". NZ Herald. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2016 – via New Zealand Herald.
  50. ^ "US Warship may help rescue stranded Kaikoura tourists". Fairfax Media. 15 November 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2016 – via Stuff.co.nz.

Further reading edit

  • Brands Jr., Henry W. "From ANZUS to SEATO: United States Strategic Policy towards Australia and New Zealand, 1952-1954" International History Review 9#2 (1987), pp. 250–270 online
  • Capie, David. "Nuclear-free New Zealand: Contingency, contestation and consensus in public policymaking." in Successful Public Policy ed by Joannah Luetjens, (2019): 379-398 online.
  • Catalinac, Amy L. "Why New Zealand Took Itself out of ANZUS: Observing 'Opposition for Autonomy' in Asymmetric Alliances," Foreign Policy Analysis 6#3 (2010), pp. 317–338.
  • Dorling, Philip. The Origins of the Anzus Treaty: A Reconsideration (Flinders UP, 1989)
  • Green, Michael J., et al. The ANZUS alliance in an ascending Asia (ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, 2015) online[dead link].
  • Jennings, Peter. "The 2016 Defence White Paper and the ANZUS Alliance." Security Challenges 12.1 (2016): 53-64 online 1 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Kelly, Andrew. ANZUS and the early cold war: strategy and diplomacy between Australia, New Zealand and the United States, 1945-1956 (2018) online free.
  • McIntyre, William David, Background to the Anzus Pact: Policy-Making, Strategy and Diplomacy, 1945-55 (1994)
  • McLean, David. "Anzus Origins: A Reassessment," Australian Historical Studies 24#94 (1990), pp. 64–82
  • Miller, Charles. "Public Support for ANZUS: Evidence of a Generational Shift?" Australian Journal of Political Science, 50#1 (2015), pp. 1–20.
  • Robb, Thomas K., and David James Gill. "The ANZUS Treaty during the Cold War: a reinterpretation of US diplomacy in the Southwest Pacific." Journal of Cold War Studies 17.4 (2015): 109–157. online 13 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Siracusa, Joseph M and Glen St John Barclay. "Australia, the United States, and the Cold War, 1945–51: From V-J Day to ANZUS", Diplomatic History 5#1 (1981) pp 39–52
  • Siracusa, Joseph M., and Glen St J. Barclay. "The historical influence of the United States on Australian strategic thinking." Australian Journal of International Affairs 38.3 (1984): 153–158.
  • Tow, William, and Henry Albinski. "ANZUS—Alive and well after fifty years." Australian Journal of Politics & History 48.2 (2002): 153–173.
  • Tow, William. "ANZUS and alliance politics in Southeast Asia." (2019) online.

External links edit

  • Disarmament and Security Centre, New Zealand Peace Foundation
  • Text of the ANZUS Treaty
  • ADST oral histories on Breakdown of ANZUS Treaty

anzus, australia, zealand, united, states, security, treaty, treaty, 1951, binding, collective, security, agreement, initially, formed, trilateral, agreement, between, australia, zealand, united, states, from, 1986, agreement, between, zealand, australia, sepa. The Australia New Zealand United States Security Treaty ANZUS or ANZUS Treaty is a 1951 non binding collective security agreement initially formed as a trilateral agreement between Australia New Zealand and the United States 1 and from 1986 an agreement between New Zealand and Australia and separately Australia and the United States to co operate on military matters in the Pacific Ocean region although today the treaty is taken to relate to conflicts worldwide It provides that an armed attack on any of the three parties would be dangerous to the others and that each should act to meet the common threat It set up a committee of foreign ministers that can meet for consultation Australia New Zealand United States Security TreatyANZUS member statesAbbreviationANZUSFormation1 September 1951 72 years ago 1951 09 01 TypeMilitary alliancePurposeCollective securityRegionPacific RimMethodsIntelligence sharingJoint military exercisesMembership Australia New Zealand partially suspended United States The treaty was one of the series that the United States formed in the 1949 1955 era as part of its collective response to the threat of communism during the Cold War 2 New Zealand was suspended from ANZUS in 1986 as it initiated a nuclear free zone in its territorial waters In late 2012 the United States lifted a 26 year old ban on visits by New Zealand warships to US Department of Defense and US Coast Guard bases around the world New Zealand maintains a nuclear free zone as part of its foreign policy and is partially suspended from ANZUS as the United States maintains an ambiguous policy whether or not the warships carry nuclear weapons and operates numerous nuclear powered aircraft carriers and submarines however New Zealand resumed key areas of the ANZUS treaty in 2007 3 4 ANZUS was overshadowed in late 2021 by AUKUS a trilateral security partnership between Australia the United Kingdom and the United States It involves cooperation in nuclear powered submarines that New Zealand did not support Australia and New Zealand are poles apart in terms of the way they see the world I think this alliance