'Puppeteer's' plan to undermine an Australian election foiled, ASIO boss reveals

The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation disrupted a foreign intelligence network and plot to influence an election in the past year.

Australian Security Intelligence Organisation ASIO Director General Mike Burgess rehearses his annual speech at ASIO headquarters in Canberra, Wednesday, February 9, 2022. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING

Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Mike Burgess. Source: AAP

Australia's top spy agency disrupted a foreign intelligence agency's onshore network last year, as well as a foreign plot to interfere in an election.

The actions were revealed in ASIO director-general Mike Burgess' annual threat assessment delivered in Canberra on Wednesday.

"Australians who were targeted by the foreign intelligence service included current and former high-ranking government officials, academics, members of think tanks, business executives and members of a diaspora community," Mr Burgess said.

"As a sting in the tail, after we removed the spies, we laid trip wires just in case the foreign country ever tries to reactivate this network."

Mr Burgess said while terrorism remained a key threat, espionage and foreign interference - sometimes by "friends with sharp elbows" - were the agency's main security concern.

He said the AUKUS security arrangement with the United States and Britain was of strong interest to foreign intelligence agencies.
Mr Burgess said it was important to be on guard against foreign political interference in a federal election year.

ASIO recently detected and disrupted a foreign interference plot in the lead-up to an election in Australia, but Mr Burgess declined to reveal which state or territory it related to.

The case involved a wealthy person - described as the "puppeteer" - who had "direct and deep connections with a foreign government and its intelligence agencies".

"The puppeteer hired a person to enable foreign interference operations and used an offshore bank account to provide hundreds of thousands of dollars for operating expenses," Mr Burgess said.

"Secretly shaping the jurisdiction's political scene to benefit the foreign power was considered a key performance indicator. It was like a foreign interference start-up."

The employee identified candidates likely to run in the election who either supported the interests of the foreign government or who were assessed as vulnerable to inducement.

The person used relationships with politicians, staffers and journalists to select potential targets.
"The puppeteer and the employee plotted ways of advancing the candidates' political prospects through generous support, placing favourable stories in foreign language news platforms and providing other forms of assistance."

The candidates had no knowledge of the plot.

"Our intervention ensured the plan was not executed, and harm was avoided," Mr Burgess said.

Had some of the candidates been elected they would have been directed to hire particular staff who were agents of the foreign government, passing on information and potentially influencing the way the member voted.

Mr Burgess said the COVID-19 pandemic sent online radicalisation into overdrive as isolated people were exposed to extreme messages.

"More time in those online environments - without some of the circuit breakers of everyday life, like family and community engagement, school and work - created more extremists," he said.

The domestic spy agency conducted an assessment in 2007 warning about the implications of a pandemic, Mr Burgess revealed.

"We assessed that a pandemic would result in an increase in anti-government behaviours, and we have certainly seen that with COVID."
While ASIO's terrorism caseload had reduced over the past 12 months there had been a rise in "radicalisation and specific issue grievances", he said.

"We have seen threats against public office holders, an attack on a vaccination clinic, and several physical assaults on healthcare workers.

"We assess that these tensions and the associated possibility of violence will persist."

Continued lockdowns and other restrictions would continue to drive this anger, uncertainty and fear, he said.

Mr Burgess said ASIO did not investigate peaceful protest or dissent, but was concerned where "opinions tip into the promotion of violence or actual acts of violence".

The most likely terrorist attack scenario over the next 12 months continued to be a lone-actor attack.

While there were no domestic terrorist attacks in the past year there were two major disruptions of violent extremist attacks.

Mr Burgess said minors now represented 15 per cent of new counter-terrorism investigations.

"Children as young as 13 are now embracing extremism," he said.

He said sports clubs, schools, parents, carers and community leaders could play a pivotal role in identifying signs of teenagers heading towards radicalisation.


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4 min read
Published 9 February 2022 9:19pm
Source: AAP, SBS


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