Defence Minister Ron Mark returned recently from the sands of the Iraqi desert, fizzing the old cliches about our troops there punching above their weight. The speculation now is that Mark, a one-time major in the Sultan of Oman's army, will try to persuade his Cabinet colleagues to extend and expand our military role in Iraq.
Let's hope his baggage was well searched on return to ensure he wasn't bringing in genuine threats to New Zealand's security like the brown marmorated stink bug. Because while our very own Lawrence of Arabia was off reliving his Omani past, this very real threat to our economic livelihood was massing at our borders lusting for the chance to destroy our horticulture industry.
Instead of adding to the $65 million we've already spent making up the numbers in America's ruinous crusade half a world away, Mark should be seconding his troops and money to the aid of the Ministry for Primary Industries' (MPI) very thin line along the Auckland waterfront.
At last count, four shiploads of second-hand cars from Japan have been sent back to sea after the discovery of hundreds of live and presumably very hungry and thirsty stink bugs. The initial reports were dominated by car salesmen wailing about the effect on the tens of thousands of people employed to process and sell the 12,000 vehicles a month pouring into the country.
Horticulture New Zealand quickly put the other side, pointing out that if established, these bugs could destroy a wide range of crops, from grapes and kiwifruit to the household veggie garden, leading to a ruinous annual $4.2 billion fall in horticultural exports.