underlines that they re going in very different directions said Geoffrey Miller an international analyst at the Democracy Project in New Zealand 5 Contents 1 Treaty structure 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Korea Malaysia Borneo Vietnam and the War on Terror 2 3 Australian reservations about the MX missile 2 4 New Zealand bans nuclear material 2 5 United States suspends obligations to New Zealand 2 6 Afghanistan 2 7 East Timor 2 8 Taiwan 2 9 1985 to present 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksTreaty structure editThe treaty was previously a full three way defence pact but was disrupted following a dispute between New Zealand and the United States in 1984 over visiting rights for ships and submarines capable of carrying nuclear arms 6 or nuclear powered ships of the US Navy to New Zealand ports The treaty became between Australia and New Zealand and between Australia and the United States While the treaty has lapsed between the United States and New Zealand it remains separately in force between both of those states and Australia 7 In 2000 the United States opened its ports to the Royal New Zealand Navy once again and under the presidency of Bill Clinton in the US and the government of Helen Clark in New Zealand the countries have since reestablished bilateral cooperation on defence and security 8 While ANZUS is commonly recognised to have split in 1984 the Australia US alliance remains in full force Heads of defence of one or both states often have joined the annual ministerial meetings which are supplemented by consultations between the US Combatant Commander Pacific and the Australian Chief of Defence Force There are also regular civilian and military consultations between the two governments at lower levels Annual meetings to discuss ANZUS defence matters take place between the United States Secretaries of Defense and State and the Australian Ministers of Defence and Foreign Affairs are known by the acronym AUSMIN The AUSMIN meeting for 2011 took place in San Francisco in September The 2012 AUSMIN meeting was in Perth Western Australia in November 9 AUSMIN continues to meet annually most recently in 2023 10 Unlike the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO ANZUS has no integrated defence structure or dedicated forces Nevertheless Australia and the United States conduct a variety of joint activities These include military exercises ranging from naval and landing exercises at the task group level to battalion level special forces training assigning officers to each other s armed services and standardising equipment and operational doctrine The two countries also operate several joint defence facilities in Australia mainly ground stations for spy satellite and signals intelligence espionage in Southeast and East Asia as part of the ECHELON network During the 2010s New Zealand and the US resumed a close relationship although it is unclear whether the revived partnership falls under the aegis of the 1951 trilateral treaty The Wellington Declaration of 2010 defined a strategic partnership between New Zealand and the US and New Zealand joined the biennial Rim of the Pacific military exercise off Hawaii in 2012 for the first time since 1984 The US prohibition on New Zealand ships making port at US bases was lifted after the 2012 exercise 8 History editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources ANZUS news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Australian New Zealand and United States aircraft during a military exercise in 1982 Origins edit In the years following the Second World War Australia and New Zealand began pressing the United States for a formal security guarantee The two governments felt threatened by the possibility of a resurgent Japan and the spread of communism to their North 11 12 Additionally the fall of Singapore in 1942 had demonstrated that their traditional protector the United Kingdom no longer had power in the region This added to their sense of vulnerability The United States was initially reluctant offering instead an informal guarantee of protection But the need to strengthen the West against communism grew with the communist victory in the Chinese Civil War in 1949 and the 1950 1953 Korean War Additionally the United States wanted to gain Australian and New Zealand approval for a soft peace with Japan The treaty allayed antipodean fears that such a peace would allow Japan to threaten them again 13 14 The resulting treaty was concluded at San Francisco on 1 September 1951 and entered into force on 29 April 1952 The treaty bound the signatories to recognise that an armed attack in the Pacific area on any of them would endanger the peace and safety of the others It stated The Parties will consult together whenever in the opinion of any of them the territorial integrity political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened in the Pacific The three governments also pledged to maintain and develop individual and collective capabilities to resist attack 15 Korea Malaysia Borneo Vietnam and the War on Terror edit nbsp U S General Westmoreland talks to the