National security experts and Defence Minister Peter Dutton havewarned about the possibility of a conflict erupting between China and the United States over Taiwan,which would force Australia to choose whether to join its major security ally in defending the island.
Former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd last year said there was a growing risk of China and the US stumbling into a military conflict over Taiwan,while Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said “the risk of miscalculation and even conflict is heightening” in the region.
Mr Pezzullo said in his message - which did not mention Taiwan or China - that free nations continued to face the “sorrowful challenge” of being “armed,strong and ready for war”.
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“In a world of perpetual tension and dread,the drums of war beat – sometimes faintly and distantly,and at other times more loudly and ever closer,” he said. “Today,as free nations again hear the beating drums and watch worryingly the militarisation of issues that we had,until recent years,thought unlikely to be catalysts for war,let us continue to search unceasingly for the chance for peace while bracing again,yet again,for the curse of war.
“By our resolve and our strength,by our preparedness of arms,and by our statecraft,let us get about reducing the likelihood of war – but not at the cost of our precious liberty. War might well be folly,but the greater folly is to wish away the curse by refusing to give it thought and attention,as if in so doing,war might leave us be,forgetting us perhaps.”
Mr Pezzullo,widely tipped to soon take over as secretary of the Department of Defence,said the least Australians could do to honour fallen soldiers was prepare to face equivalent challenges “with the same resolve and sense of duty that they displayed in years past”.