Submarine Matters has no contact with any Australian government or foreign government entities.
Years ago Submarine Matters recorded the July 19, 2012 speech by the then Director-General (DG) of the
Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), Nick Warner. That was the first public speech by an ASIS Director General.
Now, on May 10, 2022, the
current ASIS Director-General, Paul Symon (also here) has made another major public speech. Sourced from the ASIS website it is here. Because ASIS Public Statements tend to erase from that website after about 4 years Australia's Lowy
Institute website will probably stand as the more long-term. The speech appears to be aimed most specifically at recruiting a greater diversity of ASIS employees (one subset is "Case Officers") and also potential "agents" (which in Australian parlance are the sources of Case Officers).
The Lowy Institute made a
Youtube of Symon’s May 10, 2022 speech here and above.
The Question and Answer session after 32 minutes that follows the speech has many
interesting highlights.
For example, 39:21 into the Youtube, Symon talks of Chinese officials and individuals unhappy with
China’s enforced monoculture who are interested in a relationship. [Even Submarine Matters is receiving attention from a low level Wolf Warrior Cub China Anon. While this chap seems a bit hostile, at least he's writing.]
If there are other particularly interesting parts of the Question and Answer session please tell Pete in Comments below.
Symon’s longish speech is
below. I've hyperlinked some officials and politicians and also bolded some bits that talk of commercial intelligence sites. Alas Submarine
Matters is not that commercial :)
“Foreign espionage: An Australian perspective – 10 May 2022
PAUL SYMON, Director-General, Australian Secret Intelligence Service:
This speech will be more akin to a glance at the inner workings of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service rather than a forensic stare. We will use peripheral vision – you may, as an audience, need to occasionally read between the lines.
Nevertheless,
let me begin with a true story. A story about a signature moment in the career
of one of my officers. Such stories are rarely heard beyond those who’ve lived
them. It is my hope that this will give you a bit more than a glance of ASIS’s
mission and some of the quiet achievers who carry out that mission.
In late August last year, at 2am Kabul time, I received a secure
message from one of my officers – let’s call her Jane – who was quietly
enmeshed in the chaos at Kabul’s international airport. Jane’s message to me
was short – “The team are well. Tired yet committed, while there are still
friends to Australia outside the wire. The end is in sight and, while some of
the scenes are horrific, the joy of getting people to safety is sustaining us.”
Jane’s
particular role was to provide point-to-point secure, encrypted communications
from me and other officers in Canberra, to other countries in the Middle East,
and to the small team we had quietly inserted into Afghanistan.
Over
an exhausting week, Jane had worked alongside other Australian agencies to pull
off the largest ever emergency airlift in Australia’s history – over 4,100
people brought to safety from one of the most dangerous places in the world.
Our friends in CIA and MI6 gave us great support too.
Jane
and the ASIS team were some of the last coalition officers to leave
Afghanistan. They left only after those for whom ASIS had direct responsibility
were safe and in a third country.
We
had followed through with our pact to our sources – that we will do everything
we can to protect their identities and to care for their safety and welfare.
Jane’s flight out of Kabul brought to a close one more chapter in ASIS’s
history; once again, all of this kept secret at the time.
My
response to Jane was even shorter than her message to me: “Good work. Get some
sleep.” We are an agency of few words in a crisis. Committed to difficult
missions and concerned for the welfare of our people. In sum, we don’t just
work on the front line – we work beyond it.
This
story highlights the fact that we contribute uniquely to whole-of-government
efforts in pursuit of Australia’s national interests. Sitting behind that, we
publish critical secret intelligence reports which need to be sent to the right
people at the right time – in the Afghanistan context, that meant making sure
that no time was lost warning people of danger.
Indeed,
our work did save lives. ASIS demonstrated agility, innovation and sheer
tenacity throughout the operation.
Which
brings me to a further dimension of that story – it shows that foreign
intelligence work is a serious business that demands fine judgment, steadfast
nerves and an ability to cope with extreme pressure. Put simply, for ASIS,
people, not machines, generate our greatest impact.
The
events in Afghanistan reflect some future challenges for ASIS, being that the
world is shifting beneath our feet, sometimes faster than we can dance. To
continue our success into the future, ASIS must be able to predict changes and
address them before they become a problem. We must stay one step ahead.