commander of the New Zealand artillery battery alongside Australian senior officers in Vietnam in 1967 The treaty itself was not a source of debate for over 30 years with New Zealand participating as part of the British Commonwealth Forces in the Korean War and the Malayan Emergency followed by the Indonesia Malaysia confrontation and directly as part of ANZUS in the Vietnam War The Vietnam War was the first conflict New Zealand entered that did not involve the British or any other Commonwealth countries outside of Australia As an ANZUS member New Zealand contributed military and non military assistance to the United States war effort in Vietnam from 1963 until 1975 New Zealand and Australian combat forces were withdrawn in 1972 and New Zealand non military medical aid continued until 1975 16 In response to the War in Afghanistan New Zealand sent transport aircraft maritime patrol aircraft and frigates to the Persian Gulf as well as a very small number of soldiers SAS soldiers medical and assorted and peace keeping forces to Afghanistan in 2001 Despite Prime Minister Helen Clark being openly critical of American justifications for the 2003 Iraq war New Zealand did send engineer troops to Iraq following the 2003 invasion 17 These troops were however officially engaged in reconstruction under UN Security Council Resolution 1483 and were non combatant Australian reservations about the MX missile edit See also Foreign policy of the Ronald Reagan administration Australia In 1983 the Reagan Administration approached Australia with proposals for testing the new generation of American intercontinental ballistic missiles the MX missile American test ranges in the Pacific were insufficient for testing the new long range missiles and the United States military wished to use the Tasman Sea as a target area Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser of the Liberal Party had agreed to provide monitoring sites near Sydney for this purpose 18 However in 1985 the newly elected Prime Minister Bob Hawke of the Labor Party withdrew Australia from the testing programme sparking criticism from the Reagan Administration Hawke had been pressured into doing so by the left wing faction of the Labor Party which opposed the proposed MX missile test in the Tasman Sea The Labor left wing faction also strongly sympathized with the New Zealand Fourth Labour Government s anti nuclear policy and supported a South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone 19 20 21 To preserve its joint Australian US military communications facilities the Reagan Administration also had to assure the Hawke Government that those installations would not be used in the Strategic Defense Initiative project which the Australian Labor Party strongly opposed Despite these disagreements the Hawke Labor Government still remained supportive of the ANZUS security treaty It also did not support its New Zealand counterpart s ban on nuclear armed and nuclear powered ships Following the ANZUS Split in February 1985 the Australian government also endorsed the Reagan Administration s plans to cancel trilateral military exercises and to postpone the ANZUS foreign ministers conference However it still continued to maintain bilateral military ties and continued to share intelligence information with New Zealand 21 Unlike New Zealand Australia continued to allow US warships to visit its ports and to participate in joint military exercises with the United States 22 23 New Zealand bans nuclear material edit See also New Zealand s nuclear free zone and Nuclear powered cruisers of the United States Navy In 1985 the nature of the ANZUS alliance changed significantly Due to a current of anti nuclear sentiment within New Zealand tension had long been present between ANZUS members as the United States is a declared nuclear power France a naval power and a declared nuclear power had been conducting nuclear tests on South Pacific Islands Following the victory of the New Zealand Labour Party in election in 1984 Prime Minister David Lange barred nuclear powered or nuclear armed ships from using New Zealand ports or entering New Zealand waters Reasons given were the dangers of nuclear weapons continued French nuclear testing in the South Pacific and opposition to US President Ronald Reagan s policy of aggressively confronting the Soviet Union 24 Given that the United States Navy had a policy of deliberate ambiguity during the Cold War and refused to confirm or deny the presence of nuclear weapons aboard its warships and support ships 25 these laws essentially refused access to New Zealand ports for all United States Navy vessels In February 1985 a port visit request by the United States for the guided missile destroyer USS Buchanan was refused by New Zealand as the Buchanan was capable of launching RUR 5 ASROC nuclear depth bombs As this occurred after the government unofficially invited the United States to send a ship the refusal of access was interpreted by the United States as a deliberate slight According to opinion polls taken before the 1984 election only 30 per cent of New Zealanders supported visits by US warships with a