Anonymous ID: 0bac59 Q Research AUSTRALIA #22: THIS IS NOT ANOTHER 3-YEAR ELECTION Edition April 8, 2022, 10:15 p.m. No.16040627   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Welcome To Q Research AUSTRALIA

 

A new thread for research and discussion of Australia's role in The Great Awakening.

 

Previous thread

>>15592235 Q Research AUSTRALIA #21

 

Q's Posts made on Q Research AUSTRALIA threads

Wednesday 11.20.2019

>>7358352 ————————————–——– These people are stupid.

>>7358338 ————————————–——– All assets [F + D] being deployed.

>>7358318 ————————————–——– What happens when the PUBLIC discovers the TRUTH [magnitude] re: [D] party corruption?

 

Tuesday 11.19.2019

>>7357790 ————————————–——– FISA goes both ways.

 

Saturday 11.16.2019

>>7356270 ————————————–——– There is no escaping God.

>>7356265 ————————————–——– The Harvest [crop] has been prepared and soon will be delivered to the public for consumption.

 

Friday 11.15.2019

>>7356017 ————————————–——– "Whistle Blower Traps" [Mar 4 2018] 'Trap' keyword select provided…..

 

Thursday 03.28.2019

>>5945210 ————————————–——– Sometimes our 'sniffer' picks and pulls w/o applying credit file

>>5945074 ————————————–——– We LOVE you!

>>5944970 ————————————–——– USA v. LifeLog?

>>5944908 ————————————–——– It is an embarrassment to our Nation!

>>5944859 ————————————–——– 'Knowingly'

 

Q's Posts referencing Australia

https://qanon.pub/?q=AUS

https://qanon.pub/?q=australia

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https://qanon.pub/?q=remain%20in%20the%20light

 

Q's Posts referencing Australian citizens

Malcolm Turnbull (X/AUS)

Former Prime Minister of Australia, 2015 to 2018

https://qanon.pub/?q=X%2FAUS

https://qanon.pub/?q=call%20details

https://qanon.pub/?q=Threat%20to%20AUS

 

Alexander Downer

Former Australian Liberal Party politician and former Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom

https://qanon.pub/?q=Downer

 

Cardinal George Pell

Australian Cardinal of the Catholic Church and former Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy

https://qanon.pub/?q=Pell

https://qanon.pub/?q=cardinal-george-pell

https://qanon.pub/?q=pecking

 

Julian Assange

Australian activist, founder, editor and publisher of WikiLeaks

https://qanon.pub/?q=assange

https://qanon.pub/?q=JA

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https://qanon.pub/?q=WL

https://qanon.pub/?q=wikileaks

https://qanon.pub/?q=server

https://qanon.pub/?q=Seth

https://qanon.pub/?q=SR

 

Virginia Roberts Giuffre

American-Australian survivor of the sex trafficking ring operated by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell

https://qanon.pub/#4568

https://qanon.pub/#4728

https://qanon.pub/#1054

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https://qanon.pub/?q=epstein

https://qanon.pub/?q=island

https://qanon.pub/#1001

https://qanon.pub/#1861

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https://qanon.pub/#3497

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https://qanon.pub/#4579

https://qanon.pub/#4907

https://qanon.pub/#4911

https://qanon.pub/#4921

https://qanon.pub/?q=Dearest%20Virginia

 

Q's Posts referencing The Five Eyes intelligence alliance (FVEY)

An anglophone intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States

https://qanon.pub/?q=FVEY

https://qanon.pub/?q=Five%20Eyes

https://qanon.pub/?q=Interesting%2C

https://qanon.pub/?q=RAT%20BAIT

 

"Does AUS stand w/ the US or only select divisions within the US?"

Q

Nov 25 2018

https://qanon.pub/#2501

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:16 p.m. No.16040634   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Notables

are not endorsements

 

#21 - Part 1

Australian Politics and Society - Part 1

>>15592354 ASIO foils foreign spy plot to disrupt federal election

>>15592359 Video: ASIO foils spy plot ahead of election - Sky News Australia

>>15592385 Dating apps like Tinder and anti-COVID vaccine mandate protests drawing ASIO's attention, according to annual threat assessment

>>15592355 ASIO DIRECTOR-GENERAL'S ANNUAL THREAT ASSESSMENT 2022

>>15592406 Chinese state-affiliated hackers attack local media group

>>15592421 US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says Australia demonstrated best of humanity - His step-father arrived as a teenage refugee from Poland after the Holocaust with no education, graduated from University of Melbourne

>>15600521 Quad ministers address Indo-Pacific 'coercion', climate, COVID

>>15600547 Chinese spies in plot to install ALP candidates at coming federal election

>>15600564 ‘Reckless and desperate’: Malcolm Turnbull savages Peter Dutton for claiming China is backing Labor

>>15600577 Australia deploys diplomatic resources to fight Chinese and Russian 'disinformation' on AUKUS submarine deal

 

>>15600598 Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union joins Noam Chomsky in protest of AUKUS nuclear subs deal - Anthony Albanese under pressure to distance himself from one of Australia’s biggest unions as it protests the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal

>>15608332 Video: 60 Minutes’ Liam Bartlett in fiery clash with Trump-backed Republican candidate Kari Lake

>>15608804 Neo-Nazi in propaganda video burning an Aboriginal flag unmasked as former Young Liberal, Stefan Eracleous

>>15615627 Australian embassy in Kyiv evacuated as Russia invasion of Ukraine feared

>>15625898 Disinformation a ‘threat to poll’, says AFP chief Reece Kershaw

>>15640390 West Australian ban thwarts AUKUS submarines tour - A high-level AUKUS delegation to Australia to help fast-track the nation’s nuclear submarines has been forced to postpone a planned visit to Western Australia’s HMAS Stirling – home of the Collins-class subs – due to the McGowan government’s strict quarantine requirements

>>15640432 Australia looks to landlocked Czech Republic to win European support for contentious AUKUS submarine plan

>>15640478 Military air bases fast tracked for upgrade as Australia joins US Pacific push - Australian military bases and airstrips are to be upgraded as US forces look for more part-time homes for their combat aircraft, troops and ships

>>15648202 U.S. reassured of Australian alliance regardless of election outcome - Daniel Kritenbrink, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs

>>15648246 British Home Secretary Priti Patel hires Australia's Alexander Downer, ex-minister for Foreign Affairs, in bid to help solve UK Border crisis

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:16 p.m. No.16040638   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 2

Australian Politics and Society - Part 2

>>15648472 (2011) Australian delegation meeting with US Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper

>>15656287 Australia intends to list Hamas as terrorist organisation - Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews

>>15680632 'Welcome back world!': Australia fully reopens borders after two years - 2 February 2022

>>15683946 Aussie entertainment giant Neil Balnaves dies in boating accident

>>15689241 Victorian Labor braces for Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) report into dealings between the Andrews government and the United Firefighters Union

>>15697731 Video: Australia imposes sanctions on Russia over Ukraine invasion

>>15697830 It’s time to put Putin’s useful idiots on notice - Craig Kelly and Simeon Boikov / Aussie Cossack

>>15708019 Scott Morrison has condemned Vladimir Putin after Russia invaded Ukraine

>>15708027 Embassy of Russia in Australia - Comment on the introduction of a new package of anti-Russian sanctions by Australia

>>15718085 Putin’s paramilitary proxies in Australia - Simeon ‘The Aussie Cossack’ Boikov - Jack the Insider (Peter Hoysted) - theaustralian.com.au

 

>>15727210 U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken Tweet: I spoke today with Foreign Minister @MarisePayne to discuss our mutual efforts to hold the Russian government accountable for its premeditated and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

>>15727210 Foreign Minister Marise Payne Tweet: Important call with @SecBlinken today, discussing the vital, united (global) response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. (Australia) has announced further sanctions including preparing sanctions against President Putin & FM Sergei Lavrov. Russia’s egregious aggression on Ukraine must stop.

>>15735495 ‘Lethal aid’: Australia’s vow to help Ukraine - Australia will provide funding through NATO for weapons and offensive capability rather than sending its own weaponry

>>15743566 Kevin Rudd Tweet: Donald Trump is a traitor to the West. Murdoch was Trump’s biggest backer. And Murdoch’s Fox Television backs Putin too. What rancid treachery.

>>15751354 Lethal aid to Ukraine will make major difference in fight against Russian invasion: Volodymyr Shalkivskyi, top Ukrainian diplomat in Australia

>>15751375 PM warns Australians wanting to fight in Ukraine against entering into ‘suicide missions’

>>15751483 Video: The rescue effort in Lismore was like nothing I’ve seen in Australia - Catherine Naylor, Deputy opinion editor - Sydney Morning Herald

>>15751492 Q Post #4356 - https://twitter.com/MattFinnFNC/status/1266780532681199622 - Humanity at its finest. Q

>>15761198 Prime Minister Scott Morrison tests positive to Covid-19 - 1 March 2022

>>15772763 Joe Biden’s bid to unite Quad on Russia - Joe Biden calls a snap Quad security bloc meeting after India declined to condemn Vladimir Putin’s brutal invasion of Ukraine

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:17 p.m. No.16040639   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 3

Australian Politics and Society - Part 3

>>15778970 Quad leaders hold talks on Ukraine conflict, warn against similar shows of force in Indo-Pacific

>>15778992 Pine Gap - jointly run US and Australian defence intelligence facility in Alice Springs likely gathering intelligence about Russia's next moves in Ukraine

>>15783322 Former Australian international cricketer Shane Warne dies of a suspected heart attack in Thailand, aged 52

>>15787779 Department of Defence Tweet: Secretary of the Department of Defence Greg Moriarty met with @DepSecDef Dr Kathleen Hicks to advance our security alliance. Australia and the US are committed to supporting an Indo-Pacific region that is stable, prosperous and resilient.

>>15787779 Department of Defence Tweet: The Secretary of the Department of Defence, Greg Moriarty, and @DepSecDef discussed AU and US united responses to Russia’s aggression against Ukraine.

>>15792242 How a spreadsheet became a lifesaver in Lismore's flood crisis - Sally Flannery and the Support Lismore Small Business Facebook group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/supportlismore/

>>15792631 Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks with Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskiy

>>15792631 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy Tweet: I continue negotiations with partners. Told (Australian) Prime Minister @ScottMorrisonMP about the course of war. As well as risks to people and the environment due to the threat to Ukrainian nuclear and chemical facilities. Thanked for the defense and humanitarian support. #StopRussia

>>15792631 Prime Minister Scott Morrison Tweet: Just spoke with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy. He thanked Australia for our military & humanitarian support & extensive sanctions. We discussed ways we could assist further. I praised Ukraine’s courage against Russia’s aggression & condemned Russia’s actions on behalf of us all.

>>15795568 Peter Dutton warns of Putin's territorial ambition, government MP James Paterson cites nuclear danger in Ukraine conflict

 

>>15802890 Video: PM says no nuclear submarine decision before election, as new subs base planned for Australia's east coast

>>15819099 Video: 'I won't cop that': PM defends ADF while declaring floods a national emergency

>>15819116 Video: Foreign Minister Marise Payne reveals Australia is placing further sanctions on Russia, targeting "propagandists and purveyors of disinformation"

>>15827076 Australian Defence Force to grow to largest size since Vietnam War, increasing by nearly 20,000 people by 2040

>>15827088 Stronger Defence Force makes for stronger disaster recovery: Morrison

>>15827358 Victorian Labor senator Kimberley Kitching dies suddenly of a suspected heart attack in Melbourne aged 52

>>15836667 Former far-right political candidate Teresa van Lieshout claims mental health defence, but no illness, in ‘government overthrow’ case

>>15851464 Shane Warne memorial service delivers a budget googly - Morrison government rethinking budget strategy amid suspicion that Victorian Labor Premier Dan Andrews deliberately scheduled memorial service to overshadow budget

>>15852735 PM rejects criticism he was 'too slow' to act in crisis events

>>15854162 Video: Riccardo Bosi Speech in Canberra “we need 5 million protesters” - Aussie Novax

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:17 p.m. No.16040641   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 4

Australian Politics and Society - Part 4

>>15859591 Australian government under pressure to cut fuel excise as election nears

>>15859797 Australia and Netherlands seek millions from Russia in global aviation tribunal over MH17 attack

>>15866446 Facebook's parent company Meta plans Australian election ramp-up as it prepares for rise in misinformation and threats against politicians

>>15873706 How Labor’s ‘mean girls’ ostracised Kimberley Kitching - The ALP Senator endured a pattern of hostility, isolation and cruel treatment by senior Labor colleagues that put her under stress for a long time before she died.

>>15873733 Video: Scott Morrison urges Anthony Albanese to address ‘distressing’ allegations of bullying, mistreatment of Kimberley Kitching

>>15873762 Video: Former ALP member Michael Danby, one of Labor's own, SLAMS 'mean girl' gang’s treatment of Kimberly Kitching - as Scott Morrison urges his rival for the nation’s top job to act

>>15873791 Video: Ex Labor MP Michael Danby backs claims Kimberley Kitching was bullied within ALP

>>15881249 Lawyers for the man accused of raping Brittany Higgins seek to halt trial, shut down media reporting

>>15881539 US to send up to 2,200 troops to Northern Territory as China tensions build

>>15881563 Hundreds of US Army servicemen and women are set to be deployed to the Northern Territory with the US Marines - The first time US Army personnel will join the annual Marine Rotational Force deployment in Darwin

 

>>15881570 US Marines begin arriving in Australia for another six-month training mission

>>15881581 United States Marines have begun arriving in the Northern Territory to commence the eleventh annual rotation of the Marine Rotational Force – Darwin (MRF-D)

>>15881594 Marine Rotational Force – Darwin Facebook Post - “It is an honor to build upon the continuing legacy of the outstanding U.S.-Australian alliance and AUKUS agreement,” said Colonel Chris Steele, the MRF-D Commanding Officer. “We are excited to serve as the first regimental headquarters to lead MRF-D as I MEF assumes this mission, and integrate two highly capable and interoperable forces that advance our shared goals, demonstrate the strength and endurance of our alliance, and contribute to regional security.” #USMC #MRFD #ADF

>>15881975 Anthony Albanese refuses to investigate allegations of bullying, isolation and hostility by senior female ALP Senate colleagues towards the late Kimberley Kitching, dismissing her “mean girls’’ description of Penny Wong, Katy Gallagher and Kristina Keneally as sexist and “extraordinarily disrespectful’’

>>15882003 Pattern of Kimberley Kitching hostilities sank to ‘grotesque, foul’ gibes - “If you had children, you might understand,” Penny Wong shot at Kimberley Kitching during a heated meeting attended by senior Labor politicians in 2019

>>15882028 Kimberley Kitching disclosed allegations Senate Labor colleagues bullied her months before her death - Labor senator Kimberley Kitching told a parliament-employed workplace trainer she was being bullied by Senate Labor colleagues, according to multiple ALP sources

>>15882046 Penny Wong to attend Kimberley Kitching’s funeral after revelations she was set to go to an ALP fundraiser in the Northern Territory on the same day

>>15882056 Labor will assess its culture in wake of Kimberley Kitching treatment claims: Deputy Opposition Leader Richard Marles

>>15889618 Revealed: the ‘bad’ Kimberley Kitching texts about Penny Wong and her bullying complaints - Labor senator Kimberley Kitching sent a text saying Penny Wong never wanted to see her again the night before she lodged a bullying complaint with workplace safety consultants

>>15889627 Labor senators Penny Wong, Kristina Keneally and Katy Gallagher make joint statement about Kimberley Kitching bullying allegations - "The allegations of bullying are untrue," the three senators said in a joint statement - "Other assertions which have been made are similarly inaccurate."

