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Howards dirty tricks campaign committee
How the Australian election was subverted
By Linda Tenenbaum
19 February 2002
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Three months after the Australian general election, information
is starting to come to light of a dirty tricks operation, involving
upper echelons of the public service, the military and intelligence
agencies, aimed at subverting the election process and ensuring
the re-election of the Howard government.
A small cabal of handpicked government advisers was placed
in charge of fomenting an ongoing anti-refugee scare campaign.
Lies and slanders were circulated to justify brutal military measures.
Border protection was placed at the centre of the
election campaign, at the exclusion of every other issue.
To understand the reason for such desperate measures, one must
review the political and economic situation leading up to the
election. A string of major corporations had collapsed, tens of
thousands of jobs were being destroyed and the Australian dollar
had plunged to all-time lows. Howards government was in
crisis, facing growing hostility and resentment. After the conservative
parties were swept out of office in a number of state elections,
it seemed that the defeat of the federal Coalition was all but
assured.
The dirty tricks operation began with the Tampa incident in
late August, when the prime minister personally intervened to
prevent 433 Afghan refugees aboard the Norwegian freighter from
seeking asylum in Australia. The refugees had been rescued in
waters off the north-west coast after their fishing boat sank.
Howard and his minders seized upon the incident to manufacture
a national crisis and poison the political climate. With the support
of the media and the Labor opposition, sweeping new powers were
introduced, under the Border Protection and Migration Amendment
legislation, allowing the military to forcibly remove refugee
boats from Australian waters.
The navy was directed to patrol Australias north-west
coast and chase away refugee boats. The governments aim
was to provoke a series of confrontations and an atmosphere of
constant crisis.
A small committee was set up inside the Department of Prime
Minister and Cabinet to control events. This was no ordinary election
committee. It was not comprised of the usual party functionaries,
hired media advisers and spin doctorsthese people were operating
from the various Liberal Party officesbut top layers of
the state apparatus: public servants, the military brass and intelligence
personnelall, supposedly, politically neutral government
employees.
The committees operations have surfaced in the past few
days because of its role in propagating a lie that was to figure
prominently throughout the campaign: that a group of asylum seekers
on a boat bound for Australia threw their children overboard.
The lie served to assist the government in stampeding public opinion
and clawing its way back into office.
The media and the committees participants have woven
a complex web of confusion and deceit around their activities.
Nevertheless a fairly accurate account of what transpired can
be pieced together.
The People Smuggling Task Force
The People Smuggling Task Force, (PSTF) was chaired
by senior Howard adviser, Jane Halton, and included the head of
the Immigration Department, Bill Farmer, Group Captain Steve Walker
from the Defence Force and other influential Canberra officials.
It met regularly in Canberra throughout the month-long election
campaign.
On the morning of October 7, two days after Howard called the
election, Halton received a personal briefing from the head of
Defence Strategic Command, Air Vice Marshal Alan Titheridge. This
was in line with a specific directive from Defence Minister Peter
Reith the day before that, henceforth, Titheridge should directly
convey confidential border protection information
to Halton, circumventing the armed forces normal chain of
command. Titheridge informed Halton that a navy frigate HMAS
Adelaide had intercepted a boatload of refugees near Christmas
Island. The operation was still underway and he was only able
to give her a third-hand account of events that were still unfolding.
Titheridge told Halton that some of the passengers had thrown
their children overboard. He had heard this from Brigadier Silverstone,
who had spoken to the Adelaide captain, Commander Banks.
Soon after, Halton passed the information on to a meeting of the
PSTF.
Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock telephoned during the meeting
and was told the news by his departmental head, Farmer.
Ruddock immediately convened a press conference. He told the assembled
journalists that the navy had intercepted a group of Iraqi asylum
seekers who had thrown their children into the sea. Creatively
embellishing the story as he went along, Ruddock alleged that
the parents aim was to blackmail the Australian
navy into picking them up and taking them ashore by placing their
childrens lives at risk.
I regard this as one of the most disturbing practices
Ive come across, he declared. It was clearly
planned and premeditated [with] the intention of putting us under
duress.
Ruddocks press conference set the tone for the rest of
the election campaign. In interview after interview, government
ministers took to the airwaves to vilify the boat people.