Today
I’m going to address these themes – our mission, our people, our challenges –
by taking a look at where we’ve come from, where we are today, and where we
need to be tomorrow. The past, the present and the future seems an appropriate
structure for any 70th anniversary speech.
ASIS
was created on 13 May 1952. Prime Minister Menzies gave my predecessor - Alfred Deakin Brookes – unprecedented licence to build a team of quiet achievers to
act in Australia’s interests.
Our
founding mission was “to obtain and distribute secret intelligence on foreign
powers” and to “conduct special operations as may be required”. A ‘special
operation’ was broadly described as one that “uses clandestine methods –
normally unacknowledgeable – affording no proof of the instigation, or even
connivance, of the government.” ASIS’s charter, signed by Menzies and framed in
my office, makes it clear that efficiency and secrecy should be central to our
organisation. At the time, Menzies went so far as to articulate that not even
the prime minister should know the identity of our sources, or the case
officers who run them.
R G Casey, the foreign minister at the time said: “A lot of these things seem to be
rather mysterious – but in fact they are not – it is just a matter of helping
the goodies and unhelping the baddies.” Friends, while much has changed over
the last 70 years, I wish to assure you that in the nearly five years as
Director-General ASIS, we still essentially ‘help the goodies and unhelp the
baddies’.
A
lot has changed over 70 years, and we have a more nuanced view of the world.
Just as our alliances are still important to us, the last few months have
underlined that fact that our adversaries are very real, and they do much of
their work in the shadows.
While
our diplomatic colleagues in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and
other government departments, work to progress Australia’s interests by light,
ASIS metaphorically works with and in the shadows. We do not, and will not cede
this domain to our adversaries. Over 70 years, ASIS has become adept at working
in this metaphorical darkness. We lift up stones and peer behind corners to
discover the capabilities and intent of those who would wish to diminish
Australia’s interests in pursuit of their own.
We
operate without home ground advantage against adversaries who are willing to do
whatever it takes, spend whatever it takes, to harm Australia’s interests.
I
have seen the truth of it – our adversaries are spying on us. In Australia and
abroad. And worse, they are seeking to weaken our institutions and bend our
values.
I earnestly believe it is our values as an open democratic,
rule-of-law nation that sets us apart. I stand here in front of you today as a
transparent reflection of those values. ASIS should remain low profile but we
should not have no profile. Without Australians having broader understanding of
ASIS, we won’t be able to succeed in the mission entrusted to us since 1952.
Practically,
this means calibrated engagement with Australians about their secret
intelligence service. It means renewing ASIS’s social license with the public
and assuring them that what we do is bounded by Australian law and is further
bounded by the admixture of propriety, values and interests.
At
its heart, ASIS conducts business that is synonymous with risk. We are built
for this purpose. Not only in terms of our people, the way in which we train
them, our processes and capabilities; but also, in terms of the rigorous
oversight we receive.
These
are some of the foundations that have kept our organisation ‘united in purpose’
and ‘undaunted by new horizons’ over the past 70 years. This brings
me to the present…How to characterise ASIS today.
Over
many years I’ve met many truly impressive Australians. And I’m comfortable
telling you that many of the most dedicated, intelligent and loyal Australians
you could ever meet… are ASIS officers.
With
me and my deputy-director generals excluded, the law protects the identity of
ASIS officers. But because today is special I’ll tell you who they might be…
They might be one of your family members, one of your neighbours, your
classmates or former colleagues. They might be someone you know… but don’t know
completely.
Depending
on the city and the day, they might just be the person next to you on the
train…or indeed next to you in this audience.
I
can also tell you that somewhere in the world, right now, there is an ASIS
officer taking serious risks – albeit deeply considered and mitigated as far as
possible – to protect your rights and interests as an Australian.
Right
now, I know, somewhere out there, maybe far from the comforts we are enjoying
here in Bligh street, ASIS officers are working on strange streets, in bustling
cafes, or hidden from plain view.
Right
now, they are using their training and expert experience to extract secrets
that the Australian Government needs to know, and then quietly, carefully and
covertly sending these secrets home.
Again and again, Australian foreign and defence policy has been informed by our
access to such secrets – sometimes just in the nick of time.
Right
now, for every one of these officers in the field, I have other specialists
back in headquarters, working to conceive, facilitate, protect and process our
operations. They are making sure our work is bound by Australian law, proper,
ethical, valued, and always in the national interest.