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:18 p.m. No.16040643   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 5

Australian Politics and Society - Part 5

>>15889629 Former Labor Party MP Emma Husar raises fresh accusations of "toxic culture" within the party, says stress of being "bullied by powerbrokers" caused her to develop a heart condition

>>15889642 Video: Former Labor MP Emma Husar adds to the ‘Kimberley Kitching mean girls controversy’ - Sky News Australia

>>15889667 Video: Ally Langdon unloads on Labor deputy leader, Richard Marles over Kimberley Kitching bullying claims - After a Labor MP appeared to duck questions over bullying claims, the Today host Ally Langdon blew up

>>15889674 Video: Deputy Labor leader questioned over party bullying claims - Deputy Opposition Leader Richard Marles has faced hard-hitting questions from Today host Ally Langdon after Labor was hit with fresh bullying accusations from former MP Emma Husar - 9 News Australia

>>15889735 Facebook, Instagram parent company Meta sued by Australian Competition and Consumer Commission over scam ads featuring Dick Smith, David Koch

>>15889738 Australia sanctions Russian billionaires with mining industry links - Oleg Deripaska and Viktor Vekselberg

>>15889761 ‘Utterly misleading’: The Star Sydney casino hid $900m in gambling transactions from banks - disguised Chinese debit card gambling transactions as hotel expenses

>>15889766 The Star Sydney casino may struggle to keep casino licence after shocking evidence

>>15890020 Video: Disability carer Rosa Maria Maione sentenced to six years' jail for manslaughter by criminal neglect of NDIS client Ann Marie Smith

>>15890031 Rosa Maione's six-year jail sentence for Ann Marie Smith's manslaughter by criminal neglect 'inadequate' - Disability advocates describe a six-year jail term for a carer who killed her client by neglect as "a slap in the face"

 

>>15896183 Kimberley Kitching’s written plea on Labor’s ‘campaign of bullying’ delivered by hand to Senator Kristina Keneally – deputy leader of the Opposition in the Senate – on June 21, 2021.

>>15896196 Kimberley Kitching's death has exposed allegations of bad behaviour in Labor ranks, stopping Albanese's momentum in its tracks

>>15896201 Anthony Albanese’s MPs back Kimberley Kitching bullying probe - Growing numbers of Labor MPs are backing an independent inquiry into allegations Kimberley Kitching was bullied by her Senate colleagues and raised concerns about the “rotten” culture within the party’s senior circles

>>15896202 ‘Gone into hiding’: PM whacks Albo over ‘mean girls’ claims - Anthony Albanese has been accused of “going into hiding” in response to bullying allegations inside the Labor Party.

>>15896211 Scott Morrison wins back women’s support - PM recovers lost ground with women voters and has built up a larger lead over Anthony Albanese on the question of preferred prime minister, despite an onslaught of criticism on various gender issues

>>15896217 Mean Girls thrive because weak men do and say nothing - Janet Albrechtsen - theaustralian.com.au

>>15896950 Video: ADF members subjected to verbal abuse from residents during NSW flood recovery efforts

>>15897000 Kimberley Kitching’s role in Wolverine group to highlight China’s threats to Australia - Kimberley Kitching was a member of the ‘Wolverines’, a group of MPs working to highlight China’s threats to Australia. This is how they operate and what may come next

>>15903290 Video: Penny Wong denies bullying Kimberley Kitching

>>15903293 Video: Labor Senator Penny Wong denies bullying colleague Kimberley Kitching following ‘mean girls’ claim

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:18 p.m. No.16040648   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 6

Australian Politics and Society - Part 6

>>15903295 ALP leader Anthony Albanese defers to party process amid call for probe into party bullying

>>15903298 Video: Morrison deflects Liberals' defeat in SA away from federal election

>>15909930 Video: Labor senator Kimberley Kitching remembered at funeral service after 'great shock and sadness' of her death aged 52 - abc.net.au

>>15909932 Video: Labor Senator Kimberley Kitching remembered at funeral service - 9 News Australia

>>15909934 Video: Kimberley Kitching's husband delivers touching tribute at emotional funeral service - Sky News Australia

>>15909936 Kitching’s husband takes aim at Labor’s ‘cantankerous cabal’ at funeral

>>15911774 Creation of an Australian Space Force opens up a new frontier, says Peter Dutton

>>15911815 Defence Minister Peter Dutton flags future US-style Space Force for Australia

>>15916612 Chinese, Russian space capabilities ‘scare’ new Australian space commander

>>15916631 Australia's media regulator will be able to force Big Tech companies to share data about how they have handled misinformation and disinformation under new laws

 

>>15916652 Video: ‘Chattering classes’: Australian government dismisses UN secretary general António Guterres’ climate criticism - "A handful of holdouts, such as Australia"

>>15916705 Alleged sex ‘cult’ leader James-Robert Davis’ slavery charges withdrawn, a slew of alternate charges laid

>>15916711 NSW MP Gareth Ward charged with sexual violence; Premier Dominic Perrottet seeks his resignation from parliament

>>15916734 Kimberley Kitching stood apart from the ‘useful idiots’ - Angelica Snowden and Damon Johnston - theaustralian.com.au

>>15916742 There are many questions, and Kimberley Kitching deserves answers - Troy Bramston - theaustralian.com.au

>>15916756 Video: PM slams Albanese as ‘gutless’ over Kitching bullying claim ahead of Labor preselection bloodbath

>>15916764 Video: Anthony Albanese ‘gutless’ on Labor’s toxic culture - Prime Minister Scott Morrison says Labor can’t hide from the allegations of a “toxic culture” within the party’s ranks

>>15924369 Barefaced hypocrisy: Feckless reporting by female media clique - Janet Albrechtsen - theaustralian.com.au

>>15924382 Kimberley Kitching inquiry calls leave ALP split - Former union leader and Labor MP Jennie George has joined calls for an independent inquiry into allegations the late Kimberley Kitching was bullied by the party’s Senate leadership team

>>15924407 Video: Albanese holds firm on decision not to call inquiry into Kimberley Kitching's bullying allegations

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:18 p.m. No.16040650   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 7

Australian Politics and Society - Part 7

>>15924447 Video: ‘What are you afraid of?’ Albo grilled on Mean Girls claim - Labor leader Anthony Albanese grilled by Today host Karl Stefanovic, with a previous “promise” thrown back at him

>>15924467 Deputy Labor leader Richard Marles says Kimberley Kitching “never” made a bullying complaint to him during their regular discussions before her sudden death.

>>15924473 Labor deputy leader Richard Marles says no complaint made, no call for action from Kimberley Kitching

>>15932290 US and Australia accuse Russia of war crimes, as Moscow and Washington expel diplomats

>>15932317 Video: Prime Minister Scott Morrison joins growing chorus of Hillsong Church allies to distance themselves from founder Brian Houston

>>15932328 PM ‘shocked and disappointed’ by Houston resignation, not been a Hillsong member for 15 years

>>15932331 NSW MP Gareth Ward suspended from parliament over historic sexual abuse charges after he refused to resign

>>15932346 Admiral John Aquilino, Commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM) Cements the Importance of U.S-Australian Alliance

>>15932409 US Space Force chief appointed by former president Donald Trump wants closer Australian cooperation - US Chief of Space Operations General John Raymond

>>15934513 Video: Anthony Albanese grilled about Kimberley Kitching bullying allegations - Sky News Australia

 

>>15934553 OPINION: Loyal Labor lieutenant? Why Kimberley Kitching had trust issues - Niki Savva - theage.com.au

>>15934601 Labor’s weaponising of abuse claims comes home to roost - 'The Mocker' - theaustralian.com.au

>>15940061 Adelaide’s Osborne submarine shipyard to triple in size as Federal Government moves to secure space needed for AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine build

>>15940079 Cyber attacks ‘could trigger ANZUS’, says Anne Neuberger, White House’s Deputy National Security Adviser for Cyber and Emerging Technologies

>>15940127 In Australia, Chief of Space Operations, General John Raymond highlights importance of space, need for allies

>>15940174 Jenny Morrison welcomes Coalition’s $58m for endometriosis treatment - A crippling disease affecting one in nine Australian women will be tackled by the federal government in next week’s budget and it has the backing of Australia’s First Lady Jenny Morrison

>>15940274 'Run to the end, the race is just about to start': Morrison vs Albanese in the lead-up to the 2022 federal election - Jonathan Kearsley - 9news.com.au

>>15946813 When it comes to the crunch, Labor is failing women - Gemma Togini - theaustralian.com.au

>>15946827 All women must be believed – unless they’re on the other side - Chris Kenny - theaustralian.com.au

>>15947701 United States Space Force Lands In Exmouth, Western Australia - Head of the United States Space Force (USSF), General John Raymond visits Western Australian town of Exmouth to see U.S.-Australia space cooperation firsthand

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:19 p.m. No.16040653   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 8

Australian Politics and Society - Part 8

>>15955043 Katy Gallagher breaks silence after Kimberley Kitching bullying allegations

>>15955049 Video: 'I don't think I did anything': Katy Gallagher says she did not 'deserve' 'mean girls' term - Sky News Australia

>>15957002 Kimberley Kitching was warned Penny Wong wanted to boot her from key ALP committee - Sharri Markson - theaustralian.com.au

>>15957046 Justice for Kimberley Kitching lost to Anthony Albanese’s ambition - Sharri Markson - theaustralian.com.au

>>15961875 Video: Senators accused of bullying Kitching address allegations in Parliament - Sky News Australia

>>15961917 Labor senator Kimberley Kitching remembered in teary parliamentary tribute

>>15961948 SA Senator Penny Wong delivers condolence speech for colleague Kimberley Kitching

>>15961962 Video: Penny Wong remembers Kimberley Kitching in Senate motion - Sky News Australia

>>15961978 ‘No friend in me’: Keneally warns those who use Kimberley Kitching’s death for political gain

>>15961991 Video: Kristina Keneally pays tribute to Kimberley Kitching - Sky News Australia

 

>>15962023 Two years of ‘micro-aggressions’: Kitching felt frozen out by Labor - Aaron Patrick - afr.com

>>15962203 Australian Government Department of Defence - Defence Minister Peter Dutton marked the 75th anniversary of the Australian Signals Directorate by opening a new facility for the signals intelligence agency in Canberra last week

>>15964412 Election 2022: Scott Morrison seeks a way through social media quagmire

>>15964503 Kimberley Kitching tensions remain after Penny Wong leads tributes - Sarah Ison and Jess Malcolm - theaustralian.com.au

>>15968221 Video: SNEAK PEEK: Is Trump Back? | Under Investigation Australia - 60 Minutes Australia

>>15968668 Video: CEO of The Star Entertainment Group Matt Bekier resigns effective immediately following damning allegations aired during public hearings into casino operation

>>15968672 Star Entertainment let billionaire Chinese property developer Phillip Dong Fang Lee gamble, prioritising ‘making money’, despite money laundering suspicions

>>15968687 Prime Minister Scott Morrison marks 70th anniversary of the ANZUS Alliance by announcing the new Cyber and Critical Technology Intelligence Centre within the Office of National Intelligence, as US President Joe Biden declares ANZUS “essential to our shared safety and prosperity”

>>15968784 Lieutenant General Steven Rudder, Commander of Marine Corps Forces Pacific (MARFORPAC), visited the Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D) and the Australian Northern Command on March 25

>>15974687 Video: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to address Australian parliament

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:19 p.m. No.16040654   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 9

Australian Politics and Society - Part 9

>>15975097 $10b will buy Australia ‘strike back’ power against cyber enemies: Australian Signals Directorate Director-General Rachel Noble

>>15975106 Australian Federal Police launch election security task force to ensure the security of MPs and candidates during the upcoming federal election

>>15981603 LIVE: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addresses Australian Parliament - ABC News (Australia) - 31 March 2022

>>15981807 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stuns with Australian Parliament address

>>15981852 Threats from rogue states and crims rising: Australian Signals Directorate head Rachel Noble

>>15989158 Video: Volodymyr Zelenskyy asks for Australian Bushmaster armoured vehicles in address to federal parliament

>>15989255 Video: ‘Remember MH17’, Volodymyr Zelensky tells Australian parliament in historic address

>>15989480 Bruce Lehrmann, the man charged with raping Brittany Higgins in Parliament House, has applied for his trial to be permanently halted in the ACT Supreme Court

>>15989529 Leftist warriors pick and choose their moments of outrage - Chris Kenny - theaustralian.com.au

>>15989620 Labor hypocrisy on Solomons deal tests friendship - Kevin Rudd reckons the Solomons is taking China’s cash because it’s dissatisfied with our climate change stance. Does he realise that’s at odds with Richard Marles’ comments? - 'The Mocker' - theaustralian.com.au

>>15994515 Australia to sign trade deal with India as Coalition clears decks for election

 

>>15994538 Video: Australia-India trade agreement has opened one of ‘the biggest economic doors’: Prime Minister Scott Morrison - Sky News Australia

>>15995708 AUKUS submarine deal gets a boost in US Congress - Senior US politicians form AUKUS Working Group, solely dedicated to advancing the three-way alliance between America, Britain and Australia.

>>16008490 Video: Peter Gutwein quits politics leaving Tasmanian Liberals to pick new Premier

>>16008495 Video: Tasmanian Premier Peter Gutwein has announced he is resigning from politics - Mr Gutwein, 57, says the “time is right” to pursue other interests

>>16014964 Defence Minister Peter Dutton puts new strike force on fast track - Australian fighter jets and naval vessels will be armed sooner with new long-range strike missiles

>>16014984 How AUKUS has brought an alliance revolution to Australia - AUKUS acknowledged the end of US primacy in the Pacific, replaced by strategic competition and a far more complex deterrent alliance for Australia - Peter Dean - afr.com

>>16021989 Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom have vowed to expand cooperation on hypersonic weapons under the AUKUS

>>16022014 PDF: AUKUS leaders report on progress after six months: Implementation of the Australia – United Kingdom – United States

Partnership (AUKUS)

>>16022033 Video: Top cyber spy Rachel Noble sits down with Sky News as Australian Signals Directorate turns 75

>>16028290 Anthony Albanese calls on government to kick out Russian diplomats - Atrocities in the Ukrainian town of Bucha have prompted the Opposition’s call to join with EU nations and kick Russian diplomats out of Australia

>>16028297 Australian diplomats warn Prime Minister Scott Morrison: Expelling Russian diplomats could put Australian lives at risk in Moscow

>>16034737 Russia bans Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese from entering the country

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:20 p.m. No.16040655   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 10

Australian Defence Force Afghanistan Inquiry and Ben Roberts-Smith Defamation Trial - Part 1

>>15600712 Ben Roberts-Smith described alleged execution of Afghan teen as 'beautiful thing', court hears

>>15640446 Ben Roberts-Smith trial: SAS Soldier tells court at least two men pulled from tunnel in Afghanistan compound - Ben Roberts-Smith told court “There were no people in the tunnel at Whiskey 108”

>>15648230 Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial told of ‘bullet in the head’ threat to ex-SAS soldier

>>15656298 Soldier tells court he didn't 'fabricate' Ben Roberts-Smith death threats

>>15680825 Army officer tells Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial VC recipient threatened to 'smash his face in'

>>15689163 Former soldier tells court Ben Roberts-Smith ordered mock execution of unarmed prisoner during training exercise

>>15697917 ‘Weak dog’: Private eye and former policeman John McLeod denies leaking to the media, turns on Ben Roberts-Smith in court

>>15708130 Ben Roberts-Smith told another soldier in Afghanistan ‘I just want to kill’, showed photos of dead insurgents on his iPod, court hears

>>15727122 A vigilant Commonwealth government keeps watchful eyes on the Roberts-Smith case - Afghanistan war crimes investigations ongoing

>>15743221 Ben Roberts-Smith kicked an unarmed and handcuffed man off a cliff, says witness

 

>>15751401 Former soldier objects to answering questions on alleged murder in Ben Roberts-Smith case

