One night in March of 1973, and unbeknown to PM Gough
Whitlam, Attorney General, Senator Lionel Murphy QC, with a squad of Federal
Police raided the offices of ASIO in Canberra and on St Kilda Rd,
Melbourne.
I sat stunned in my Canberra Times’ office, and reached for
a phone to call super sleuth journo Alan Reid, ...surely he would know what the
hell was going on. He didn’t, well not right then he didn’t, no-one did.
It turned out that Murphy
was after his own file.
ASIO Chief, Peter Barbour, had let them in and opened the safe that
held the file incriminating Murphy with, among other things, a 'close
association' with the Soviet spy Ivan Skripov, who had been deported in 1963.
.
Murphy had been a suspected KGB ‘sleeper’. He was active in Communist cells within the ALP. As Attorney General he had issued strict instructions to ASIO demanding that it no longer target student groups and peace organisations and that it stop bugging certain Canberra embassies including the Soviet Embassy.
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Murphy had been a suspected KGB ‘sleeper’. He was active in Communist cells within the ALP. As Attorney General he had issued strict instructions to ASIO demanding that it no longer target student groups and peace organisations and that it stop bugging certain Canberra embassies including the Soviet Embassy.
Very few people knew the real Murphy, at the time only his close ALP
friends knew of his first wife, a girl called Nina who was born in the town of
Chita in the Siberian East of the USSR. Nina was the daughter of White Russian
parents who emigrated from Vladivostock to Australia in 1925.
She had met Lionel while at Sydney University and it was believed that
both had been working as Soviet operatives.
But ASIO had another interest in Murphy, a person called Junie Morosi.
Morosi was bonking both Murphy and hard-line Communist and Trade Minister, Jim
Cairns. Morosi’s dalliances with Tom Uren and other Ministers were a
poorly kept secret.
The following year Jim Cairns was
promoted to Deputy Prime Minister by Whitlam and ASIO became even more concerned
that Morosi was now a serious security risk.
The far Left of the ALP was always unelectable but they used electable
cleanskins like Whitlam to gain government. They used Kevin Rudd 35 years later
in the same way.
Whitlam did not last a full term (he struggled through two half-terms)
before his incompetent, Soviet-sympathetic, Cabinet rabble crumbled and passed
on prematurely, including Murphy and drug honcho Grassby. Many escaped what
should have been certain jail terms.
On December 14, 1984, the DPP had finally decided to charge Murphy with
attempting to pervert the course of justice. Murphy was convicted in July of
1985 and sentenced to 18 months in jail. He was acquitted 11 months later
suffering from terminal cancer.
It is claimed Murphy had no legal authority to seize ASIO files. The
Labor Party believed ASIO was a law unto itself, even though the organisation
never had the extensive powers and massive budgets it has today. (Since 2001
ASIO’s budget has increased 500 per cent with Abbott throwing another $630
million at it only last week.)
Sorry, I got a little carried away with that preamble but, since 1973,
the Murphy affair has served to beg the question: Should the executive arm of
government reign superior over a nation’s security and intelligence
agencies?
At the time, ASIO’s Peter Barbour could have refused Murphy entry to
ASIO offices and asked the High Court to sort it out, despite the fact that
Murphy as Attorney General held the highest judicial post in the land.
J Edgar Hoover kept files on all US politicians, but he was smart
enough to let each politician know he held damning information on their private
lives, thereby ensuring his own longevity in office. Hoover was untouchable,
and he only headed up the FBI, not the CIA.
So, what’s it to be? If members of Whitlam’s Cabinet were working
against Australia’s interest in a cold war environment, who then holds the
ascendancy? An elected Attorney General, or the Chief of ASIO who holds
explosive files on him and others? It may never be tested.
So we come to the current ASIO Chief, the rather openly
self-opinionated David Irvine (pictured). Irvine is an unusually noisy career
diplomat and academic. He has enjoyed breaking the tradition of ASIO silence
and comparative anonymity.
It’s more than a little disconcerting that Irvine claims Islam as,
“...one of the world’s great and enriching religions.” He has also loudly
praised our successful multiculturalism and the efforts of leaders in the
Muslim community in helping counter terrorism and has roundly criticised “Right
wing nutters” as un-Australian for suggesting that immigration from Islamic
countries be limited.
But Mr Irvine doesn’t stop there; he suggests that, “some of those
home-grown Muslims who travel over to Islamic hotspots, may not have gone with
extremist intentions but were motivated instead by a wish to help other Muslims
or live what they believe to be a truly Islamic lifestyle”.
WTF? Can you run that by me again Mr Irvine, sir!
Perhaps Irvine, as ASIO Chief, should be aware of those Australians who
trained with Al Queda in Afghanistan and Pakistan in the 1990s and 2000s.
Almost all returned to Australia and subsequently became involved in some form
of terrorist-related activity.
Around a third of them were arrested and/or convicted of terrorism
offences. Two thirds remain free to continue their studies in the virtues of
radical Islam.
Mr Irvine described his attitude to terrorism in a recent public
address as this: “After five years in the job, my advice remains that the
Australian public should not become paranoid and jump at the shadows of
immediate, impending or inevitable catastrophe.
“The threat of terrorism will be with us for some time but it must not
be allowed to dominate our lives. We should maintain our awareness, use the
anti-terrorist hotline if necessary and, above all, place our trust in
Australian governments to be vigilant on our behalf.”
Golly, did he really say, “trust Australian governments”? Blimey! And
did he really say we should, “use the anti-terrorist hotline, if necessary”?
Irvine continued, “Our efforts are designed to protect both Muslim
Australians and non-Muslim Australians alike. It was for this reason that I was
upset by the headline in ‘The Australian’, it read: ‘We’ll fight Islam for 100
years’. Let me reiterate, we are not fighting Islam, in Australia or anywhere
else.
“We will continue to work with the community of Muslim Australians,
whom it is our duty to protect in exactly the same way as we seek to protect
all other Australians.” Hmmm, is he fair dinkum or is he under the spell of
18C?.
Irvine, a close friend and appointee of Kevin Rudd, is a living example
of why politically partisan appointments to the upper echelons of our Security
Agencies should never happen.
ASIO itself should be keeping a file on its chief spook Irvine, the man
is a dangerous idiot of radical Green proportions with exceptional powers and
too many buckets of unaccountable brass to play with.
He refuses to keep his head down, loves selfies and the sound of his
own voice, as does his mate Kevin, and espouses the ridiculous notion that
Islam should be of no concern, is not a threat, and is one of the world’s
“great and enriching religions” and that we should all take a chill pill.
Well, it’s probably a good thing that this Rudd remnant is to be
replaced in two weeks’ time, albeit with another career diplomat, Duncan Lewis.
The career diplomats I have known were mostly intelligence deprived and
had filled cushy appointments used by political parties to shuffle their mugs
sideways into never ending, harmless cocktail circuits.
In this climate of Islamic extremism Abbott should look further afield
than the diplomatic circuit for his chief spook.
After all, ASIO will already have files on many in the Labor Party and
certainly on treasonous Greens like Lee Rhiannon and dangerous fools like Sarah
Hanson-Young.
So, should have Barbour told Murphy to
piss off all those years ago?
Yes he should have because the radical Left, those who seek to destroy
Australia, will always find a way into our governments.
And all that stands between us and our security is our chief spook.
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