Howard insisted their behaviour was against the natural
instinct. A government senator declared they were repulsive
. . . and unworthy of Australia. The Opposition Labor Party
leader Kim Beazley weighed in, accusing the Iraqis of committing
an outrageous act which he absolutely condemned.
The passengers alleged actions became the new justification
for the governments anti-refugee crusade.
But what actually happened on the morning of October 7? A small,
rickety Indonesian fishing vessel, straining under the weight
of 223 men, women and children cramped on deck, was intercepted
by the Adelaide in Australian territorial waters and ordered
to turn back. The crew refused. The navy fired four warning shots,
50 feet in front of the vessel. Three minutes later more rounds
were fired, followed by another 23 shots right near the boat.
Then the navy boarded. In the ensuing turmoil and confusion, several
terrified refugees jumped overboard, believing they were about
to be killed. One father lifted his child up high to indicate
that children were on board and the shooting should stop. Not
one child was thrown overboard.
At 5pm on October 7, just hours after Ruddock had launched
his tirade, PSTF member Group Captain Walker advised the taskforce,
after checking with his superiors, that there was no documentary
evidence that children had been thrown overboard. Darwin command
had apparently misheard what Commander Banks had said. Walker
urged caution. But the rest of the taskforce preferred Haltons
initial version, which neither they, nor the media, had questioned,
let alone verified. Clearly, a backdown would have embarrassed
the government and compromised its vendetta. So Walkers
advice was simply ignored. Halton proceeded to prepare a briefing
for both Howard and Reith, which referred to passengers
throwing their children into the sea. The memorandum was
faxed to the two politicians that night and became the basis for
their subsequent media interviews.
In other words, on the very day the incident took place, Howards
committee was told that children had not been thrown overboard.
The members nevertheless decided to proceed with the story.
The next day, October 8, the fishing boat began to sink. The
crew of the Adelaide took the desperate and exhausted passengers
on board, rescuing dozens of them from the water. Some three hundred
digital photographs were taken of the rescue, each marked with
the date and time it was shot.
Commander Banks emailed the photographs to Defence Force offices,
along with an explanatory text explaining the circumstances of
the rescue. The following day, October 9, Defence Public Relations
officially informed Reiths media adviser, Ross Hampton,
as well as various Defence personnel, about the photographs.
On October 10, Banks, who had read the false reports in the
media about the events of October 7, told Brigadier Silverstone
that no child had been thrown overboard. Silverstone sent the
advice up the chain of command to various Defence officials.
On the same day, Howards office telephoned Hampton in
Reiths office asking whether the photographs could be released
to the media, to back up the children overboard story.
The prime ministers staff also phoned Halton. Aware that
at least some senior Defence officers were disputing the veracity
of the story, they asked her to check it out with Strategic Command.
She did, and shortly after received a formal written report stating
There is no indication that children were thrown overboard.
The photographic proof
Meanwhile, Defence staff emailed to Hampton at least seven
of the rescue photographs. Following a specific request from Reiths
office, Defence had removed the explanatory text accompanying
the pictures. Most of the photos showed the sinking boat, surrounded
by dozens of people in the water. But just two blurred shots were
selected for release to the media, and it seems they were severely
edited. They showed only one child and two other people in the
middle of an empty expanse of water. There was no fishing boat
and no navy frigate. Nor were there any captions, and the date
and time had been deleted.
That afternoon, Defence Minister Reith was interviewed on Melbourne
radio. He announced that he now had proof of the incident.
It did happen. The fact is the children were thrown in to
the water... we have produced the photos. Reith also claimed
that the navy had taken a video, which showed children being thrown
into the sea.
Both before and after Reiths radio interview, Brigadier
Gary Bornholt, from Defence public relations, contacted Reiths
office to make clear that the photos were of the rescue on October
8, not children being thrown overboard. He even left a message
to this effect on the Hamptons mobile phone.
That night, the ABCs prestigious nightly current affairs
program, The 7.30 Report, broadcast the photographs as
evidence that the child-throwing allegations by Howard, Reith
and Ruddock were correct. Again, no-one bothered to insist on
any verification. None of the most obvious questions were asked.