>>15761426 Ben Roberts-Smith’s accuser risked his life in Taliban battle but ‘politics’ robbed him of top medal, court hears

>>15770041 Tensions boil in Ben Roberts-Smith trial as soldier says he was ‘manipulated’

>>15779131 Ben Roberts-Smith checked whether drone recorded events on day of alleged murders, court told

>>15787690 SAS senior command knew in 2013 of allegations Ben Roberts-Smith kicked detainee off cliff, court hears

>>15802905 SAS soldier cried describing Roberts-Smith kicking man off cliff, court told

>>15810421 'Toxic' SAS was like 'country wives club' and 'rumour mill', Ben Roberts-Smith trial hears

>>15819129 Afghan man with prosthetic leg ‘marched off’ by Roberts-Smith before being killed, court told

>>15819137 SAS soldier sensationally accused of war crimes after an anonymous threat was aired in Ben Roberts-Smith’s defamation trial

>>15836644 Ben Roberts-Smith was a 'bully' and VC was given in error, former SAS patrol commander tells court

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:20 p.m. No.16040658   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 11

Australian Defence Force Afghanistan Inquiry and Ben Roberts-Smith Defamation Trial - Part 2

>>15859641 ‘Did we just witness an execution?’: Former SAS soldier describes alleged killing by Ben Roberts-Smith

>>15866438 Ben Roberts-Smith machine-gunned Afghan with prosthetic leg as ‘an exhibition execution’, witness alleges

>>15881223 Ben Roberts-Smith trial hears claims war veteran wanted to 'choke a man to death with my bare hands'

>>15881925 ‘Bit rich’ for Roberts-Smith to back mental health charity, soldier tells court

>>15889909 SAS whistleblower could not ignore war crime allegation against Ben Roberts-Smith, court hears

>>15916667 SAS whistle blower denies speaking to media about alleged war crimes in Afghanistan as a move to "tarnish" the reputation of decorated veteran Ben Roberts-Smith

>>15916673 Ben Roberts-Smith's former girlfriend tells defamation trial he punched her in face in Canberra hotel room

>>15932396 MP Andrew Hastie tells court Ben Roberts-Smith had a reputation for bullying fellow soldier

>>15940091 Andrew Hastie ‘pities’ Ben Roberts-Smith, tells court alleged SAS war crimes were ’incentivised’

>>15945927 I blew the whistle on VC hero Ben Roberts-Smith, says Andrew Hastie

 

>>15962224 Roberts-Smith in 'alternate universe': MP Andrew Hastie - Government MP and former soldier Andrew Hastie has defended speaking to journalists about alleged war crimes, saying he wanted to shed light on the situation

>>15968651 Legal stoush after key witness attempts to avoid testifying at Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial

>>15968660 ‘Self incrimination of the gravest kind’: SAS witness may be compelled to give ’murder’ evidence at Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial

>>15975044 SAS witness who allegedly murdered an Afghan prisoner under orders from war veteran Ben Roberts-Smith has not been forced by the Federal Court to speak about the mission

>>15981895 Roberts-Smith punched SAS soldier in jaw and ordered mock execution, court told

>>15989384 Ex-soldier tells court he didn't fabricate allegations against Ben Roberts-Smith to hide his own 'abysmal failure'

>>16002446 Roberts-Smith trial enters ‘Heart of Darkness’ territory - "Some guys went up the Congo, the others didn’t."

>>16008514 SAS soldier told Ben Roberts-Smith to ‘pull his head in’ over alleged mock execution, court hears

>>16015002 Ben Roberts-Smith and patrol let down by ‘weak leadership’ in SAS, court hears

>>16034770 Roberts-Smith may have ‘colluded’ with witnesses in defamation case, court told

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:20 p.m. No.16040659   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 12

Malka Leifer Extradition and Prosecution

>>15881939 Trial of former Adass Israel school principal Malka Leifer on charges relating to child sexual abuse will not take place until late October this year at the earliest

 

#21 - Part 13

Julian Assange Indictment and Extradition

>>15859598 Julian Assange set to marry in Belmarsh prison - WikiLeaks founder will tie the knot with Stella Moris on 23 March, wearing a kilt designed by Vivienne Westwood

>>15866464 PDF: U.K. Supreme Court Says Assange Cannot Appeal His Extradition to U.S. - Court refuses permission to appeal “because the application does not raise an arguable point of law”

>>15903348 ‘I want the kids to see Australia’: Meet Stella Moris, Julian Assange’s fiancee

>>15932377 ‘Very happy, very sad’: An emotional Stella Moris has married Julian Assange in Britain’s maximum-security prison HMP Belmarsh

 

#21 - Part 14

Cardinal George Pell and Vatican Financial Scandal Allegations

>>15761463 Cardinal Pell Condemns ‘Illegal and Ferocious Russian Invasion’ in Letter to Ukrainian Catholic Leader

>>15881317 PDF: Cardinal Pell Calls on Vatican to Correct 2 Senior European Bishops for Rejecting Church’s Sexual Ethics - Jesuit Cardinal Hollerich of Luxembourg and Bishop Bätzing of Limburg have both called for changes to the Church’s teaching on homosexuality in recent interviews

>>15889780 ‘I am Not Afraid’ of the Truth, Says Cardinal Becciu in Testimony at Vatican Finance Trial

>>15896960 Accused Cardinal Angelo Becciu hits out at ‘monstrous and grotesque’ claims

>>15896972 Vatican trial: the moment of truth for God’s bankers

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:21 p.m. No.16040660   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 15

Australia / China Tensions - Part 1

>>15592406 Chinese state-affiliated hackers attack local media group

>>15592415 Quad unease at China, Russia ‘no limits’ pact

>>15592419 Australia leads world on standing up to China, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says

>>15594672 Australia’s Pine Gap ‘hugely important’ to western monitoring of China, says former British spy chief - Richard Dearlove discusses facility’s role in monitoring China’s ‘rather alarming’ activities

>>15594679 One Decision podcast - The Wallaby and the Dragon - Julie Bishop, Foreign Minister between 2013-2018 talks to One Decision about Australia’s priorities in a western alliance post-Trump, and how the West needs to approach and counter, Beijing

>>15600267 Lithuania plays 'coercion card' against China in joining 'exclusive club' with Aussies - Vilnius' stunt exposes desperation, a laughingstock for immature actions - Liu Xin - globaltimes.cn

>>15600272 Quad foreign ministers meet amid divergent expectations - Targeting China, Russia only serves US strategic demand: expert - Yang Sheng and Liu Caiyu - globaltimes.cn

>>15600282 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s Regular Press Conference on February 9, 2022

>>15600284 Video: #Australia adopted genocide and assimilation policies against the Indigenous people - SpokespersonCHN

>>15600521 Quad ministers address Indo-Pacific 'coercion', climate, COVID

 

>>15600527 China's military build-up, aggressive behaviour in the region a concern, says visiting Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi

>>15600535 Quad pledges to counter China maritime aggression

>>15600547 Chinese spies in plot to install ALP candidates at coming federal election

>>15600564 ‘Reckless and desperate’: Malcolm Turnbull savages Peter Dutton for claiming China is backing Labor

>>15600577 Australia deploys diplomatic resources to fight Chinese and Russian 'disinformation' on AUKUS submarine deal

>>15600625 Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the Commonwealth of Australia - Chinese Ambassador Xiao Qian Presents Letter of Credence to H.E. Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2022-02-11

>>15607773 ‘Cold War is long over’: China hits out at Australia, US after Quad meeting - China has accused Australia and its allies of undermining international solidarity and trying to maintain US dominance

>>15607785 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s Regular Press Conference on February 11, 2022

>>15623621 China’s snow job can’t erase Aussie ties - 550 days since Australian journalist Cheng Lei was nabbed by Chinese agents in Beijing

>>15631554 Prime Minister Scott Morrison calls on Beijing to speak up against Russian aggression

 

>>15631558 Scott Morrison's remarks about China being 'chillingly silent' over Ukraine labelled 'belligerent rhetoric' by Chinese foreign ministry

>>15631565 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on February 14, 2022

>>15631625 Weak Australian leadership inhibits potential relationship reset with China - Bruce Haigh - globaltimes.cn

>>15631870 Labor Senator Kimberley Kitching names billionaire Chau Chak Wing as 'puppeteer' in foreign interference plot

>>15631873 Video: Labor Senator Kimberley Kitching operated under 'parliamentary privilege' to 'name' Chau Chak Wing - Sky News Australia

>>15631878 Chau Chak Wing hits back after Labor senator suggested he was ‘puppeteer’ in foiled election plot

>>15632005 Chinese propaganda outlet endorses Anthony Albanese as ‘better PM’ than Scott Morrison - Sharri Markson - theaustralian.com.au

>>15640316 Anthony Albanese attended Chau Chak Wing event after ASIO warning - Anthony Albanese gave effusive praise for Chinese billionaire Dr Chau Chak Wing just weeks after ASIO warnings over foreign influence risks

>>15640319 Video: Hon Anthony Albanese MP CCWM Preview Evening Speech - Chau Chak Wing Foundation, Dec 3, 2020

>>15640346 Who is Chau Chak Wing? The alleged ‘puppeteer’ behind foreign interference plot

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:21 p.m. No.16040662   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 16

Australia / China Tensions - Part 2

>>15640374 Video: PM accuses Labor MP of being a 'Manchurian candidate' in Question Time, before quickly withdrawing accusation

>>15648206 UK pledges $34 mln to enhance security in Indo-Pacific as part of a pact with Australia, and leaders of both countries expressed "grave concerns" about China's policies in its far western region of Xinjiang

>>15648219 Visiting US General Charles Flynn, younger brother of President Donald Trump's first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, endorses Australia's new multi-billion-dollar American tanks

>>15656325 GT Voice: UK, Australia geopolitical gimmicks for Indo-Pacific unwelcome - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15656336 AFP uncovers suspected Chinese spy’s alleged plot to smuggle military equipment - Chinese-born Gold Coast accountant Kim Bowei Lee and Russian-born Brisbane entrepreneur Alexander Cher charged with contraventions of Australia’s Defence Trade Control Act

>>15665139 Chinese navy ship accused of ‘unsafe’ act after pointing laser at Australian defence aircraft

>>15665146 Australian Government Department of Defence - Chinese vessel lasing ADF aircraft - "Defence can confirm that on 17 February 2022, a P-8A Poseidon detected a laser illuminating the aircraft while in flight over Australia’s northern approaches."

>>15671368 Australia accuses China of 'act of intimidation' after laser aimed at aircraft

>>15671396 'Very aggressive act': Defence Minister Peter Dutton calls out Chinese warship targeting RAAF aircraft - Sky News Australia

>>15680374 Beijing claims RAAF plane ‘flew’ too close to laser ship

 

>>15680380 Australia's accusation of PLA vessel's laser deployment 'false mud-throwing at China' - Liu Xuanzun and Guo Yuandan - globaltimes.cn

>>15680385 video: Global Times torches Australia for trying to ‘throw mud’ at China - Sky News Australia

>>15680454 US military asset to be linked to controversial Port of Darwin via fuel pipeline - Northern Territory East Arm fuel storage facility

>>15688601 ‘Malicious, provocative’: RAAF ‘dropped sonar buoy’ claims China

>>15688613 China slams Australia's groundless accusations on PLA Navy's operations against ADF aircraft's approach - Li Wei, Ministry of National Defense - eng.mod.gov.cn

>>15688620 Video: China responds to RAAF allegations - Sky News Australia

>>15688632 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on February 21, 2022

>>15688643 Japan 'fully behind' Australia over laser incident involving China in Arafura Sea, says ambassador Yamagami Shingo

>>15688927 Australia's 'laser attack' fault-finding farce copies the US: Global Times editorial - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15689398 Australian Government Department of Defence - Chinese ship lasing of P-8A Poseidon on 17 February 2022 - "No sonobuoys were used prior to the PLA-N vessel directing its laser at the P-8A aircraft on 17 February."

 

>>15697791 Scott Morrison urges China to join the west in condemning Russia over Ukraine invasion

>>15708057 Scott Morrison fires warning over China and Taiwan amid Russia-Ukraine crisis

>>15708071 Chinese police begin work in Solomon Islands to maintain law and order, as Australian officials watch closely

>>15708079 China's new ambassador says Beijing willing to go 'halfway' to repair diplomatic relations with Australia

>>15718066 China slammed over Moscow trade ‘lifeline’ - Australia’s political leaders lash Beijing’s decision to throw a trade “lifeline” to Russia by ending restrictions on Russian wheat imports just hours after its brutal invasion of Ukraine

>>15724965 Scott Morrison warns the invasion of Ukraine has sent an “earthquake” through the international rules-based order, calls on China to back a crucial UN Security Council vote condemning Vladimir Putin

>>15724982 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on February 25, 2022

>>15761244 Peter Dutton calls on China to put pressure on Russia to end Ukraine conflict

>>15779158 Mike Pompeo Tweet: It is not provocative to demand freedom. Susan and I are grateful for the opportunity to visit with Taiwan’s foreign minister Joseph Wu - and enjoy some CCP-sanctioned Australian wine.

>>15795585 Video: Peter Dutton flags Australia sending weapons to Taiwan, acquiring nuclear submarines before 2040

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:21 p.m. No.16040663   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 17

Australia / China Tensions - Part 3

>>15795597 US sees Ukraine war as China test run, says Australian Liberal Senator James Paterson

>>15802873 PM’s chilling warning to Australia on ‘arc of autocracy’ amid China, Russia tensions

>>15802887 Video: Scott Morrison says China must push Russia for peace in Ukraine

>>15802915 Kim Bowei Lee, Gold Coast accountant allegedly involved in plot to traffic military hardware from Russia to China is “shocked and distressed” over being charged by police - His lawyer claims he is neither a “smuggler nor a spy”

>>15802935 Heroic act of police officer Kelly Foster, who drowned when attempting to help Chinese woman Jennifer Qi, brings Australian, Chinese families together - xinhuanet.com

>>15810390 Australia cannot afford overreaching on Taiwan question - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15810400 China should be on alert over Australia’s future nuclear-submarine base: experts - Xu Keyue - globaltimes.cn

>>15812783 China accuses Australia of ‘sinister’ plot - Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi casts Australia as the US’s most loyal accomplice in a “sinister” strategy to constrain the rising power with an “Indo-Pacific version of NATO”

>>15812847 Chinese-owned, consistently loss-making Port of Darwin continuing to trade as a “going concern” only thanks to a fresh letter of financial support from its Chinese government-backed owner, the Shandong Landbridge Group - "Its non-current borrowings at balance date were $666m."