clear majority of 58 per cent opposed and over 66 per cent of the population lived in locally declared nuclear free zones 26 An opinion poll commissioned by the 1986 Defence Committee of Enquiry confirmed that 92 per cent now opposed nuclear weapons in New Zealand and 69 per cent opposed warship visits 92 per cent wanted New Zealand to promote nuclear disarmament through the UN while 88 per cent supported the promotion of nuclear free zones 27 United States suspends obligations to New Zealand edit See also Foreign policy of the Ronald Reagan administration New Zealand After consultations with Australia and after negotiations with New Zealand broke down the United States announced that it was suspending its treaty obligations to New Zealand until United States Navy ships were re admitted to New Zealand ports citing that New Zealand was a friend but not an ally 28 The crisis made front page headlines for weeks in many American newspapers 29 David Lange did not withdraw New Zealand from ANZUS although his government s policy led to the US s decision to suspend its treaty obligations to New Zealand An opinion poll in New Zealand in 1991 30 showed 54 of those sampled preferred to let the treaty lapse rather than accept visits again by nuclear armed or nuclear powered vessels The policy did not become law until 8 June 1987 with the passing of the New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone Disarmament and Arms Control Act 1987 more than two years after the Buchanan was refused entry after the US refused to declare the presence or absence of nuclear weapons and a year after the US suspended its treaty obligations to New Zealand This law effectively made the entire country a nuclear free zone 31 Despite the ANZUS split US Secretary of State George P Shultz maintained that the ANZUS structure was still in place should NZ decide in the future to reverse its anti nuclear policy and return to a fully operational defence relationship with the US President Reagan also maintained in NSDD 193 National Security Decision Directive that New Zealand still remained a friend but not an ally 32 On 10 July 1985 agents of the French Directorate General for External Security bombed the Greenpeace protest vessel Rainbow Warrior in Auckland causing one death The lack of condemnation by Western leaders to this violation of a friendly state s sovereignty caused a great deal of change in New Zealand s foreign and defence policy 33 and strengthened domestic opposition to the military application of nuclear technology in any form New Zealand distanced itself from its traditional ally the United States and built relationships with small South Pacific countries while retaining its good relations with Australia and to a lesser extent the United Kingdom 34 The suspension of New Zealand in ANZUS has had significant effect on New Zealand United States relations and on New Zealand domestic policy The anti nuclear policy has been a part of New Zealand political culture for years now However that has not stopped United States politicians from trying to change the policy citation needed Afghanistan edit nbsp Australian Prime Minister John Howard and US President George W Bush on 10 September 2001 Howard was in Washington during the 11 September attacks Australia and New Zealand both provided military units including special forces and naval ships in support of the US led Operation Enduring Freedom for support for anti Taliban forces in response to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks Providing 1 550 troops Australia remains the largest non NATO contributor of military personnel in Afghanistan New Zealand committed 191 troops 35 East Timor edit Between 1999 and 2003 the armed forces of Australia and New Zealand deployed together in a large scale operation in East Timor to prevent pro Indonesian militia from overturning a vote for independence on the region The United States provided only limited logistical support but the USS Mobile Bay provided air defence for the initial entry operation The operation was taken over by the United Nations Taiwan edit One topic that became prominent in the 2000s was the implications in the case of a hypothetical attack by the People s Republic of China against Taiwan who would likely receive American support While Australia has strong cultural and economic ties with the United States it also has an increasingly important trade relationship with mainland China In August 2004 Foreign Minister Alexander Downer implied in Beijing that the treaty would likely not apply to that situation but he was quickly corrected by Prime Minister John Howard In March 2005 after an official of the People s Republic of China stated that it may be necessary for Australia to reassess the treaty and after China passed an Anti Secession Law regarding Taiwan Downer stated that in case of Chinese aggression on Taiwan the treaty would come into force but that the treaty would require only consultations with the United States and not necessarily commit Australia to war citation needed 1985 to present edit Further information New Zealand United States relations Australia