When were the photographs taken? What else was going on at the
time? Who else was in the water? Where was the boat? By now, any
slander against refugees, no matter how grotesque, was unquestioningly
accepted as good coin.
Ignoring the written report from Strategic Command, which informed
Halton that no evidence existed for the children overboard
claim, she decided that the photographs released by Reith provided
adequate proof that the incident had occurred. The
Daily Telegraph splashed the photos all over its front
page, under the headline Proof that boat people threw children
overboard. Later, the newspaper claimed that the government
ministers statements (based on Haltons advice) were
proof of the photographs authenticity.
The next morning, October 11, high-level Defence officials
met to work out how to respond to the continuing false reports.
Some time around 10am, Reith was personally informed that the
photographs did not depict children who had been thrown into the
sea.
Nevertheless the children overboard lie continued
to take centre stage in the governments election campaign.
Reiths office issued a directive forbidding any Defence
Force official to publicly speak on the issue to the media. Reith
also gagged the crew of the HMAS Adelaide.
On October 31, Brigadier Silverstone, commander of the joint
task force dealing with the asylum seekers, had a conversation
with Reith about the video, which the minister was still insisting
contained further proof that children had been thrown into the
sea. Notes taken of the exchange record Silverstone saying: Minister,
the video does not show a child being thrown into the water.
Reith responded: Well, wed better not see the video
then.
On November 7, three days before the election, residents on
Christmas Island told the media that crew members from the Adelaide
participants in the events of October 7had reported
to them that the incident never happened. The crew were reportedly
furious at the lies being told in Canberra, and even more furious
at being gagged.
Reporters began asking questions. Howard, who was due to address
the National Press Club the next day, directed his staff to contact
the governments key intelligence assessment agency, the
Office of National Assessments, for a report on the incident.
When asked about the conflicting accounts, the Prime Minister
cited the ONAs report: Asylum seekers wearing lifejackets
jumped into the sea and children were thrown in with them.
It turns out that, according to the head of ONA, the organisation
did not have independent information about the incident.
It relied, instead, on media reports and had placed a high
level of credibility on the reports because they reflected statements
by ministers.
So, Halton relied on the photographs released by Reiths
department; the media relied on Haltons report (on which
the ministers based their statements) and the ONA relied on the
media. The whole conspiracy formed a very neat, closed circle.
On election day, the Liberals published full-page advertisements
with a large slogan reinforcing their election message: We
decide who comes to this country and the circumstances in which
they come.
Damage control
Aware that the growing controversy over the children
overboard lie would not simply disappear, Howard decided,
immediately after the election, to begin organising his own defence.
He directed two reports to be prepared: one by the Defence Force
and one by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinetthe
two organisations responsible for circulating the lie in the first
place. The Defence report was handed over to Howards department
in December. Jennifer Bryant, an employee of Howards department,
a member of the PSTF and a colleague of Jane Halton, was appointed
to write up the second report.
The prime minister tabled the two reports last Wednesday after
parliament resumed from a three-month recess. This was his first
opportunity , and he used it to conduct a pre-emptive strike,
for the purposes of damage control. Both reports made clear that
the children overboard incident never happened and
that repeated efforts by various military officers to correct
the false story were blocked or ignored.
But the reports also succeeded in carrying out their primary
aim: the exoneration of Howard and Ruddock. Let us review how
this was done:
1) The Prime Ministers Department did not have direct
control over what would be included in the Defence report. Bryant
therefore had to reconcile the contents of her report with the
information contained in the Defence report. Luckily she had the
latter well in advance, two months before the reports would be
tabled.
2) The Defence report detailed how various military officials
had informed the members of the PSTF and other government advisers
that the children overboard story was false. But the
line from Howard and Ruddock was that they were never told of
this. If they had been told, and they therefore knew the story
wasnt true, then they both lied. Under the Westminster parliamentary
system, lying is an offence that requires immediate resignation.
So an explanation had to be devised as to how at least 31 senior
government and military officials were aware of the truth, but
it failed to reach the ears of the two politicians.
3) According to Bryants report, the various bureaucrats
simply omitted to tell their superiors. A lot was happening, wires
got crossed, people were busy, they didnt receive messages.
And there were, after all, contradictory accounts. It was difficult
to know what was true. But the report was adamant. Howard and
Ruddock were never told and they never lied.