>>15827045 Marise Payne meets China’s new ambassador Xiao Qian

 

>>15836505 Ambassador Xiao Qian meets with former Australian politicians and well-known scholars - Paul Keating, John Howard, Bob Carr and James Laurenceson - au.china-embassy.org

>>15836540 Australia's military buildup 'controlled by US,' risks nuclear contamination - Leng Shumei - globaltimes.cn

>>15842310 China’s Defence Ministry says Australia will “suffer the worst consequences” if it offers military support to Taiwan

>>15842328 Video: Chinese defense spokesperson Senior Colonel Tan Kefei: Australia has no business interfering Taiwan question

>>15852724 Australia's vaccine diplomacy in Pacific islands wards off Beijing - PM Morrison

>>15859676 China’s foreign policy verges on catastrophic - Alexander Downer - afr.com

>>15889856 Dutton presses Xi to lean on Putin, as he foreshadows conflict in Asia-Pacific

>>15889886 Video: PM says China supplying weapons to Russia an 'abomination' - 9 News Australia

>>15889889 Morrison clamors for China sanctions, but ignores abomination of Australia - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15911774 Creation of an Australian Space Force opens up a new frontier, says Peter Dutton

 

>>15911815 Defence Minister Peter Dutton flags future US-style Space Force for Australia

>>15916612 Chinese, Russian space capabilities ‘scare’ new Australian space commander

>>15924286 Australia's north open to attack: US Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral John Aquilino says Australia's north is under threat amid the most concerning security challenge in the region in recent years

>>15924299 US Indo-Pacific Command leader Admiral John Aquilino says China has fully militarized islands in the disputed South China Sea

>>15924338 China must engage Australia to boost CPTPP chances, trade minister Dan Tehan says

>>15924342 GT Voice: Australia undermines CPTPP in desperate pursuit of talks with China - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15932351 Australia sets up space command against China, a ‘political show risks arms race’ - Liu Xuanzun and Guo Yuandan - globaltimes.cn

>>15932355 Does Australia’s Defence Space Command want to confront China? - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15932366 China's Ambassador Xiao Qian is seeking friendship again but its Foreign Ministry still rails against Australia

>>15939896 Solomon Islands and China in military pact - A draft security co-operation agreement between China and the Solomon Islands would allow Chinese military forces to be deployed in the Pacific Island nation

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:22 p.m. No.16040666   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 18

Australia / China Tensions - Part 4

>>15939923 Video: ScoMo responds to leaked security deal between China and Solomon Islands - Sky News Australia

>>15939947 Solomons confirms a security deal coming with China; Australia and NZ concerned

>>15939983 Solomon Islands Govenment Statement - SOLOMON ISLANDS BROADEN SECURITY COOPERATION WITH MORE PARTNERS

>>15940010 Australia, NZ warn Solomons over ‘destabilising’ the Pacific with China deal

>>15940039 PM Scott Morrison declined to meet new Chinese ambassador Xiao Qian

>>15945974 US-Australia economic pact to fight China sanctions - Australia and the US will elevate economic coercion by China in the Indo-Pacific to a third pillar of the strategic partnership alongside defence and foreign affairs

>>15946023 Video: 'Extremely irresponsible': China hits back at Australia over Solomon Islands deal - Sky News Australia

>>15946042 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on March 25, 2022

>>15947631 Video: Scott Morrison rules out meeting with Chinese ambassador until Beijing’s diplomatic freeze starts to thaw

>>15947641 Australian journalist Cheng Lei to be tried in Beijing on state secrets charges next week - 25 March 2022

 

>>15947654 Australian government says it expects basic standards of justice, procedural fairness and humane treatment when Australian citizen Cheng Lei goes on trial in Beijing next week.

>>15955076 Video: Prime Minister Scott Morrison: Solomons-China pact bad for the region - Sky News Australia

>>15962100 China's Solomon Island naval base security draft agreement designed to 'intimidate' Australia, Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce says

>>15962119 Morrison declines to meet new Chinese envoy, continues anti-China rhetoric to boost re-election bid - Xu Keyue - globaltimes.cn

>>15962188 China Freaked: B-2 Bombers, F-35s And F-22 Stealth Fighters Are In Australia - Stavros Atlamazoglou - 19fortyfive.com

>>15962188 7NEWS Australia Tweet: Video: A US B-2 stealth bomber has flown into Australia, landing at RAAF Base Amberley today. The defence force says the visit is part of talks between Australia and the US.

>>15968672 Star Entertainment let billionaire Chinese property developer Phillip Dong Fang Lee gamble, prioritising ‘making money’, despite money laundering suspicions

>>15968700 ‘Insulting’: Solomon Islands lashes out at Australia, New Zealand over China deal

>>15968710 Video: Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare 'insulted' by reaction to security treaty with China

 

>>15968716 Solomon Islands close to security deal with China, alarming neighbors - Michael E. Miller and Frances Vinall - washingtonpost.com

>>15968722 Defiant Solomon Islands PM says deal with China is ‘ready to sign’

>>15968726 ‘Utter nonsense’: Solomon Islands PM says China is not a threat to regional stability - Guardian Australia

>>15968732 'Bully' Australia coerces Pacific island countries, smears China's role in the region - Xu Keyue - globaltimes.cn

>>15968763 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on March 28, 2022

>>15968770 To stop Chinese bases, Australia must lead in the Pacific - Peter Jennings - aspistrategist.org.au

>>15975118 Australia deporting students because of military training, says China - Michael Smith - afr.com

>>15975126 China lodges representations with Australia over repatriation of Chinese students - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15975131 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on March 29, 2022

>>15975146 Australian Border Force stands firm on Chinese claims of unfair visa cancellations for students at airports - Bill Birtles - abc.net.au

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:22 p.m. No.16040667   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 19

Australia / China Tensions - Part 5

>>15975213 Video: China puts Australia on notice with latest Solomon Islands message

>>15975221 Papua New Guinea, Fiji enlisted to persuade the Solomons against China deal

>>15975227 Morrison displays arrogance, political naivete: China Daily editorial - chinadaily.com.cn

>>15975239 OPINION: Solomon Islands in danger of becoming a puppet state of China - Celsus Irokwato Talifilu, political adviser to Premier Daniel Suidani, Malaita Province, Solomon Islands - smh.com.au

>>15980846 Independent MP Bob Katter calls for guns for all 13-year-old Australian school children to form militia and combat against ‘existential’ threat

>>15981847 Video: Bob Katter expands on his calls to arm teens to combat threats facing Australia - Sky News Australia

>>15981917 Australia’s Ambassador to China Graham Fletcher blocked from Cheng Lei’s trial in Beijing

>>15981930 Video: Australian ambassador blocked from Cheng Lei trial - Sky News Australia

>>15981958 Solomon Islands inks security deal with China, ignoring Australian protests

>>15981967 China, Solomon Islands agree on controversial security pact: official

 

>>15981978 Solomon Islands Govenment Statement - SOLOMON ISLANDS AND CHINA INITIAL FRAMEWORK AGREEMENT ON SECURITY COOPERATION

>>15981988 Federated States of Micronesia calls on Solomon Islands to reconsider security treaty with China

>>15982008 How Beijing successfully peddles a dishonest but compelling narrative to the Pacific - John Lee, Non-resident senior fellow at the Hudson Institute - theaustralian.com.au

>>15982047 Australia continues to boost defense budget amid ‘naive ambition’ of weaponizing self for US strategy - Xu Keyue

>>15982077 Solomons-China deal ‘changes calculus’ for Australian Defence Force: Lieutenant General Greg Bilton, ADF Joint Operations Commander

>>15982091 Australia’s big new move on China: Major announcement expected on a new port facility in Darwin amid concerns over a Chinese company leasing the existing port

>>15989709 Defence Minister Peter Dutton claims Australia wasn’t caught off guard by China Solomon-Islands deal that could have major implications for the Pacific

>>15989752 How China stole a march on Australia in the Pacific - Eryk Bagshaw - smh.com.au

>>15994733 Solomon Islands won't allow Chinese military base, says Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare's office

>>15994743 Solomon Islands Govenment Statement - PM SOGAVARE: Not a Secret Deal but a Sovereign Issue

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:23 p.m. No.16040669   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 20

Australia / China Tensions - Part 6

>>15994756 China-Solomon Islands security pact has no military connotation: Chinese FM - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15994770 Australia plays victim of ‘economic coercion’ to attack China, obstructs cooperation: Chinese FM - Global Times - globaltimes.cn

>>15994781 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s Regular Press Conference on April 1, 2022

>>15994793 Video: The current difficult situation in China-Australia relations. - SpokespersonCHN

>>16002473 Solomon Islands, China military deal: What it means for Australia

>>16002540 Japan's ambassador to Australia, Yamagami Shingo warns Australia against 'too many eggs in one basket' with China trade

>>16008518 Millionaire Chinese property developer Zheng Jiefu quietly expelled from Australia for ‘harming security interests’

>>16014957 Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Admiral Samuel J Paparo lashes 'concerning' Solomon Islands security pact with China

>>16021998 China reacts to AUKUS hypersonic missiles deal as Barnaby Joyce says weapons pose 'existential threat'

 

>>16022043 Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Solomon Islands - Media Release of the Chinese Embassy on China-Solomon Islands security cooperation

>>16022045 Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Solomon Islands - Q&A on China-Solomon Islands Security Cooperation by the Spokesperson of the Chinese Embassy

>>16028308 China denounces Australia and New Zealand for their “colonial mentality” in Beijing’s most detailed defence of its security agreement with the Solomon Islands

>>16028339 Australian spy chiefs meet with Solomon Islands PM Sogavare over draft security deal with China - Paul Symon, head of overseas spy agency the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), and Andrew Shearer, Director-General of the Office of National Intelligence

>>16028349 Solomon Islands Govenment Statement - Positive Outcome to Dialogue between PM and Australian Envoy

>>16028406 China accuses US, UK and Australia of trying to build Asia-Pacific NATO

>>16028409 AUKUS plans hypersonic weapons to confront China as US speeds up NATO, Asian allies' coordination - Liu Xuanzun and Liu Xin - globaltimes.cn

>>16028413 Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s Regular Press Conference on April 6, 2022

>>16028421 Video: AUKUS is an Anglo-Saxon clique, a child of the Cold War mentality & bloc politics. - SpokespersonCHN

>>16034829 Security pact puts heat on Solomon Islands - Foreign Minister Marise Payne and US counterpart Antony Blinken express concern about China’s draft security agreement with the Solomon Islands

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:23 p.m. No.16040672   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 21

Coronavirus / COVID-19 Pandemic, Australia and Worldwide

>>15600512 Australians told to get COVID boosters to be considered fully vaccinated

>>15600521 Quad ministers address Indo-Pacific 'coercion', climate, COVID

>>15608324 Video: Incredible scenes as anti-vaccine mandate protesters swarm Canberra streets - Up to 10,000 anti-vaccine protesters have taken to the streets of Canberra, with police making multiple arrests during incredible scenes near Parliament House

>>15640390 West Australian ban thwarts AUKUS submarines tour - A high-level AUKUS delegation to Australia to help fast-track the nation’s nuclear submarines has been forced to postpone a planned visit to Western Australia’s HMAS Stirling – home of the Collins-class subs – due to the McGowan government’s strict quarantine requirements

>>15656192 Australia's biggest states ease more COVID-19 curbs ahead of border reopening

>>15656221 Video: Omicron ‘clearly not’ as threatening as flu, says Dr Nick Coatsworth - news.com.au

>>15656223 Video: Former deputy chief medical officer Dr Nick Coatsworth says Omicron variant is ‘clearly not’ as threatening as influenza - Sky News Australia

>>15664451 Australia reports 43 COVID deaths before expanded border reopening

>>15664466 Video: Victoria set to open purpose-built quarantine hub - 9 News Australia

>>15672473 Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw vows to ramp up enforcement action against protesters inciting violence, even if not committing it themselves

>>15680632 'Welcome back world!': Australia fully reopens borders after two years - 2 February 2022

 

>>15727103 Australia reports 35 more COVID-19 deaths as masks come off in eastern states - 26 February 2022

>>15743113 Video: Bill Gates praises ‘Aussie response’ to pandemics - cnbc.com

>>15743113 Is it possible to prevent the next pandemic? If every country does what Australia did, says Bill Gates

>>15743123 Video: Bill Gates: ‘If every country does what Australia did,’ the world could prevent the next pandemic

>>15761198 Prime Minister Scott Morrison tests positive to Covid-19 - 1 March 2022

>>15845764 Australia nears living with COVID like flu - PM Morrison - 12 March 2022

>>15881176 Dr Nick Coatsworth reacts to Pfizer’s claim most people will need four doses of the Covid vaccine

>>15882249 Video: South Australia's Stevens, Spurrier, Marshall and their Covidian Web of Lies - South Australia In Focus

>>15932302 Moderna will produce its mRNA vaccines in Australia from 2024, with final deal signed off

>>15962087 Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews tests positive for COVID-19

>>15994867 Video: New Covid-19 drug Molnupiravir approved in Australia, could eliminate the virus from the body in just three days, a study has shown

>>15994881 COVID antiviral drug molnupiravir eliminates actively infectious SARS-CoV-2 virus by day 3 of therapy - European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases - APRIL 1, 2022

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:24 p.m. No.16040674   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 22

Virginia Roberts Giuffre, Prince Andrew, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell - Part 1

>>15608844 PDF: Ghislaine Maxwell lawyers cannot keep retrial arguments under seal, judge rules - Lawyers want new trial after juror Scotty David gave interviews in which he said he had been sexually abused as a child

>>15615852 Unsolved mysteries behind famous Prince Andrew photo - The photo of Prince Andrew, Virginia Giuffre and Ghislaine Maxwell is now famous – but some basic facts about the shot have never been established

>>15640077 PDF: Prince Andrew settles civil sexual assault claim with Virginia Giuffre

>>15640164 Did this email from Ghislaine Maxwell sink Prince Andrew's case and cost the royal $16M? 2015 email exchange between Epstein's madam and lawyer Alan Dershowitz confirms infamous image of the royal with Virginia Roberts is real

>>15640164 "On January 10, 2015, Mr Dershowitz wrote: 'Dear G. Do you know whether the photo of Andrew and virginia is real? You are in the background.'"

>>15640175 Q Post #4565 - Possible Epstein was a puppet [not the main person(s) of interest]? Financed by who or what [F] entities? 1. [Primary] gather blackmail on elected pols, dignitaries, royalty, hollywood influencers, wall street and other financial top level players, other high profile industry specific people, etc. 2. Feed an addiction [controllable] Maxwell family background? Robert Maxwell history [intel, agency, wealth, [CLAS 1-99]]? Sometimes it's the people in the background that are of greater significance. Q

>>15640272 Video: Reports Prince Andrew to pay about $20 million in settlement with Virginia Giuffre - 9 News Australia

>>15670139 Jeffrey Epstein’s model agent friend Jean-Luc Brunel has been found dead in prison, as his alleged Australian victim, Virginia Giuffre, spoke of her disappointment not to face him at his trial

>>15670157 Virginia Roberts Giuffre Tweet: The suicide of Jean-Luc Brunel, who abused me and countless girls and young women, ends another chapter. I’m disappointed that I wasn’t able to face him in a final trial to hold him accountable, but gratified that I was able to testify in person last year to keep him in prison.

>>15670242 GIUFFRE VS. MAXWELL - Deposition - VIRGINIA GIUFFRE - 05/03/2016 - "They [Maxwell and Epstein] instructed me to go to George Mitchell, Jean Luc Brunel, Bill Richardson … I was told to do something by these people constantly … my whole life revolved around just pleasing these men and keeping Ghislaine and Jeffrey happy. Their whole entire lives revolved around sex. They call massages sex. They call modeling sex …"

 

>>15670270 Video: French Modelling agent Jean-Luc Brunel, Epstein associate, found dead in prison - Sky News Australia

>>15670293 Ghislaine Maxwell’s family ‘fears for her safety’ after Brunel found dead

>>15718117 PDF: Ghislaine Maxwell juror Scotty David to be quizzed in court as lawyers push for retrial

>>15761613 Video: Inside the court case that ended in the humiliation of Prince Andrew - 60 Minutes Australia

>>15770154 PDF: Ghislaine Maxwell trial juror may receive immunity to testify - After Scotty David revealed he planned to invoke his fifth amendment privilege, prosecutors decided to seek immunity

>>15819160 Maxwell juror says he was distracted during jury selection but ‘I did not lie’ - Scotty David admits he rushed screening questionnaire and says he gave answer to sexual abuse question that was not accurate

>>15819168 Video: Maxwell juror regrets not telling of sex abuse - Associated Press

>>15819198 “One of the Biggest Mistakes I Have Ever Made in My Life”: A Ghislaine Maxwell Juror Has His Own Day in Court

>>15819220 PDF: Virginia Giuffre’s sex abuse lawsuit against Prince Andrew formally dismissed

>>15836706 Video: 'My sister is the victim': Ghislaine Maxwell's brother on juror controversy - Ian Maxwell tells LBC that the jury in his sister's trial was 'evidently not impartial' as a juror is accused of lying on their form

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:24 p.m. No.16040676   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 23

Virginia Roberts Giuffre, Prince Andrew, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell - Part 2

>>15866480 PDF: Alan Dershowitz fights to keep tax returns from Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre

>>15884733 PDF: Ghislaine Maxwell lawyers say Scotty David should never have been on jury - Attorneys reject explanation that Juror 50 ‘flew through’ screening questionnaire, which would have flagged he had been sexually abused

>>15932437 Jeffrey Epstein’s Private Islands in the Caribbean to List for $125 Million - In the U.S. Virgin Islands, Little St. James and Great St. James are being sold by the Epstein estate

>>15932492 TWO EXCEPTIONAL PRIVATE CARIBBEAN ISLANDS - THE JAMESES U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS - $125,000,000 - bespokerealestate.com

>>15932512 Video: The Jameses U.S. Virgin Islands - Bespoke Real Estate

>>15932522 Q Post #1001 - Where do roads lead? Each prince is associated with a cardinal direction: north, south, east and west. Sacrifice. Collect. [Classified]-1 - [Classified]-2 - Tunnels. Table 29. - D-Room H - D-Room R - D-Room C - Pure EVIL. - 'Conspiracy' - Q

>>15975053 Prince Andrew’s Appearance With Queen an ‘Insult to Humanity,’ Epstein Victims Say - Victims of Jeffrey Epstein have responded angrily to Queen Elizabeth appearing in public with Prince Andrew.