United States relations and Australia New Zealand relations Annual bilateral meetings between the US Secretary of State and the Australian Foreign Minister replaced annual meetings of the ANZUS Council of Foreign Ministers The first bilateral meeting was held in Canberra in 1985 At the second meeting in San Francisco in 1986 the United States announced that it was suspending its treaty security obligations to New Zealand pending the restoration of port access Subsequent bilateral Australia US Ministerial AUSMIN meetings have alternated between Australia and the United States The alliance engenders some political controversy in Australia Particularly after Australian involvement in the 2003 Iraq war some quarters of Australian society have called for a re evaluation of the relationship between the two nations Nonetheless the alliance enjoyed broad support during the Cold War 36 and continues to enjoy broad support in Australia 37 One commentator in Australia has argued that the treaty should be re negotiated in the context of terrorism the modern role of the United Nations and as a purely US Australian alliance 38 Australia is also a contributor to the National Missile Defense system 39 40 In May 2006 US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Pacific Affairs and Northern Atlantinc Ocean Christopher Hill described the New Zealand anti nuclear issue as a bit of a relic and signalled that the US wanted a closer defence relationship with New Zealand He also praised New Zealand s involvement in Afghanistan and reconstruction in Iraq Rather than trying to change each other s minds on the nuclear issue which is a bit of a relic I think we should focus on things we can make work he told an Australian newspaper 41 While there have been signs of the nuclear dispute between the US and NZ thawing out pressure from the United States increased in 2006 with US trade officials linking the repeal of the ban of American nuclear ships from New Zealand s ports to a potential free trade agreement between the two countries 42 On 4 February 2008 US Trade Representative Susan Schwab announced that the United States will join negotiations with four Asia Pacific countries Brunei Chile New Zealand and Singapore to be known as the P 4 These countries already have a FTA called the Trans Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership and the United States will be looking to become involved in the vitally important emerging Asia Pacific region A number of US based organisations support the negotiations including but not limited to the United States Chamber of Commerce National Association of Manufacturers National Foreign Trade Council Emergency Committee for American Trade and Coalition of Service Industries 43 44 In 2010 the United States and New Zealand signed the Wellington Declaration in Wellington New Zealand during a three day visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton The signing of the declaration ended the ANZUS dispute of the past 25 years and it was later revealed the US and New Zealand had resumed military co operation in eight areas in 2007 45 On 16 November 2011 US President Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard met in Canberra Australia to announce plans for a sustained new American presence on Australian soil 2 500 American troops are to be deployed to Darwin Australia New Zealand and the United States signed the Washington Declaration on 19 June 2012 to promote and strengthen closer bilateral defense and security cooperation 46 On 20 September 2012 while on a visit to New Zealand US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta announced that the United States was lifting the 26 year old ban on visits by New Zealand warships to US Department of Defense and US Coast Guard bases around the world 47 US Marines had trained in New Zealand and New Zealand s navy took part in the RIMPAC maritime exercises alongside the US earlier that year 48 The Royal New Zealand Navy RNZN invited the United States Navy to send a vessel to participate in the RNZN s 75th Birthday Celebrations in Auckland over the weekend of 19 21 November 2016 The guided missile destroyer USS Sampson became the first US warship to visit New Zealand in 33 years New Zealand Prime Minister John Key granted approval for the ship s visit under the New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone Disarmament and Arms Control Act 1987 which requires that the Prime Minister has to be satisfied that any visiting ship is not nuclear armed or powered 49 Following the 7 8 magnitude Kaikōura earthquake on 14 November 2016 the Sampson and other naval ships from Australia Canada Japan and Singapore were diverted to proceed directly to Kaikōura to provide humanitarian assistance 50 See also editAnglosphere ASEAN AUSCANNZUKUS Australian Defence Force AUKUS 2021 Australia United Kingdom and United States security partnership Contents of the United States diplomatic cables leak New Zealand Five Eyes Five Power Defence Arrangements FPDA Defence cooperation among Australia Malaysia New Zealand Singapore and UK New Zealand Defence Force Pine Gap Quadrilateral Security