My
officers and their families are not doing these things without sacrifice. There
is excitement in our work without doubt, but it comes at a cost. Right now,
there will be ASIS officers feeling the heaviness of the burden they accepted
in a career where they must not discuss their work, even to those nearest and
dearest to them. And there are sharper burdens as well. ASIS’s staff welfare
officers have fielded more than a few calls from worried partners. ASIS has
back-up plans for our back-up plans, and we work hard to ensure things almost
always work out okay. Unlike many organisations, it’s when things don’t work
out okay that ASIS truly bonds.
Intelligence is a team pursuit. The team lifts and falls on the character, resilience and credibility of its members. Those who thrive in ASIS tend to care more about those beside them than in impressing those above them. It’s in these conversations with officers where you hear raw emotions, the passion, and that which motivates action. These characteristics I see in abundance in ASIS.
But let me share with you an uncomfortable truth.
In
the next decade, the work of these officers will become more complex and
challenging.
As we move forward, ASIS will need more officers with more diverse
skills and backgrounds supported by more integrated capabilities. We are going
to need to recruit and work with even more vigour and urgency than at any other
point in our 70-year history. We need scale, agility and contemporary solutions
to meet the new problems we will confront.
This
brings me to the future… What will ASIS’s identity and purpose be going
forward? What are the most telling features of the future espionage
environment? How should ASIS conduct espionage beyond the safety of our shores?
Why would a young person today want to join ASIS next year, in 2030 or beyond?
I have given considerable thought to these questions. I’m happy to share with
you some of our observations. Contained within them are some salutary warnings.
First, high quality intelligence is in very high demand. The need for effective national intelligence – particularly the synthesis of quality collection and assessment - has never been more acute.
The world is experiencing more than just a realignment in power. The global
rules-based order is being manipulated and subverted. The future will likely be
less advantageous to Australia than that we once knew.
The
world within which Australians seek prosperity, safety and sovereignty is
marked by contest. In a difficult world, diplomacy remains vital and, in
parallel, Australia must actively use intelligence to protect and advance its
interests, prudently and determinedly.
Intelligence, with its ability to be covert, deniable and discreet,
can provide government with a suite of options to reduce strategic surprise and
further national objectives abroad – within the lawful bounds of its duties,
and in tandem with diplomacy. In an increasingly complex strategic environment,
this suite of options must necessarily grow to confront the threats we face.
ASIS is ready for this.
ASIS
benefits from espionage opportunities that emerge from the suppressed dissent
within authoritarian states. When leaders abolish fixed political terms, for
example, they become responsible and accountable for everything – including the
disillusionment that emerges from within. This provides us an edge.
We
notice that in closed societies top officials will always reinforce leaders’
biases and assumptions. That, after all, is the safest career path for them.
Speaking truth to power is an enduring strength of our system.
Another
observation though is that, at the same time as our operating environment has
become more competitive and volatile, it has also become increasingly difficult
to conduct human intelligence work. While it remains a core component of
statecraft, it must adapt to meet the extraordinary challenges arising from the
interaction of a complex strategic environment, intensified
counter-intelligence efforts, and emergent and emerging technologies.
For
a service like my own there is a near-existential dimension to technology risk.
The
analogue systems and processes which spies of the past took for granted have
been relegated to history, and we now live in a fundamentally digital era where
our covert activities are increasingly discoverable.
In
this technological sandbox, authoritarian regimes are having a heyday. Those so
inclined are harnessing the booming IT economy to develop myriad forms of
surveillance, and are using them for a range of ends, including public control
and counter-espionage.
We
cannot avoid or fight this wave of digital transformation – we must drop in on
the wave and ride it. Specifically, HUMINT operators need to turn the tables by
mastering technology to meet a range of functions and requirements.
Technologies
from biotechnology, nanotechnology and quantum computing will not only be
challenges but also keys to ASIS’s success.
My
next observation goes to the challenge of ensuring intelligence reporting
effectively informs policy-making, including where that policy is being made
outside of classified systems.
Policymakers
have access to an extraordinary array of sources on which to base their
assessments, develop options, and implement decisions. It is a crowded space
for policymakers who still only have the same number of hours in their working
day. Human intelligence will need to provide the gems that reveal the heart of
key issues and problems and to do this with increasing speed and in
fit-for-purpose formats.
