Let's
recall a moment in history - now long gone, when New Zealanders could be proud of
their government
Flashback:
When David stood up to Goliath
9
February, 2013
In
the morning, David Lange was frolicking in the waves of American
Samoa. By evening he was changing the face of United States-New
Zealand relations.
Days
later, New Zealand was tipped as the next world leader.
Watch
the documentary Reluctant Revolutionary, about Lange's stand.
''The
summer was over,'' Lange later noted of flying to Wellington, talking
to Cabinet, and refusing entry to New Zealand waters of the USS
Buchanan - a US ship with potential nuclear capability, seemingly
sent to test the resolve of New Zealand's anti-nuclear stance.
It
may have soured our relationship with Washington and provided a
dramatic end to a paradisiacal trip to Tokelau, but it certainly set
Lange up as New Zealand's David versus America's Goliath.
February
4, 1985 was the day the New Zealand Government backed overwhelming
public anti-nuclear sentiment and effectively became officially
nuclear free - even if legislation was still two years away.
''I
felt so proud,'' long-standing anti-nuclear protester Barney Richards
said this week.
''We
stood up against the most powerful nation in the world. And we had a
major victory.''
He
remembers a reporter travelling all the way from Britain ''to see for
himself the little country that snubbed its nose to the world''.
Two
years before, Mr Richards had spent three freezing nights on the
Wellington wharves protesting the arrival of nuclear-powered cruiser
USS Texas.
Unions
refused to dock the cruiser, which ended up having to anchor in
Wellington Harbour. Crews had to row to shore, where they were
greeted by protesters.
''The
Americans would say 'we are here to save you from the Communists' and
we would just burst out laughing,'' Mr Richards said.
One
protester boarded the USS Texas and placed an anti-nuclear banner on
the railing, prompting the taunting chant: ''We climbed up your
chain, and then we climbed back down again.''
That
same trip saw school children marching to the wharf in protest. Two
years later, on February 4, 1985, it was these pupils Mr Richards
felt the proudest for.
Margaret
Wilson was Labour Party President in 1985 and remembers the party
executive meeting and urging Caucus that the anti-nuclear stance was
not just about nuclear weapons but nuclear power as well.
''This
was the litmus test issue that a lot of people felt strongly about.''
That
urging, taken to Caucus by acting Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer,
worked.
Public
sentiment was about 70 per cent anti-nuclear, the party was
anti-nuclear, and now the Government officially was too.
It
was hardly new ground for New Zealand. Many local authorities were
already nuclear free, and as far back as 1973 Norman Kirk's Labour
Government had sent a frigate to Mururoa to protest French nuclear
testing.
Though
expected, February 4, 1985 prompted talk of being punished by the
Americans with the likes of trade sanctions.
There
was also a mass of correspondence from around the world supporting
New Zealand's stance.
On
February 6, just two days after the stance - though quite a few days
after it was obviously coming - The Dominion reported more than 2000
letters of support flooded into Lange's office.
Jude
Buckland wrote from Tasmania that she felt like ''flying over and
hugging you all for your anti-nuclear stand''.
Another
said: ''As an American, I can only say we are not worthy of your
trust ... when the smoke clears, NZ will join Australia as the new
world leaders.''
America
did sever all military and security ties, effectively leaving Anzus
as an in-name-only agreement, but trade fears never came to pass. In
fact, New Zealand-US trade actually increased in the years after, Te
Ara historian Jock Phillips said.
The
US, though, did have reason to feel disgruntled.
It
is almost certain that Lange had given secretary of state George
Shultz the impression the issue would be sorted out. The US,
sensitive to New Zealand concerns, sent the USS Buchanan - a ship
probably without nuclear weapons and not nuclear powered.
But
its neither-confirm-nor-deny nuclear policy meant America could not
explicitly say the USS Buchanan was nuclear-free.
The
stoush not only shored up Labour Party support for Lange but also
propelled him to the world stage.
The
next month he was in the Oxford debating chamber famously arguing
that nuclear weapons were morally indefensible and uttering arguably
the most famous retort by a New Zealand politician: ''I can smell the
uranium on [your breath] as you lean forward.''
Lange
was known around the world. New Zealand is yet to become a world
power.
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