 

>>15981714 Video: Ghislaine - Partner In Crime | Official Trailer | Paramount+ - In an intimate portrait of the infamous partner to Jeffrey Epstein, this four part series explores the central question in Ghislaine Maxwell's trial - how deeply was she involved in the sex trafficking ring that abused hundreds of women and girls, and how did the former socialite become the accomplice to one of the worst sex offenders in history?

>>15993282 PDF: Federal Judge Refuses to Grant Ghislaine Maxwell a New Trial Following Sex Trafficking Conviction, Finds Juror ‘Testified Credibly and Truthfully’

>>15993374 US judge denies Ghislaine Maxwell's bid for new trial over juror's false statements

>>16015024 RealGhislaine Tweet: Bobbi C. Sternheim: “We strongly object to the court’s denial of Ms. Maxwell’s motion for a new trial. The defense was denied the opportunity to question Juror 50 during the recent hearing.

>>16015024 RealGhislaine Tweet: This strong issue, among many other issues, will be presented to the Court of Appeals and we are optimistic about Ms. Maxwell’s success on appeal.”

>>16015024 RealGhislaine Tweet: Juror Lied. Judge Denied. - #FairTrial #TrialByImpartialJury #StealthJuror #DueProcess - US Justice: F - FAIL

>>16022029 Ghislaine Maxwell family ‘profoundly shocked’ by denial of new trial

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:24 p.m. No.16040682   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 24

Child Exploitation, Pedophilia, Sexual Abuse and Human Trafficking Investigations - Part 1

>>15600261 Former Hey Dad! actor Robert Hughes parole decision deferred pending a comprehensive psychological assessment of Hughes’ risk of sexual reoffending

>>15615656 Millionaire corporate raider Ron Brierley, 84, is released from jail after just four months due to ill health despite being found with 40,000 vile child porn images

>>15623609 Women sexually harassed by former High Court judge Dyson Heydon receive historic settlement

>>15689317 Australian Federal Police warn human trafficking will surge as international borders open

>>15689317 Australian Federal Police - Human trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices (including forced marriage) information report form

>>15689317 My Blue Sky - Australia’s dedicated forced marriage portal providing information, support and legal advice to people in or at risk of forced marriages - https://mybluesky.org.au

>>15708100 Ex-students of paedophile Ted Bales commended for courage as ex-Christian Brother gets more jail

>>15751413 United States Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) Signs Memorandum of Understanding with Australian Federal Police

>>15761384 Video - Operation Molto: 51 Australian children rescued and more than 100 Australians charged with child abuse-related offences in massive global police operation

>>15761392 Video: Nationwide Operation Molto closes with the removal of 51 children from harm in Australia - Australian Federal Police

 

>>15770119 Crown Resorts turned blind eye to sex slavery, human trafficking: Austrac - Law enforcement raised concerns over high-roller known as “Customer 26” and his links to sex slavery and human trafficking as early as 2012

>>15779089 Pedophiles targeting young girls on Instagram - disgusting tactics revealed by 'Collective Shout', Australian group campaigning to end sexploitation of women and children

>>15819105 Notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale charged with further sex offences - 87-year-old accused of committing 24 offences against two male victims in Mortlake in 1981 and 1982

>>15827100 Cody Michael Reynolds, Sydney teacher charged after police allegedly find child abuse material on two phones and laptop

>>15836609 Video: Tasmanian Premier Peter Gutwein reveals he is a victim of child sexual abuse

>>15889703 Hillsong founder Brian Houston committed 'indiscretions' towards two women, church leader Pastor Phil Dooley says

>>15889712 Retired Catholic priest Richard Doyle found guilty of molesting young girl more than 40 years ago

>>15889729 Former Labor adviser Benjamin John Waters ‘weaponised’ his diagnosed autism to evade questions about whether he had a sexual interest in children, a court has heard

>>15903364 ‘We are sorry’: Hillsong apologises for Brian Houston conduct breach

>>15903367 Media Statement - An important message from the Hillsong Global Board

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:25 p.m. No.16040685   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 25

Child Exploitation, Pedophilia, Sexual Abuse and Human Trafficking Investigations - Part 2

>>15916711 NSW MP Gareth Ward charged with sexual violence; Premier Dominic Perrottet seeks his resignation from parliament

>>15924222 Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston resigns after internal misconduct investigation

>>15932317 Video: Prime Minister Scott Morrison joins growing chorus of Hillsong Church allies to distance themselves from founder Brian Houston

>>15932328 PM ‘shocked and disappointed’ by Houston resignation, not been a Hillsong member for 15 years

>>15932331 NSW MP Gareth Ward suspended from parliament over historic sexual abuse charges after he refused to resign

>>15940215 Foreign Minister Marise Payne Statement - International Engagement Strategy on Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery - 25 March 2022 - "We have zero tolerance for those who exploit the vulnerable."

>>15940215 PDF: Australian Government International Engagement Strategy on Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery: Delivering in Partnership (2022)

 

>>15947677 Perth Children's Hospital nurse Peter De Mouilpied made dozens of child exploitation videos, court hears

>>15962247 Gerald Ridsdale – arguably Australia’s most prolific paedophile priest – faces court on fresh charges that allege he abused two boys 40 years ago

>>15962328 Woman living with cerebral palsy tells Disability Royal Commission she was 'raped and assaulted' by carer

>>15962328 Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability - Public hearing 17: The experience of women and girls with disability with a particular focus on family, domestic and sexual violence - 28 March 2022

>>15968645 Stewart Iain Berry and husband Mathew Campbell face SA court accused of involvement in Jadd Brooker’s online pedophile ring

>>15981879 Australian Federal Police will use $142 million budget allocation to develop “specialist capability” to tackle serious crime enabled by anonymising technology - New account takeover and data disruption powers are the ‘envy’ of the United States, says Commissioner Reece Kershaw

>>16008504 Pedophile John Wayne Millwood disperses fortune to thwart victim of record $5.3m in civil damages

>>16022022 Paedophiles should forfeit superannuation to pay compensation, child sex abuse victim Andy Martin says

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:25 p.m. No.16040688   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#21 - Part 26

Qanon / Conspiracy Theory Hit Pieces, Australia and Worldwide

>>15608332 Video: 60 Minutes’ Liam Bartlett in fiery clash with Trump-backed Republican candidate Kari Lake

>>15608862 The global ‘freedom movement’ is a carnival of crank and conspiracy, and very dangerous - I spent a year undercover in QAnon. Don’t let the ridiculousness distract from the threat - Van Badham - theguardian.com

>>15609020 ‘Defend democracy’: The race to tackle conspiracy theories this election - Video: Riccardo Bosi - “The AEC recommended recently to the government to use Dominion vote-counting machines”

>>15609027 Australian Electoral Commission Tweet: "This is completely false and very disappointing. The AEC has never recommended using voting machines and has no relationship with Dominion."

>>15609027 Video: Australian Electoral Commission - The Dominion conspiracy theory

>>15612796 Video: Riccardo Bosi Canberra Speech - 5th Feb

 

>>15615972 Video: Falling into the ‘freedom’ movement … and getting out - Rachael Dexter and Simone Fox Koob - theage.com.au

>>15656316 Why the Freedom Movement resembles a cult - Jack the Insider (Peter Hoysted) - theaustralian.com.au

>>15697886 Fascist flags, QAnon and extremist ties: the many faces of ‘freedom’ protesters - Andrew Leigh, Federal Member for Fenner - the-riotact.com

>>15708166 Belief in QAnon has strengthened in US since Trump was voted out, study finds - Surveys by the Public Religion Research Institute reveal QAnon believers increased to 17% in September from 14% in March 2021 - David Smith - theguardian.com

>>15708169 PDF: The Persistence of QAnon in the Post-Trump Era: An Analysis of Who Believes the Conspiracies - US Public Religion Research Institute

>>15981839 Scott Morrison must reveal any text messages from QAnon friend, information watchdog orders - After two-year freedom of information battle with Guardian Australia, the PM’s office has been told to search for any messages with QAnon proponent Tim Stewart - Josh Taylor - theguardian.com

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:27 p.m. No.16040694   🗄️.is 🔗kun

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Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:39 p.m. No.16040757   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0759 >>0766

JFK’s daughter Caroline Kennedy lauds Australia as a ‘model’ for standing up to China

 

ADAM CREIGHTON - APRIL 8, 2022

 

Caroline Kennedy, daughter of the late US president and scion of the Democrat party, has lauded Australia as a “model” for standing up to China and called on the US and Australia to beef up their diplomatic presence in the Pacific to counter growing Chinese influence.

 

Speaking at her confirmation hearing to become the first female US ambassador to Australia, Ms Kennedy repeatedly praised the ambition and importance of the Quad group of nations, the AUKUS security pact and the strength of the US-Australia relationship in friendly questioning from senators ahead of a confirmation vote that’s not seriously in doubt.

 

“There is no country more committed to [American] values than our close ally and Five Eyes partner Australia,” she told senators, pointing out tensions in the Indo-Pacific had increased significantly since she left her previous posting as US Ambassador to Japan in 2017.

 

“Australia has been a model [in responding to China], and they are fortunate they have a lot of minerals and critical elements and that a lot of their other exports they have been able to find other markets for,” she said, when asked about Chinese economic coercion.

 

“I think the US can learn a lot from [Australia’s] response, they’ve stood firm and managed to come together with a bipartisan foreign policy, and I think greater and deeper partnership with us in security and diplomatic areas that will serve our country and theirs well,” she said.

 

Accompanied in the room by her husband Edwin and son Jack, Ms Kennedy, 64, took questions alongside other Biden administration ambassadorial nominees (to Korea, Philippines, and Norway) on Thursday morning (Friday AEDT) at the Capitol in Washington.

 

“Ed and I visited Australia on our honeymoon and were thrilled to return in 2014 as a family,” she said.

 

Ms Kennedy in her short opening statement also revealed she was always grateful to “Australian coast watchers” who rescued her father, who was assassinated in Dallas in 1963, during World War II.

 

“He hoped to be the first president to visit Australia during his second term… I hope to carry that legacy forward in my own small way”.

 

Formally announced by the White House in December (although leaked to the media twice earlier), former Australian ambassadors and Washington foreign policy experts feted Ms Kennedy’s nomination as a sign of Mr Biden’s esteem for Australia, owing to her close connection with the President and her powerbroker role in the ruling Democratic Party.

 

Former Australian ambassador to Washington Kim Beazley in December said Ms Kennedy would be “enormously effective” in Canberra. “She is a good diplomat and has had a great history in the political life of the US. She is a woman who gets noticed and we want that in an American ambassador to Australia,” he said.

 

Asked about growing Chinese influence in the Solomon Islands following a surprise security pact between the two nations recently, Ms Kennedy said the reopening of a US embassy there “couldn’t come soon enough”.

 

“Together with Australia with the infrastructure partnership we have we can do more and should do more and we must stay engaged in a vital region. We need to be more visible,” she told senators.

 

A date for a vote on her confirmation by the Senate is still yet to be determined; the Biden administration has come under criticism for the slow pace of ambassadorial appointments over a year into the president’s term.

 

As of March, about one third of US ambassadorial positions have been nominated and confirmed by the US Senate, according to analysis by The Washington Post.

 

Ms Kennedy gave mainly vague answers to questions on the nature of the Chinese regime and the Biden administration’s policy on India, sticking largely to platitudes about values and the administration’s talking points about the importance of “free, secure, prosperous, rules-based order” in the Indo-Pacific region.

 

Ms Kennedy was a prominent supporter of Barack Obama in 2008, and an early backer of Joe Biden’s presidential bid last year.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/caroline-kennedy-lauds-australia-as-a-model-for-standing-up-to-china/news-story/4c82b126090eee626cb32fc3fefd8ac2

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:40 p.m. No.16040759   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0762

>>16040757

New US ambassador Kennedy warns on Solomon Islands

 

Matthew Cranston - Apr 8, 2022

 

1/2

 

Washington | America’s next ambassador to Australia, Caroline Kennedy, said she was committed to taking a stronger stance against China’s coercion in the Indo-Pacific once she takes up her position later this year.

 

Ms Kennedy, the only remaining child of President John F. Kennedy, said the US and Australia should do more together in the Pacific islands, noting that the reopening of the US Solomon Islands embassy could not have come soon enough.

 

“The fact that we are reopening our embassy in the Solomon Islands, that can’t come soon enough, and I think that together with Australia, with the infrastructure partnership that we have in the Pacific Islands, we can do more, and we should do more … we need to be more visible,” Ms Kennedy said.

 

Ms Kennedy made the comments during her nomination hearing in the US Senate on Thursday (Friday AEST) for the key post in Australia that has been left vacant since January last year.

 

Ms Kennedy said a more rapid response was needed in Solomon Islands, whose government has confirmed it is close to signing a security deal with Beijing. Confirmation of the deal has justified fears by Australia’s security agencies about China’s ambitions in the region.

 

Australia’s top intelligence chiefs travelled to Honiara this week for talks with Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, but failed to persuade him to abandon the deal, which officials feel could pave the way for an eventual Chinese naval base, less than 2000 kilometres from Australia.

 

Ms Kennedy said the US had a lot to learn from the way Australia had handled itself during a challenging period dealing with China’s coercion.

 

“Certainly Australia most recently has been challenged by Chinese economic coercion. And I think that the United States can learn a lot from their response. They’ve stood firm,” she said.

 

During the hearing, Republican senators Ted Cruz and Mitt Romney pressed Ms Kennedy about how hard she would go on China and whether the Biden administration had a proper strategy to deal with the superpower.

 

“I think that we have an opportunity through our partnerships and alliances, working multilaterally throughout the region, to really create a comprehensive strategy that will strengthen deterrence and increase our own security,” she said.

 

“As we move forward into this increasingly tense time in the Indo-Pacific, I look forward to working with the Australians and with the Japanese, to secure a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

 

“In a world where the liberal international order is being undermined, American values are more essential than ever,” she said, “There’s no country more committed to these values than our close ally and Five Eyes partner Australia,” she said, referring to the intelligence alliance.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:41 p.m. No.16040762   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040759

 

2/2

 

In her testimony, Ms Kennedy spoke of the important role Australians and Solomon Islanders had played in helping the US secure peace in the region during World War II, as well as helping her own father when he and his men were adrift in the South Pacific.