The
private sector is increasingly capable of providing relevant intelligence to
customers.
Within
government we need to differentiate our offerings, and evolve to incorporate
aspects of the commercial intelligence market into our business model.
In this environment ASIS must be more forward-leaning in engaging Australian businesses and industry as we seek to work together to dissect and solve many of the challenges I’m outlining today.
My final observation is that the greatest challenge, but with the greatest
prospective reward, is for intelligence agencies to maximise the human capital
of our people and the collective strength of our partnerships.
Problem-solving
lies at the heart of the intelligence profession. As such all ASIS officers
must have a problem-solving mindset – one that uses imagination and curiosity,
invention and discovery, to understand and describe a problem in a way that
allows it to be solved.
Intelligence
professionals need to be constant innovators, seeking new ways of work to
improve both offence and defence. We won’t always get it right, but that is in
the nature of an agency for which every activity has its own unique attributes.
This
is also why a diverse workforce is so important to ASIS – people from different
backgrounds approach different problems in different ways, and we must harness
this diversity.
Of
course, the golden rule to problem solving is to avoid going it alone. In that
context, our alliances – of which Australia has many - create dramatic strength
in numbers.
The
Five Eyes alliance, in particular, is unparalleled. If you want to measure just
how valuable these alliances are, you only need to consider how much our
adversaries resent them.
Closed
societies engineer their own trust deficit, treating others as transactional,
rather than as genuine partners. 'Wolf warriors' misjudge the intelligence of
citizens around the globe. In that regard, I’m reminded of a quote from Reid
Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn, who said: “No matter how brilliant your mind
or strategy, if you’re playing a solo game you’ll always lose to a team.”
Friends, I started this speech with a true story, about the work of ASIS
officers in Afghanistan as Kabul fell. I have also shared with you some of the
core work we conduct on a daily basis – namely extracting secrets that the
Australian Government needs to know.
Now, to close this speech I’d like to share one last glimpse of
what I have seen ASIS do during my time as Director-General.
I have seen ASIS officers support other Australian government agencies in their efforts to secure the release of Australian hostages… I have seen ASIS officers provide unwavering support to the defence mission in various conflict zones around the world. There, they worked tirelessly to obtain intelligence to protect the lives of civilians and military personnel.
I
have seen ASIS officers help disrupt terrorist attacks that saved the lives of
civilians, including Australians, putting themselves in harm’s way to do so… I
have seen our officers obtain exquisite intelligence that gives government
insight on the most pressing national security issues and saves government
considerable expenditure… I have seen our officers disrupt unsafe maritime
ventures, saving the lives of men, women and children who were risking their
lives at sea… I have seen ASIS officers obtain access in the most denied of
locations, behind the lines at night if you will. And I have seen ASIS officers
staring down the hardest of targets without blinking...
All
of these experiences, of which I am privileged to share in, form a part of the
story of where the Service is today. And I am truly proud of the work we have
done.
But
as always, there is more to be done, and ASIS now must adopt considered and
comprehensive transformation. Foreign intelligence services need to modernize –
and ASIS is no exception. If they fall behind adversaries, they will, at worst,
generate rather than mitigate national risk.
Transformation
will ensure ASIS remains fit-for-purpose, and will be best able to support
Government and Australia’s interests. It is vital we remain sharp, integrated
and able to generate significant advantage and impact amidst increasing
uncertainty.
Recognising
that we are a sharp tool, not a broad brush, ASIS must be selective and
discerning in its objectives to continue making a unique contribution to
government.
Through
effective prioritisation we must ultimately end up doing select priority tasks
exceptionally well.
Friends,
the challenge is great, the risk is real, the threat is growing. I start some
days in my job apprehensive about what the future has in store for ASIS, but I
finish every day more invigorated than apprehensive.
I
am surrounded each and every day by the exceptional officers of Australia’s
Secret Intelligence Service. Our people operate where others do not, will not
or cannot; they achieve what others think to be impossible. My officers are
professional, capable and accountable individuals who typify resilience,
tenacity, and above all else - service. Every day I am reminded that
Australia’s current and future ‘quiet achievers’ – are up for and will be up
for – the tasks that await us now and into the future.
For more information on the Lowy Address, please visit https://www.lowyinstitute.org/publications/foreign-espionage-australian-perspective”
Further reading, see ASIS History which is on the ASIS website.
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