Dialogue QUAD Strategic dialogue among Australia India Japan and US Southeast Asia Treaty Organization SEATO 1954 1977 international collective defense organisation United States Armed ForcesReferences edit ANZUS treaty comes into force URL https nzhistory govt nz anzus comes into force Ministry for Culture and Heritage updated 5 Oct 2021 Joseph Gabriel Starke The ANZUS Treaty Alliance Melbourne University Press 1965 Alexander David 21 September 2012 U S lifts ban on New Zealand warships New Zealand keeps nuclear free stance Chicago Tribune Kristensen Hans 23 September 2012 In Warming US NZ Relations Outdated Nuclear Policy Remains Unnecessary Irritant Federation of American Scientists McClure Tess 16 September 2021 Aukus submarines banned from New Zealand as pact exposes divide with western allies The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Aukus submarines banned from New Zealand as pact exposes divide with western allies Experts say Aukus military deal underlines Australia s increasingly close alignment with the US on China and New Zealand s relative distance The test for ship access was decided as nuclear capability not actual proof of nuclear armament by a NZLP 1984 committee of President Margaret Wilson Chair of the Defence and Foreign Affairs Committee and MP and former President Jim Anderton and MP Fran Wilde King M 2003 The Penguin History of New Zealand Penguin Books NZ Ltd Auckland 1310 New Zealand p426 and pp 495 6 a b New Zealand U S Security Cooperation and the U S Rebalancing to Asia Strategy government report 8 March 2013 Congressional Research Service PDF FAS org 8 March 2013 Retrieved 13 September 2013 AUSMIN 2011 media release 14 September 2011 Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Foreignminister gov au 14 September 2011 Retrieved 3 October 2011 Fact Sheet 2023 Australia U S Ministerial Consultations AUSMIN U S Department of Defense Retrieved 4 February 2024 Milestones 1945 1952 Office of the Historian history state gov Retrieved 24 September 2017 Cohen Michael 2022 Different fears same alliance Multilateralism assurance and the origins of the 1951 United States New Zealand Australia alliance Journal of Peace Research 60 2 322 336 doi 10 1177 00223433221077302 ISSN 0022 3433 S2CID 250472154 David McLean Anzus Origins A Reassessment Australian Historical Studies 24 94 1990 pp 64 82 ANZUS treaty comes into force NZHistory New Zealand history online nzhistory govt nz Retrieved 24 September 2017 William David McIntyre Background to the Anzus Pact Policy Making Strategy and Diplomacy 1945 55 1994 Surgical and medical support URL https vietnamwar govt nz nz vietnam war surgical and medical support VietnamWar govt nz Accessed 22 December 2022 NZ PM backs Blair s Iraq conduct BBC News 11 July 2003 Retrieved 1 July 2010 Samantha Maiden 1 January 2012 US planned to fire missile at Australia secret Cabinet papers from the 1980s reveal Daily Telegraph Retrieved 19 April 2013 US rocket plan became Hawke s first setback Sydney Morning Herald 1 January 2013 Retrieved 19 April 2013 Hawke Government events 1985 The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Library 6 March 2013 Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2013 a b Carpenter Ted 1986 Pursuing a Strategic Divorce The U S and the Anzus Alliance Cato Institute Policy Analysis 67 Cato Institute 4 5 Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 19 April 2013 US Ships to Visit Sydney The Southland Times 22 February 1985 p 1 US Ships to Visit Australian Ports The New Zealand Herald 22 February 1985 p 1 Amy L Catalinac Why New Zealand took itself out of ANZUS observing opposition for autonomy in asymmetric alliances Foreign Policy Analysis 6 4 2010 317 338 The Operations Coordinating Board part of President Eisenhower s National Security Council established the US policy in 1958 of neither confirming nor denying NCND the presence or absence of nuclear weapons at any general or specific location including aboard any US military station ship vehicle or aircraft Morgan J G Jr 3 February 2006 Release of Information on Nuclear Weapons and on Nuclear Capabilities of U S Forces OPNAVINST 5721 1F N5GP PDF Washington DC Department of the Navy Office of the Chief of Naval Operations pp 1 2 Retrieved 2 July 2012 Disarmament and Security Centre Publications Papers Archived 14 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine Disarmament and Security Centre Publications Papers Archived 13 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lange David 1990 Nuclear Free The New Zealand Way Books David Lange Michael Gifkins Penguin Books ISBN 0140145192 The Australian National University Archived from the original on 20 February 2011 Retrieved 7 March 2016 NZ Nationals move closer to US Green Left 12 June 1991 Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 1 July 2010 Nuclear free legislation nuclear free New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage 30 August 2012 Retrieved 21 October 2012 U S Policy on the New Zealand Port Access Issue National Security Decision Directive 193 21 October 1985 Federation of American Scientists Intelligence