4) The fall guy was Peter Reith. Having retired from politics
at the last election, the former Defence Minister had become politically
expendable.
If the report is true, only one conclusion can be drawn. A
small group of unelected government officials organised a conspiracy,
behind the backs of senior ministers, to feed them lies and corrupt
the election process. But what would be their motive? They were,
after all, implementing Howards own agendaslandering
refugees, providing a rationale for ejecting them and, in the
process, bolstering the likelihood of Howards re-election.
If the report is false, even more serious issues arise. Not
only did Howard repeatedly lie, he went to extraordinary lengths
to cover his tracks. And he was aided and abetted by a number
of others, including the reports author. According to her
report, the prime minister never officially received Defence Force
briefings on the children overboard, or saw the original
navy photographs. This means that Howards top advisers conspired
with him to avoid leaving any paper trail. Everything was done
with a wink and a nod. Howard, in other words, led an elaborate
ruse, involving his own department, the military and intelligence,
aimed at hoodwinking the Australian public and hijacking the election.
Howard has been forced to admit that some of his advisers did,
indeed, know the truth. But this simply doesnt square with
his actions. Not one of them has been called to account. No disciplinary
action, no reprimands or requests for resignations. Jane Halton,
the woman at the centre of the scandal, has, instead, been promoted
to head the Department of Health and was last month awarded a
public service medal for distinguished public service.
No questions asked
In the final analysis, the conspiracy only succeeded because
it was never challenged. From the gutter press and rightwing talk-back
radio hosts to the most reputable current affairs programs and
liberal broadsheets, the media played along, uncritically
reporting every lie and slander. As for the Labor Party, it jumped
on the bandwagon from day one. While a great deal of shouting
and moralising is underway now, not a single Labor politician
opened their mouth in the course of the campaign to attack Howards
policy or question his vilification of refugees. Both the press
and the Labor opposition were as equally committed as the government
to suppressing any genuine discussion or debate about the deepening
social and political crisis.
The 233 asylum seekers involved have been removed from the
scene, conveniently dumped on Manus Island, a far-flung, malaria-infested
outpost, located on the equator, some 400 kilometres from Papua-New
Guinea. The media is barred from speaking with them and they have
been given no opportunity to clear their names.
Whether Howard will survive the continuing fallout from the
children overboard affair is unclear. A full Senate
inquiry begins on March 25. Last week Howard confidently announced
he would allow any public servant to testify. Yesterday he qualified
his remarks, indicating he may veto his most senior advisers,
military personnel and government ministers.
There is no doubt that there is considerable opposition to
Howard within sections of the military. A former Admiral has accused
the government of a Goebbels-style Big Lie campaign, while other
senior figures have slammed Howards border protection policy,
accusing Howard of misusing the navy for political purposes, destroying
its credibility and creating profound mistrust within its ranks.
Leaks are occurring almost daily, some from high-level military
sources, revealing, for example, the governments use of
intelligence agencies against Australian citizens in pursuit of
its anti-refugee agenda.
Whatever Howards immediate fate, the recent election
campaign marked a turning point in Australian politics. First
and foremost, it reveals the rot and decay of bourgeois democracy.
At the very point where the masses of ordinary people were supposed
to be able to exercise their right to choose and to vote, the
whole process was poisoned and corrupted by an unelected cabal,
working closely with the most senior political figures.
Secondly, the treatment meted out to a group of vulnerable
refugees has profound implications for the working class as a
whole. It demonstrates the extent to which the ruling elite and
its political representatives will go in protecting their own
interests and undermining fundamental democratic rights. This
must be taken as a serious warning of the methods that will be
used in the coming period, as social tensions deepen and genuine
oppositional movements begin to emerge.
See Also:
2001 Australian elections:
The political issues facing the working class
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party of Australia
[31 October 2001]
Australian election
reveals the decay of parliamentary politics
[14 November 2001]
Australian election:
a bizarre five-week campaign
[10 November 2001]
Australian election:
The Howard government's big lie unravels
[10 November 2001]
Drowned refugees were
victims of Australian policy
[29 October 2001]
Australian navy opens
fire on refugee boat
[13 October 2001]
Why the Tampa
refugees should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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