- John Graham, Canberra Times
- Fiona Stager , Bookseller and Publisher
- World Council of Churches
- John Pilger - journalist and flim-maker
Allied and Addicted
Australia's deepening dependence on the United States


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In many respects, Australia behaves as if it were still a colonial dependency. Our policies on foreign affairs, trade, human rights, and the environment seem to be uncritically allied to those of the United States. But as the American-led coalition lurches towards defeat in Iraq, Australians should ask how reliable and indispensable our deepening dependence on this alliance really is.
In Allied and Addicted, Alison Broinowski argues that Australias development as an independent nation has stalled, and warns that behaving like the schoolyard bullys errand-boy has earned Australia a reputation for being ready to kiss up and kick down. Broinowski shows how being so closely identified with current American policies harms Australias interests, and how the United States alliance actually endangers Australia more than it protects us. But she remains optimistic that Australia may at last be turning in the direction of genuine independence.
Allied and Addicted challenges many of the assumptions of conservative policy-makers, and highlights the need for informed choices in the debate about Australias place in the world.
135 x 210 mm, 144 pages, paperback.
Save $7 - Was $22.00

New Internationalist