Program accessed 22 October 2012 https fas org irp offdocs nsdd nsdd 193 htm Keith Sinclair A History of New Zealand Penguin Books New Zealand 1991 Nuclear Free The New Zealand Way The Right Honourable David Lange Penguin Books New Zealand 1990 corporateName Commonwealth Parliament address Parliament House Canberra Australian Defence Force in Afghanistan www aph gov au Retrieved 10 April 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link ASSDA Opinion Poll M0004 Morgan Gallup Poll May 1984 Computer Reports Archived 6 November 2004 at the Wayback Machine Destined to stay with the USA OpinionGerardHenderson smh com au 30 March 2004 Retrieved 1 July 2010 It s time to trade in and trade up the outdated ANZUS treaty On Line Opinion 15 4 2004 On Line Opinion Retrieved 1 July 2010 U S and Australia Sign Missile Defense Agreement AUSMIN 2004 Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Australia to Join US Missile Defence Program Foreignminister gov au 4 December 2003 Archived from the original on 18 December 2006 Retrieved 1 July 2010 Geoff Elliott 22 March 2007 Better relations on the menu as Kiwi PM dines with Bush The Australian Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 24 September 2008 New Zealand US links free trade to repeal of NZ nuclear ships ban November 2 2002 Newsweekly com au 2 November 2002 Archived from the original on 15 April 2010 Retrieved 2010 07 01 Office of the United States Trade Representative Archived 28 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Recent Events Archived 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine What the WikiLeaks cables say about NZ Television New Zealand 20 December 2010 Archived from the original on 18 September 2011 Retrieved 16 September 2011 Washington Declaration United States New Zealand Council 19 June 2012 Retrieved 16 June 2019 US lifts ban on New Zealand naval ships The Telegraph 21 September 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2019 Alexander David 20 September 2012 U S lifts 26 year old ban on New Zealand warship visits to U S bases Chicago Tribune Auckland Retrieved 20 September 2012 US warship USS Sampson heads to New Zealand NZ Herald 18 October 2016 Retrieved 18 October 2016 via New Zealand Herald US Warship may help rescue stranded Kaikoura tourists Fairfax Media 15 November 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2016 via Stuff co nz Further reading editLibrary resources about ANZUS Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Brands Jr Henry W From ANZUS to SEATO United States Strategic Policy towards Australia and New Zealand 1952 1954 International History Review 9 2 1987 pp 250 270 online Capie David Nuclear free New Zealand Contingency contestation and consensus in public policymaking in Successful Public Policy ed by Joannah Luetjens 2019 379 398 online Catalinac Amy L Why New Zealand Took Itself out of ANZUS Observing Opposition for Autonomy in Asymmetric Alliances Foreign Policy Analysis 6 3 2010 pp 317 338 Dorling Philip The Origins of the Anzus Treaty A Reconsideration Flinders UP 1989 Green Michael J et al The ANZUS alliance in an ascending Asia ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre 2015 online dead link Jennings Peter The 2016 Defence White Paper and the ANZUS Alliance Security Challenges12 1 2016 53 64 online Archived 1 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Kelly Andrew ANZUS and the early cold war strategy and diplomacy between Australia New Zealand and the United States 1945 1956 2018 online free McIntyre William David Background to the Anzus Pact Policy Making Strategy and Diplomacy 1945 55 1994 McLean David Anzus Origins A Reassessment Australian Historical Studies 24 94 1990 pp 64 82 Miller Charles Public Support for ANZUS Evidence of a Generational Shift Australian Journal of Political Science 50 1 2015 pp 1 20 Robb Thomas K and David James Gill The ANZUS Treaty during the Cold War a reinterpretation of US diplomacy in the Southwest Pacific Journal of Cold War Studies 17 4 2015 109 157 online Archived 13 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Siracusa Joseph M and Glen St John Barclay Australia the United States and the Cold War 1945 51 From V J Day to ANZUS Diplomatic History 5 1 1981 pp 39 52 Siracusa Joseph M and Glen St J Barclay The historical influence of the United States on Australian strategic thinking Australian Journal of International Affairs 38 3 1984 153 158 Tow William and Henry Albinski ANZUS Alive and well after fifty years Australian Journal of Politics amp History 48 2 2002 153 173 Tow William ANZUS and alliance politics in Southeast Asia 2019 online External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Australia New Zealand United States Security Treaty ANZUS classroom activities NZHistory net nz Disarmament and Security Centre New Zealand Peace Foundation Text of the ANZUS Treaty Will New Zealand ever rejoin ANZUS ADST oral histories on Breakdown of ANZUS Treaty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ANZUS amp oldid 1207346269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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