 

“I’ll always be grateful to the Australian coast watchers and Solomon Islanders who rescued my father during World War II. I know he hoped to be the first sitting President to visit Australia during his second term. If confirmed, I hope to be able to carry that legacy forward in my own small way,” she said.

 

Ms Kennedy, 64, was joined at the hearing by her husband, Edwin, and her son, Jack, while her two daughters, Rose and Tatiana, watched online.

 

As the former US ambassador to Japan, Ms Kennedy said she thought “tensions” in the Indo-Pacific relating to China had increased dramatically since her time there and that faster more visible responses were required.

 

“I think it has become much more widespread, much more public, much more open. The South China Sea issues were certainly present and some of the economic coercion was certainly happening, but I think all of that has become more dramatic in the last five years.”

 

Ms Kennedy’s comments came as NATO agreed to a request to step up cooperation in the Asia-Pacific area including in areas of maritime security, noting China’s unwillingness to condemn Russia’s aggression in Ukraine was a “serious challenge to us all”.

 

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea would also work together in cybersecurity and other areas. Although Australia and other Asia Pacific countries are not members of the northern security alliance, they are considered friendly “partners”.

 

“NATO and our Asia-Pacific partners have now agreed to step up our practical and political cooperation in several areas, including cyber, new technology, and countering disinformation,” Mr Stoltenberg said following a meeting of the alliance’s foreign ministers in Brussels.

 

“We will also work more closely together in other areas such as maritime security, climate change, and resilience because global challenges demand global solutions.”

 

https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/new-us-ambassador-kennedy-warns-on-solomon-islands-20220407-p5abhk

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:42 p.m. No.16040766   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0769

>>16040757

Why Australia is the talk of the town in Washington

 

Matthew Cranston - Apr 8, 2022

 

1/2

 

Washington | When US president Joe Biden met two Australian chief executives during the past month, it only confirmed what everyone had already suspected – the country that some American politicians are calling the “anchor of democracy in the Pacific” is having a rare moment in Washington.

 

One of the chief executives was Jane Hunter, the head of Tritium, which is one of Australia’s most successful electric vehicle companies. The meeting was significant, not only because Hunter snapped up a prime photo opportunity with the President, but because she was able to provide input to US domestic policy – something quite unprecedented for the boss of an Australian company.

 

The second meeting was with Australia’s second richest person, mining billionaire and clean energy advocate Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest, to discuss the opportunities in hydrogen energy. It proved to be another rare moment for an Australian corporate leader to provide input on US domestic policy.

 

Forrest presented a plan about hydrogen investment to the President, his chief of staff Ron Klaine and National Economic Council director Brian Deese. He also gave a rundown of his plan to one of the most powerful people in the world, Senator Joe Manchin.

 

The two meetings underscore the growing commercial ties between Australia and the US. They add to the strengthening military, diplomatic and academic bonds that the US is deliberately going out of its way to build with Australia as geopolitical tensions rise, especially in the Indo-Pacific.

 

In the past week, there have also been updates on the latest developments concerning the military intelligence sharing partnership AUKUS, which by itself has raised the US-Australia alliance to new levels. That arrangement alone now has 17 separate groups of Americans and Australians working together to hammer out how the two countries can share and use critical information and technology across nuclear submarines, quantum computing, missiles and cyber security to name but a few.

 

Some of the biggest names in US politics, Senators Ted Cruz and Mitt Romney, have namechecked Australia this week while putting their views forward about President Biden’s pick for the US Ambassador to Australia, Caroline Kennedy.

 

‘Renewing our vows’

 

“As she knows, Australia is our steadfast partner, and among our most important allies historically, and today our partnership remains critical in maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Romney said. Senator Ed Markey, who introduced Kennedy at the hearing, commented that she was perfectly suited to “Australia, the democratic anchor in the Indo-Pacific.”

 

Kennedy, who honeymooned in Australia, says she believes Americans and Australians want to renew their vows to each other. “As we emerge from restrictions in the past few years, Americans and Australians are eager to resume their in-person ties of friendship and business and study abroad, which are among the closest in the world,” she says.

 

“The United States is Australia’s most important economic partner, our two-way trade has doubled since our Free Trade Agreement went into effect in 2005. We’re increasing vital co-operation on critical technologies, rare earth minerals, supply chain resilience and energy transformation.”

 

Last week, Australian Trade Minister Dan Tehan won a commitment from the US Secretary of Commerce, Gina Raimondo, to financially back Australian critical minerals companies, and locked in a new form of ministerial-level talks on commerce between the two countries.

 

There is no doubt that Australia has become a new focus for the elite of Washington DC. It is a view shared by Australia’s ambassador to the US, Arthur Sinodinos, who last week made a guest appearance before Congress’ oldest committee, the House Ways and Means committee.

 

Sinodinos says he has noticed a marked increase in activity and attention from Americans. “I have observed that the tempo across all elements of the alliance has accelerated. There is much more information sharing and there’s more thinking about how we can work together, not just militarily but commercially and diplomatically,” Sinodinos tells AFR Weekend.

 

“The attention the US is paying, certainly in Washington, to Australia reflects the appreciation partners like the US have for the way Australia has stood up to economic coercion, and the way we are modernising our military and expanding diplomatic influence through elements such as the Quad, AUKUS and through ASEAN and Pacific island countries.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:43 p.m. No.16040769   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040766

 

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There is also a heightened awareness in academia about Australia’s increasing importance to America. Dr Charles Edel, for example, has just been made Australia chair at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies. His position is the first of its kind at any of the countless Washington-based think tanks, but might not be the last.

 

“In my conversations across the administration, with members of Congress, with the media and with industry partners, Australia now commands significantly more attention than it has in the past,” Edel says. “That’s because more and more of America’s Indo-Pacific policy is being written within the relationship.”

 

“There is an explosion of interest in Washington about Australia, both related to AUKUS, but also extending far beyond it,” he adds. “Over the past several years in the United States, there has been a growing respect for and interest in Australia’s policies, which have resonated for both American policymakers and the American public, and that’s largely because Australia is seen as a bellwether in that Australia was among the first to experience a number of coercive measures from China, and in many areas Australia has been the first to respond.”

 

Setting up in the US

 

Edel says regardless of what swings occur in the US political system, there is a bipartisan consensus that Americans want more capable allies, willing to do more on their own and also together with the United States. “Australia is a prime example in this space, in that it is building up its own capabilities as well as looking for new opportunities to partner with the United States,” he says.

 

Billionaire Anthony Pratt – who regularly featured with former president Donald Trump promoting his company Visy’s renewable energy and recycle cardboard boxing plants – is backing the Centre for Strategic and International Studies’ Australia chair.

 

It is also worth noting that the Australian Strategic Policy Institute – one of the pre-eminent military think tanks in Australia – has just set up an office in Washington to be headed by Mark Watson.

 

And more Australians are heading to America. James Boland, the president and founder of Australian Community – a group designed to help Australians achieve success in America – says there has been a surge in visa demand. He notes that key working visas for Australians in the US – B1, B2, E3 and J1 – are returning to pre-COVID-19 levels.

 

“We have Australian founders of US corporations approaching our organisation to help source Australian workers on the E3 visa. Our E3 visa campaign is also being championed to HR departments of US corporations given the quality and work ethic of Australian workers, and the simplicity, affordability and availability of the E3 visa,” Watson says.

 

“I expect the number to accelerate since Australians are now free to leave the country.”

 

Last week, potential US presidential candidate and Maryland Governor Larry Hogan attended the opening of Australian diagnostics manufacturer Ellume’s $135 million factory in Frederick, just outside Washington, which plays a crucial role in America’s response to the health crisis.

 

Hogan says he wants America to open up more national security investment opportunities to companies such as Ellume. It seems he is not the only one.

 

https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/why-australia-is-talk-of-the-town-in-washington-20220405-p5aate

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:49 p.m. No.16040786   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0789 >>0797 >>7528

Former Hillsong pastors say they were threatened by Brian Houston to hand over their church and assets

 

Hagar Cohen, Alex McDonald, Raveen Hunjan, and Mario Christodoulou - 6 April 2022

 

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Two former European pastors have accused Hillsong co-founder Brian Houston and the church's general manager of sending threatening emails during a dispute over the transfer of their church, cash, and assets to Hillsong Australia.

 

Zhenya and Vera Kasevich led the congregations of Hillsong Kyiv and Hillsong Moscow for two decades.

 

They have spoken to 7.30 for the first time about the circumstances behind their sudden departure from the megachurch.

 

It comes as the Pentecostal juggernaut faces one of its worst crises since its establishment in the early 1980s.

 

Last month, Hillsong's Sydney-based global pastor Brian Houston resigned after the church revealed it had received complaints from two women about his behaviour.

 

Since then, nine Hillsong branches in the US have broken away from the church.

 

Now, the former lead pastors of the Kyiv and Moscow churches say they too attempted to break away from the church in 2014.

 

They say they ultimately chose to hand over their churches and assets after Brian Houston threatened to open a rival Hillsong church in Kyiv.

 

Documents signed by Hillsong Australia general manager George Aghajanian show that Hillsong Church Ltd requested the Kasevichs make a "voluntary donation" of the proceeds of the sale of a property, as well as over $US230,000 in cash.

 

"I was in an impossible situation," Zhenya Kasevich said.

 

"No matter what decision you make, you lose."

 

At that time, the Kasevichs were planning to emigrate to the United States and were in the process of applying for US residency. Hillsong had agreed to assist them in dealing with US immigration.

 

In one email obtained by 7.30, George Aghajanian writes that he "can make things very difficult" for them "with the American authorities".

 

In another email, Brian Houston warns that Vera and Zhenya Kasevich "have a lot to fear" and that his general manager has "a lot of useful information for the US embassy" about the former Hillsong Kyiv pastors.

 

"Basically [Brian Houston] said … 'This church is mine. I will make your life small. I will squash it,'" Vera Kasevich said.

 

Brian Houston told 7.30 in an email that the Kasevichs' account of the takeover of Hillsong Kyiv and Moscow was "a complete fantasy", and that he made no threats regarding the US embassy.

 

The Kasevichs said they were finally free to speak out about their ordeal because their US residency had been secured and they no longer felt intimidated by Hillsong's Australian leaders.

 

"We were quiet for eight full years … and now we are safe," Zhenya Kasevich said.

 

He said the aim of the takeover by the church's Sydney head office was "to get the assets of [Hillsong] Ukraine into their own hands".

 

'A voracious appetite for money': Growing the property empire

 

A 7.30 investigation has uncovered how the Sydney-based Pentecostal church has built a property empire, partly by taking financial control over other churches in Australia and globally.

 

The first takeover occurred in 2009, when Brisbane-based Garden City Christian Church merged with Hillsong. In the process, Hillsong acquired properties and assets valued at $12 million at the time.

 

Elsewhere in Australia, in 2013 and 2014, two churches in Victoria decided to merge with Hillsong, with three properties transferred to Hillsong. One of those properties was repurposed as a luxury rental.

 

In 2015, a Gold Coast church agreed to merge with Hillsong, transferring ownership and the mortgage on its Upper Coomera church building.

 

A year later, two churches in Darwin valued at more than $2 million were also transferred to Hillsong.

 

In 2020, a church hall at Joondalup in Western Australia — worth an estimated $2.5 million, with a small mortgage owing — was handed over to Hillsong.

 

As a registered charity, Hillsong is not required to pay taxes such as stamp duty on any real estate that it acquires.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:50 p.m. No.16040789   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0793

>>16040786

 

2/3

 

A previous congregant from one of the churches that merged with Hillsong has told 7.30 that he never supported the move.

 

Lance Goodall, who attended Brisbane's Garden City Church, said a vote of church members at the time decided overwhelmingly to install Brian Houston as their senior pastor, but he felt that the discussion at the time glossed over some important questions.

 

"Everyone was encouraged to consider [the merger] as being the best possible choice for the church going forward," he said.

 

"It was perplexing, to be honest with you."

 

Garden City Church eventually transferred the ownership of more than a dozen Brisbane properties to a Hillsong charity, with no money changing hands.

 

Lance Goodall says he was always sceptical about Hillsong's motivation for merging with Garden City.

 

"One of the key objectives in the takeover by Hillsong is the acquisition of property and assets," he said.

 

However, it's not only properties that Hillsong acquires at no cost — 7.30 tracked down a church whose funds ended up under Hillsong control.

 

Jaime San Martin, a previous assistant pastor at the Botany Spanish Church in Sydney in the early 2000s, said when his church joined the "Hillsong family" the church had to transfer all of its funds to a Hillsong account.

 

"They controlled everything," Mr San Martin told 7.30.

 

Mr San Martin had helped seal an agreement with Hillsong which he hoped would help his small congregation with administration and pastoral duties.

 

But ultimately, the relationship turned out to be "just a financial thing", he said.

 

"We were having difficulties accessing our own funds," Mr San Martin said.

 

"[Hillsong] were beginning to show signs of having a voracious appetite for money."

 

Mr San Martin's church separated from Hillsong in 2002.

 

Hillsong's expansion into the US

 

In 2010, Hillsong established its first campus in the United States, and has since expanded to 16 locations.

 

Since then, Texas-based private investigator Barry Bowen has tracked Hillsong's property expansion across the US. He told 7.30 that it's highly unusual for a charity to grow so quickly.

 

Mr Bowen works for the Trinity Foundation, which is dedicated to investigating church fraud. While he didn't find fraudulent activity, he did find a large number of properties that Hillsong owns across three US states.

 

"It owns at least three condominiums in New York City. It owns a $US3.5 million home in California," he said.

 

"When I searched in Arizona, I discovered 31 properties. If they don't sell any of those assets in the next year, it's expected to appreciate to over $40 million."

 

In Australia, 7.30 found that some of Hillsong's biggest assets are separated from the church's activities through its use of a web of interlinked charities and trusts.

 

Mr Bowen said he identified a similar strategy in the US, involving dozens of legal entities which he argues creates a firewall between the church and its properties.

 

According to Mr Bowen, this corporate structure means potential claimants in any litigation against Hillsong may have a hard time recovering any funds.

 

"If a victim sues the church, the church does not have major property assets," he said.

 

"The church is limited in what it can pay for a judgement. This protects the church financially from large lawsuits."

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:51 p.m. No.16040793   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7442

>>16040789

 

3/3

 

Brian Houston 'drawn to success'

 

From their new home in the US state of Florida, Zhenya and Vera Kasevich say their first church started as a small congregation in 1992, just as the fledgling independent nation of Ukraine was emerging from the collapse of the Soviet empire.

 

Hillsong Sydney sent an Australian pastor and some financial support to help them get established, and they named their church Hillsong, despite remaining independent.

 

The Kasevichs say that as the congregation in Kyiv grew in 2008, Brian Houston developed a growing interest in their church.

 

"He is drawn to success," said Vera Kasevich.

 

"Our church budget in Ukraine was almost $1 million a year, only from income from [donations]."

 

Mr Kasevich told 7.30 that he remembered having to pay large sums for guest speakers to attend a Hillsong conference in Kyiv.

 

"We had to pay $13,000 for first class tickets from the USA to Ukraine," he said.

 

"We could not look at our poor people's eyes and tell them we are using church money for our benefit and our luxurious life. So when we saw this, we started to raise questions."

 

As tensions rose, they claim Brian Houston began to challenge their independence, and that in 2014, he gave them an ultimatum — either stand aside or Hillsong would set up a rival church in Kyiv.

 

To prevent the congregation from being split up, Vera and Zhenya Kasevich agreed to leave the church.

 

The couple say they were asked to stay away from any church events and this "completely cut" their relationship with other church members who they described as their "only family".

 

"They cut our emails, they cut our database, they cut us from the server," Vera Kasevich said.

 

The Kasevichs were asked to sign a non-disclosure agreement with Hillsong which required them to never attend any service at Hillsong Kyiv or Hillsong Moscow, and not to directly contact Hillsong's leadership, its staff, or key volunteers.

 

The agreement, obtained by 7.30, was signed by Hillsong's general manager George Aghajanian, but the Kasevichs didn't agree to its terms and refused to sign it.

 

"They excommunicated us," Vera Kasevich said.

 

The couple say they are speaking out now in the hope that others with similar experiences feel heard.

 

"We are not afraid to tell the truth, and we want other people who are victims to have a voice," Vera Kasevich said.

 

Brian Houston has denied the Kasevichs' claims.

 

He said in an email that Hillsong provided financial support to Hillsong Kyiv over many years, and that he and his wife visited the Kyiv church on many occasions.

 

7.30 sent a list of detailed questions to Hillsong Australia, but it did not provide a response.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-06/hillsong-property-empire-financial-control-over-churches/100969258

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:52 p.m. No.16040797   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7528

>>16040786

How Hillsong built its property empire by taking financial control of other churches | 7.30

 

ABC News (Australia)

 

A 7.30 investigation has found Hillsong expanded its property portfolio partly by taking financial control over other churches.

 

Read more here:

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-06/hillsong-property-empire-financial-control-over-churches/100969258

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64kWajqSx8A

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:54 p.m. No.16040808   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0813

From knitting to code breaking: The life and career of Australia’s first female intelligence agency boss

 

As a child Rachel Noble always thought her father was an engineer – the nation’s top cyber spy had no idea he was actually a spy.

 

Anthony Galloway - APRIL 8, 2022

 

1/2

 

When Rachel Noble was a young girl living in Perth, she thought her dad was an ordinary engineer. She knew he had been in the Air Force and was based at RAAF Base Pearce, but that was about it.

 

Little did she know that the military base was one of Australia’s key foreign signals intelligence (SIGINT) sites, and her dad was a cyber spy. Now, if you drive to the Australian Defence Satellite Communications Station in Geraldton, you travel down Noble Road, named after her father, Jim Noble, who founded the facility.

 

“My dad told me most of my life very boringly that he was an engineer and I asked no further questions” says Noble, now Australia’s top cyber spy in her role as director-general of the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD). The 52-year-old is speaking to us from the ASD’s Canberra headquarters, a heavily fortified building complex overlooking Lake Burley Griffin and the nation’s Parliament.

 

“So there I am, you know, 10-year-old running around the air force base in my bare feet and going to school in my bare feet and not knowing that my dad was a SIGINT-er.”

 

The family then settled in Melbourne, where her father worked at the Defence Signals Directorate, the precursor to the ASD.

 

After finishing her university degree in meteorology, Noble was working at Optus in Melbourne when she decided to follow her then-boyfriend to Canberra. Her sister, who had taken a job with the DSD a few years earlier, cut out an ad in The Canberra Times for a job at the directorate and mailed it to her.

 

She applied and was recruited as a code breaker in 1994. Back then, the DSD was a highly secretive organisation. Few Australians had ever heard of it.

 

“I hung in there with that recruitment process because I knew that it was a real place and my family had been associated with the organisation over the years,” she says.

 

Over the next 2½ decades, she worked in a variety of jobs for DSD and then ASD, as well as in the Department of Defence. This included a stint as deputy chief at the top-secret surveillance base Pine Gap in the Northern Territory.

 

Some may think the world of cyber spies would have been an overly blokey environment for a young woman to enter. But Noble says that wasn’t the case.

 

When the signals agency was established in 1947 in Melbourne, the first director, British commander J.E. “Teddy” Poulden, championed women after seeing their huge contribution to signals intelligence collection during World War II.

 

“He gets told you can have ‘this many people and also only this many can be women, and the women may only have roles in these types of jobs’,” Noble says.

 

“So Teddy goes: ‘Yeah, whatever. You can’t find me down here in Melbourne. I’m just going to recruit all these women that I need because they have the skills that I want’. And, heaven forbid, he hired a married woman, which was forbidden.

 

“So actually, when you really go back and look at the history of DSD and ASD and all of its precursors, we have actually been really strong on diversity. And women have always here radically kind of held roles that they weren’t allowed to or shouldn’t have.

 

“And it’s created a really strong, vibrant culture of diversity. And look, I really mean those words, not ribbon-wearing diversity, but genuine diversity and inclusion.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:55 p.m. No.16040813   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040808

 

2/2

 

Noble says it is no surprise, then, that in February 2020, ASD made her the first woman to head an Australian intelligence agency.

 

And now the government has given her agency a huge vote of confidence, as well as a few challenges.

 

In last week’s budget, the ASD received a $9.9 billion funding boost, which will enable the agency to enhance its offensive capabilities and build new offices in Melbourne, Perth and Brisbane under what is dubbed Project REDSPICE.

 

It’s a strong sign that cyber warfare from nation-states such as China and Russia is only increasing and Australia needs to boost its arsenal to both defend against attacks and be able to fight back.

 

The funding announcement came in the same week as the ASD’s 75th anniversary.

 

''‘We are first and foremost a component of the war-fighting capability.’''

 

“ASD sits within the Defence portfolio and I’m responsible to Peter Dutton, the defence minister,” Noble says. “We are first and foremost a component of the war-fighting capability. It was our original mission 75 years ago when we were born after the Second World War, and it still remains so today.”

 

There has been a perception that the ASD will struggle to almost double its workforce over the next 10 years, with the type of people it aims to recruit able to earn millions working for tech giants such as Apple, Google and Microsoft.

 

She pushes back on this, saying “we don’t compete on raw salary” and “there are things that you can do at ASD that are illegal if you’re in Google or Microsoft”.

 

“ASD is a really cool place to work,” she says.

 

Liberal senator James Paterson, chair of Parliament’s intelligence and security committee, says Noble will go down as “one of the most transformative leaders in ASD history”.

 

“REDSPICE, which she championed, will take ASD from a highly effective signals intelligence agency to one of the world’s most potent,” he says. “She’s also earned the trust of the Parliament to expand ASD’s defensive role protecting our critical infrastructure at a time where it could not be more important to our national security.”

 

And what does Australia’s top cyber spy, who has a husband and two teenage children, like to do in her spare time?

 

“I was born in the wrong century. I like to do needlework and knitting,” she says. “They are things that are mindful, that force you to slow the mind down, focus on a task that is calming and repetitive in a way that actually does help me deal with all of the modern stresses of life.”

 

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/from-knitting-to-code-breaking-the-life-and-career-of-australia-s-first-female-intelligence-agency-boss-20220408-p5abwm.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:56 p.m. No.16040817   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0819

OPINION: Australia enshrines protection against modern slavery

 

Martijn Boersma and Justine Nolan - April 8, 2022

 

1/2

 

More than 40 million people are victims of modern slavery, 21 million of whom are in forced labour.

 

While these estimates are not uncontentious, news reports that detail abusive working practices, including modern slavery in Australia and overseas, remind us that this is a real and significant problem.

 

For example, investigations into the Australian horticultural industry have uncovered a pattern of systemic underpayment and abuse of workers. Similarly, the production of rubber gloves in Malaysia is tainted by exploitative practices, such as excessive recruitment fees, withholding of passports and wages, threats to workers and forced overtime.

 

In the past four years, the Australian government has taken steps to address workplace exploitation in the operations and supply chains of Australian companies and this week it ratified the International Labour Organisation’s (ILO) Protocol on Forced Labour.

 

With the ratification of the ILO Protocol on Forced Labour, Australia inches closer to making its response to modern slavery more survivor-centred, placing increased emphasis on the rehabilitation and compensation of those that have been exploited.

 

What is the Protocol on Forced Labour?

 

The ILO has eight “fundamental” conventions, which are binding international treaties that detail basic principles to be implemented once countries ratify them.

 

The “Forced Labour Convention, 1930” is one of these fundamental conventions, which focuses on work performed against people’s will under the threat of punishment and the recently ratified protocol serves to update the 1930 convention.

 

Australia ratified the Forced Labour Convention in 1932. Yet in the 80 years since, the types of exploitation and the ways in which people fall victim to exploitation have changed.

 

While traditional practices such as physical restrictions and captivity persist, other practices such as debt bondage and conditions that rob workers of human dignity have evolved. Today, the chains that illegally bind many workers to the labour they perform are more often psychological than physical.

 

The ILO protocol ratified by the government this week modernises the 1930 Forced Labour Convention. Its ratification will ensure that Australia’s policies and actions to address forced labour remain effective.

 

Among other things, the protocol addresses the increased use of forced labour connected to the private sector and the responsibilities of nation states to make compensation and rehabilitation available to survivors.

 

It also emphasises education, especially among vulnerable groups such as migrant workers, and education of employers to prevent forced labour.

 

The protocol stresses the importance of due diligence in the public and private sector, and it underlines the need to address the root causes that heighten modern slavery risks. For example, the payment of (excessive) recruitment fees is a pervasive problem.

 

Sime Darby Plantation, one of the world’s largest producers of palm oil and a company whose products have been banned by the United States over allegations of forced labour, just announced a plan to reimburse workers $12.16 million. Such company responses are rare, however, and are often a response to long-term campaigns by civil society organisations seeking justice for exploited workers.

 

The protocol seeks to provide greater clarity and consistency to such reparations.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:56 p.m. No.16040819   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040817

 

2/2

 

Incremental Progress in the Fight Against Modern Slavery

 

With the Modern Slavery Act and the National Action Plan to Combat Modern Slavery already in place, surely this means that Australia is taking appropriate steps to address modern slavery without the need for any new laws?

 

While public reporting helps to raise awareness, a recent report found that in the first year of reporting, 77 per cent of the companies reviewed had failed to comply with the basic reporting requirements and 52 per cent had failed to identify obvious modern slavery risks.

 

While some companies are making progress in better understanding and identifying modern slavery risks, there is significant room for improvement.

 

Education and increased awareness are useful, but this is not enough to address the problem. Unfortunately, neither the Modern Slavery Act nor the National Action Plan provide clear guidance on how survivors of forced labour can be supported.

 

The protocol dictates that nation states should assist in “rehabilitating” survivors and ensure that they do not suffer reprisals for their involvement in forced labour. Further, it demands that survivors should have access to remedies, including compensation.

 

This survivor-centric focus of the protocol is critical and a valuable addition to Australia’s current initiatives.

 

The protocol has now been ratified by 57 of the 187 ILO members. Australia’s ratification makes it only the fifth nation in the Asia-Pacific region to do so.

 

This is significant, as the Asia-Pacific region is said to have the second highest prevalence of modern slavery in the world.

 

Martijn Boersma is Associate Professor, Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking at The University of Notre Dame Australia.

 

Professor Justine Nolan is the director of the Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney.

 

https://www.smh.com.au/business/workplace/australia-enshrines-protection-against-modern-slavery-20220302-p5a100.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:58 p.m. No.16040829   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0832

The kingdom and the NGO: Vatican financial trial exposes internal rivalries

 

Testifying before Vatican judges, Monsignor Mauro Carlino admitted to spying on higher-ups at the Vatican bank.

 

Claire Giangravé - April 7, 2022

 

1/2

 

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — The long-running prosecution of high Vatican officials for a real estate investment gone wrong has produced a few historic, shocking and even titillating moments, from Pope Francis’ decision to allow a cardinal of the church to be indicted to the intimations, denied by that same cardinal, that his relationship with a female security consultant was more than advisory.

 

But some of the most intriguing testimony came last week as Monsignor Mauro Carlino, a former official of the Vatican’s powerful Secretariat of State, raised the veil on the widely known but rarely glimpsed rivalry between the Secretariat and the Vatican bank, involving secret surveillance, alleged blackmail and good old-fashioned backstabbing.

 

The monsignor admitted to Vatican judges that he had commissioned surveillance of important bank officials, as well as one of Pope Francis’ closest advisers.

 

Culturally the Secretariat and the bank are very different institutions. The Vatican bank, officially called the Institute for Religious Works, is run by laypeople and non-Italians at that, and has tried to shake off a well-deserved reputation for financial scandal in recent years by adopting global standards of transparency and accountability.

 

The Secretariat, the seat of the church’s secular sovereignty, is the province of cardinals, archbishops and other clerics. It handles relations with other states, Vatican diplomacy and the government of the departments and offices that make up the Roman Curia. Its decisions have largely yielded the scandal behind the current trial.

 

Carlino is among 10 defendants facing trial for their part in the controversial purchase of prime real estate in London’s Chelsea neighborhood that has cost the church well over $300 million from a fund earmarked for the pope’s charitable works. Among the others are Cardinal Angelo Becciu, a former sostituto, the secretary of state’s chief of staff, and Carlino’s onetime boss, and an Italian businessman named Gianluigi Torzi.

 

As the investment soured, Francis removed Becciu, who had overseen the purchase of a majority stake in a fund that owned the London property, replacing him with Archbishop Edgar Pena Parra. Pena Parra oversaw the Secretariat’s turbulent efforts to take full ownership of the property in Chelsea with the help of Torzi. But in brokering the deal, Torzi held onto 1,000 voting shares of the fund, giving him ultimate control over the property’s disposition.

 

In the spring of 2019, Pena Parra was frantically looking for a way to exit the arrangement with Torzi. He asked the Vatican bank for a loan to pay the businessman $17 million for his controlling shares as well as to pay off $120 million in debt on the London apartment house. Pena Parra’s request was seconded by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, in a letter to the bank.

 

In late May of 2019, the Vatican bank’s president, French investment banker Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, approved the loan, Carlino told the judges. “The pope approved, the sostituto was happy the affair was concluded,” he said, “and then a communication arrives stating that after all (the loan) wasn’t approved.”

 

The Secretariat spoke with the bank’s general director, Gian Franco Mammì, to salvage the situation, Carlino testified, but to no avail. On July 2, the Vatican bank flagged the “suspicious” loan request to Vatican prosecutors, who launched an investigation.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 10:58 p.m. No.16040832   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040829

 

2/2

 

What happened between May and July of 2019 that made the Vatican bank step back from the deal remains a mystery. “The substitute asked for information” on Mammì, Carlino said, “and following the weirdness of the loan that was granted and then denied, asked (Domenico) Giani, then the commander of the Vatican gendarmes, to run some checks.”

 

In addition, Luciano Capaldo, an architect who acted as a consultant to the Secretariat of State on the London deal, requested surveillance on the higher-ups at the Vatican bank, according to testimonies by both Carlino and Capaldo.

 

People “at the Secretariat of State and Monsignor Carlino especially wanted information on Torzi,” Capaldo told Vatican prosecutors in leaked video of interrogations by prosecutors. He told the investigators that he had watched surveillance footage “sometimes even with the substitute.”

 

In September 2019, after the deal with Torzi was concluded, Pena Parra asked for “a dossier on Torzi from the Italian secret service,” Carlino said. Carlino admitted he had asked for surveillance of Giovanni Boscia, currently the chief financial officer at the bank, stating that the Secretariat suspected he may have had a previous relationship with Torzi or the original owner of the London property, Raffaele Mincione.

 

Asked by Vatican judges about cellphone messages suggesting he had “a gentleman” followed, Carlino said the chat referred to Giuseppe Milanese, a longtime friend of Francis who had handled the initial negotiations with Torzi. The Secretariat, Carlino said, was concerned that Milanese was also “in cahoots” with Torzi.

 

The suspicions between the Vatican bank and the Secretariat of State may be traced to a power struggle between Becciu and Cardinal George Pell, the Australian prelate whom Francis appointed to push through financial reforms in 2014, reforms that Becciu fought.

 

Pell and the Vatican bank’s president had pushed hard to create an investment company based in Luxembourg that would have pulled the Catholic institution’s often troubled financial infrastructure into the globalized economy of the 21st century.

 

But Francis shot the plan down, warning in a homily at the Vatican, “When organizations take first place, love goes down and the church, poor thing, becomes a NGO and that’s not the way.”

 

Pell’s time as secretary for the economy at the Vatican was cut short in 2017 when he was summoned to Australia to answer charges that he sexually abused minors. He was acquitted on appeal in April 2020, but by then his tenure at the Vatican had expired. Becciu has denied rumors that he had a hand in the accusations against Pell.

 

But the pope’s homily and the fallout of the London realty deal show that friction between the Vatican bank and the Secretariat has as much to do with differing visions of the church: a kingdom with its roots in medieval court life or an NGO-style international institution. Carlino’s testimony points to how the curial culture of the Secretariat clashed with the globalist ambitions of the Vatican bank.

 

The bank’s chief, de Franssu, denies that the clash exists at all: “There is no war,” he told Italian media in 2019, denying that the bank’s whistleblowing to Vatican prosecutors was an attack on the Secretariat.

 

But Francis’ take is more difficult to determine. Since the start of the Vatican trial, he has greatly diminished the Secretariat’s power, cutting its purse strings and removing its representative from the council overseeing the Vatican bank. His new Apostolic Constitution, “Praedicate Evangelium,” published in March, created more spaces for lay leadership in the Roman Curia, and he has long counseled the bureaucracy of clerics to see themselves as servants, and not tend their own power.

 

But given the choice to hand the financial management to the Vatican bank, Francis chose to centralize the church’s finances in the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, or APSA.

 

Headed by Italian Bishop Nunzio Galantino, APSA remains a black box. One clue to its sympathies, however, is that when the Vatican bank changed its mind and canceled the Secretariat’s loan, APSA borrowed $150 million from foreign banks to bail the church out of the London deal.

 

https://religionnews.com/2022/04/07/the-kingdom-and-the-ngo-vatican-financial-trial-exposes-internal-rivalries/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 11 p.m. No.16040836   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3677

First case of ‘Deltacron’ detected in Australia

 

The first case of a new Covid variant has been detected in Australia, with scientists revealing what they know about the strain.

 

Hamish Spence - April 8, 2022

 

“Deltacron” and another recombinant Covid infection have been detected in Australia.

 

In its weekly Covid report, NSW Health revealed the state has identified one Deltacron infection, a mix of Delta and Omicron BA.1, and a recombinant infection of Omicron’s sub-variants BA.1 and BA.2.

 

Recombinant viruses are when two separate virus strains merge to form a new, single, hybrid strain.

 

While these infections were reported for the first time on Friday, NSW Health said they were not identified this week.

 

Deltacron was detected for the first time at the Institut Pasteur in Paris in February and has since been found in the US, UK and Denmark.

 

While this hybrid strain sounds scary, scientists say it was expected and it is too early to tell what impact it could have.

 

University of NSW virologist Professor William Rawlinson told the Sydney Morning Herald people with recombinants have not shown worse signs so far.

 

“We need to keep a close eye on the relationship between these cases and severity of disease,” he said.

 

Trinity College biochemistry Professor Luke O‘Neill wrote for the Conversation in March that more work needs to be done to determine whether Deltacron will be “any better at evading immunity” and causing “more severe disease”.

 

“There are currently too few Deltacron cases to draw any conclusions on these issues,” he said.

 

“What we need are experiments to determine the properties of Deltacron – scientists have started that process and have been able to infect cells with it, so hopefully we’ll have answers in time.”

 

Two new mixed infections were also detected in NSW this week, which occurs when two separate virus sequences are detected at the same time in a specimen.

 

They were a mix of Omicron BA.1 and BA.2, though neither of the specimens were collected this week.

 

Seven mixed specimens had already been identified in NSW before this week, three with Delta and Omicron BA.1 and four with Omicron BA.1 and BA.2.

 

NSW recorded 20,396 new Covid cases on Friday, while eight people with the virus died.

 

https://www.news.com.au/world/coronavirus/health/first-case-of-deltacron-detected-in-australia/news-story/4a02fd926bbf027c990ba4ab0d9b48d6

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 8, 2022, 11:03 p.m. No.16040849   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6545

RealGhislaine Tweets

 

Maxwell Family Statement: Our family is profoundly shocked and troubled by the denial of a retrial for our sister. The court's ruling is as tainted as the original verdict is unsafe.

 

https://ba2454cd-c37d-4338-88ee-63f8ce48d2ce.usrfiles.com/ugd/ba2454_bd9c5050b86e48a7b012a8821155ed3e.pdf

 

https://twitter.com/RealGhislaine/status/1512086644521791496

 

 

This & many other issues will be appealed to the 2nd US Circuit and we are optimistic about Ghislaine's success on appeal.

 

https://twitter.com/RealGhislaine/status/1512086646635696135

 

Ghislaine Maxwell family ‘shocked’ by denial of new trial

 

https://apnews.com/article/ghislaine-maxwell-nyc-state-wire-alison-j-nathan-jeffrey-epstein-new-york-302aa0de738c2f9578c62ba824cc2d12

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 12:28 a.m. No.16041115   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1121 >>1135

Scott Morrison: Why I love Australia

 

Liberal Party of Australia

 

Apr 9, 2022

 

Over the last three years Australians have been tested.

 

Despite the challenges, our economic recovery is leading the world.

 

This is not a time to change course.

 

This is a time to stick to our plan.Let’s build a stronger future together.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVOQJZdv76M

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 12:29 a.m. No.16041118   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1121

Labor's plan for a better future.

 

Australian Labor Party

 

Apr 3, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese is focused on delivering for all Australians, with real plans for stronger Medicare, secure jobs, and more manufacturing.

 

Together we will build a better future.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZ8j6WTSs_Q

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 12:30 a.m. No.16041121   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1130

>>16041115

>>16041118

Scott Morrison chokes up in emotional clip explaining why he's 'fired up' for the coming election - as sharp-looking Anthony Albanese releases his own video pitch to Australia

 

AIDAN WONDRACZ and AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS - 9 April 2022

 

1/2

 

Scott Morrison and Opposition leader Anthony Albanese have both released their latest campaign videos - as the prime minister gets set to call an election date.

 

Mr Morrison choked up as he took a more emotional approach in the one minute long video released on Saturday.

 

The prime minister revealed the touching reason he wanted to continue as prime minister, before reflecting on his government's successes during the Covid pandemic and admitting the world was as unstable as it was during World War Two.

 

He touched on the 2019-20 Black Summer bushfires, the Covid pandemic, unprecedented floods in Queensland and NSW, and Russia's invasion in the Ukraine.

 

'We're dealing with a world that has never been more unstable since the time of the second World War,' Mr Morrison said.

 

Mr Morrison is expected to call the date of the next election this weekend with Labor still ahead in the polls.

 

Mr Albanese released his own campaign video attacking rising national debt, promising to keep taxes low and vowing to introduce fee-free courses at TAFE.

 

'Forty thousand people are alive in Australia because of the way we managed the pandemic,' Mr Morrison said.

 

'Seven hundred thousand people still have jobs and countless numbers of businesses that would have been destroyed.'

 

Mr Morrison touched on his election promise to strengthen the Australian economy.

 

'Were dealing with an economy that has more moving parts, and more risks, but indeed many many opportunities that we have to seize,' he said.

 

Mr Morrison appeared to momentarily choke up as he revealed the touching reason he wanted to continue as prime minister.

 

'This is why as we go into this next election, what's firing me up? We're actually in a really strong position.

 

'I was at a trade school the other day in Brisbane, Year 11 and 12. I asked them, 'how many of you are going to start your own business?' More than half of their hands went up.

 

'How good's that? That's why I love Australia'.

 

Mr Albanese promised in his video he would focus on strengthening the economy and pulling the country out of 'skyrocketing' debt.

 

'Australians deserve a prime minister who shows up, who takes responsibility and who works with people,' he said.

 

'Debt has skyrocketed under the Liberals. They doubled the debt even before the pandemic. Labor will get spending under control so we can keep taxes low.'

 

Mr Albanese touched on his experience growing in a single-parent household.

 

'Growing up with a single mum, I learned the value of a dollar and I know how hard it is to get ahead,' he said.

 

'That's why I will help families get ahead by making childcare cheaper, reducing power bills and investing in fee-free TAFE.'

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 12:32 a.m. No.16041130   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16041121

 

2/2

 

Speculation continues to mount on when Mr Morrison will call the election, with Australians set to go to the polls on either May 14 or May 21.

 

A Newspoll conducted for The Australian shows 38 per cent of the primary vote is going to Labor - a fall of three percentage points since the last survey - with the coalition improving a point to 36 per cent.

 

But on a two-party preferred basis, Labor is ahead 54 per cent to 46 per cent for the government, which if realised at the May election could translate to a national swing of more than five per cent.

 

Asked who would be a better prime minister, the poll of 1,531 voters sided narrowly with Scott Morrison, who improved by a point to 43 per cent.

 

Over a period when both leaders have come under attack over alleged bullying behaviour within their own party, Anthony Albanese was unchanged on 42 per cent.

 

Mr Albanese said it was likely the election would be called this weekend because Mr Morrison 'didn't like the scrutiny' of a sitting Parliament.

 

'This Prime Minister last year gave up on governing and said he was campaigning,' Mr Albanese said on Saturday.

 

The Opposition Leader said Mr Morrison was treating the election as a 'game' and delaying it, to allow the use of taxpayer funds to spruik government spending and appoint mates to government boards.

 

'This absurdity of not having the election called so that they can continue to spend taxpayer funds on election ads that are in the name of the government, but they're really about promoting the Liberal National parties … call the election, let the Australian people decide,' he said.

 

Mr Albanese said Labor had a mountain to climb to win the looming election but had a plan for the future while the government was 'out of puff'.

 

If the prime minister does not visit the governor-general by this Sunday it will rule out the earlier May date, as a minimum of 33 days is required between calling an election and polling day.

 

It will also mean MPs will have to return to Canberra for the week as the House of Representatives is due to sit.

 

A program for the scheduled sitting was released on Friday afternoon but it is not expected to go ahead.

 

Mr Morrison has said his visit to Governor-General David Hurley is not far away.

 

'Electoral terms are for three years. The last election was on May 18 (2019) and the next election will be held about the same time,' he told reporters on Friday.

 

'You'll know very soon.'

 

A potential hurdle delaying Mr Morrison from calling the election was cleared on Friday afternoon when the High Court threw out a challenge to his pick of candidates for several NSW seats.

 

Chief Justice Susan Kiefel said there were 'insufficient prospects of success' to warrant leave for former Liberal member Matthew Camenzuli to challenge Mr Morrison's intervention in the state's local branches.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10701975/Scott-Morrison-Anthony-Albanese-release-campaign-videos-ahead-election-call.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 12:34 a.m. No.16041135   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16041115

Campaign ad shows a window into what it takes to be a Prime Minister; and that’s the ground he needs to fight against Albanese

 

If nothing else, this opening salvo of the election campaign should show even its harshest critics that the Coalition is not to be written off and underestimating the Prime Minister is a mistake.

 

Peta Credlin - April 9, 2022

 

In political campaigning terms, it’s known as a memory ad.

 

A reminder to the voter of all the things your government has done without telling people that they should be grateful; or more grateful, as the case may be, given the Prime Minister starts this election behind in the polls. As a piece of campaign weaponry, it hits the mark. It’s beautifully shot and has echoes of White House imagery, with the glimpses through the window of the PM’s Parliament House office; the man at his desk, working late into the night keeping Australians safe, flanked by our nation’s flag. In a none too subtle reminder to conservatives too, there’s a portrait of the Queen which won’t be there in a month’s time if the government changes.

 

It’s an ad that seeks to frame the election by using Scott Morrison’s incumbency to remind people of the heavy responsibility that comes with the nation’s top job; “floods, fires, pandemic and war” have all been issues that have crossed his desk and it begs the question in the mind of the viewer, is the other bloke up to all that? There’s the reference to the complexity of our national economy, again a marker that this former treasurer has a proven track record whereas the Opposition Leader might have been around a long time but the fact he’s never had a portfolio in either the economic, or national security areas, is telling.

 

An ad like this has a limited shelf life. You need to use at the start because in the end, the campaign isn’t about what you’ve done, it’s about what you will do if re-elected and the sort of difference you want to make to the lives of ordinary Australians. In the end, ‘what’s in it for me’ is a core motivation for most voters busy trying to raise their families, work hard and get ahead, or live a secure life in retirement.

 

There are other visual cues that reinforce the Morrison brand. The wedding ring: fidelity, faith and fatherhood. The mention of Brisbane and a recent visit to a trade training school: a reminder that more and more, the Liberal Party is the natural home of those who work with their hands for a living, amplifying Labor’s shift away from the centre towards the world of inner-city greens and woke elites.

 

The tone is refreshing, away from the bellowing Morrison of recent months; the candidate we’ve seen out on the hustings, replaced with the contemplative leader. In my campaigning experience, especially when you want to connect with women, tone is everything and he lands it here. Also absent is the hectoring, he (and Albanese) talk ‘at’ voters too much. Instead, the images on the screen ‘breathe’; it’s reflective and sober, with a little bit of chocked emotion coming through. And closing with ‘that’s why I love Australia’ says to the viewer that Scott Morrison, the unabashed patriot, is back.

 

I’ve never referred to the PM as ScoMo. I know it was his ‘daggy Dad from the suburbs’ schtick last time but when you want to highlight your opponent’s lack of gravitas for the country’s most serious job, I’ve always felt it was a mistake to do that by diminishing your own. Maybe his campaign team now agrees because this ad shows a window into what it takes to be a Prime Minister; and that’s the ground he needs to fight against Albanese, not who voters might most like to sit next to at the footy.

 

If nothing else, this opening salvo of Campaign 2022 should show even its harshest critics that the Coalition is not to be written off and underestimating the Prime Minister is a mistake.

 

Peta Credlin AO is a weekly columnist with The Australian. Since 2017, she has hosted her successful prime-time program Credlin on Sky News each weeknight at 6pm. For 16 years, Peta was a policy adviser to Howard government ministers in the portfolios of defence, communications, immigration and foreign affairs. Between 2009 and 2015, she was chief of staff to Tony Abbott as Leader of the Opposition and later as prime minister. Peta is admitted as a barrister and solicitor in Victoria, with legal qualifications from the University of Melbourne and the Australian National University.

 

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/opinion/peta-credlin/campaign-ad-shows-a-window-into-what-it-takes-to-be-a-prime-minister-and-thats-the-ground-he-needs-to-fight-against-albanese/news-story/63d811db0e24b9669abcab05c645cc60

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 10:26 p.m. No.16047076   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7080 >>7083 >>7095 >>7405 >>7410 >>7438 >>7493 >>3169 >>3178 >>3201 >>3203 >>3205 >>8982 >>8999 >>5880 >>5891 >>5912 >>3507 >>3508 >>3542 >>3665 >>0036 >>0042 >>0076 >>6207 >>6213 >>6221 >>6235 >>6252 >>6276 >>6291 >>6334 >>6439 >>6464 >>1958 >>1968 >>1989 >>2010 >>2295 >>4690 >>4696 >>4749 >>1287

Scott Morrison calls federal election for May 21, setting up battle with Labor's Anthony Albanese

 

Brett Worthington and Georgia Hitch - 10 April 2022

 

Australians will get to decide who leads the country for the next three years when they go to the polls in a federal election on May 21.

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison locked the date in today after visiting the Governor-General in Canberra.

 

It sets up a six-week campaign that will pit Mr Morrison's Liberal-National Coalition against a Labor Party led by Anthony Albanese.

 

Mr Morrison said he did not think his government was "perfect" but that the public would judge it on what it had done over the last term.

 

"Our government is not perfect — we've never claimed to be, but we are up-front and you may see some flaws but you can also see what we have achieved for Australia in incredibly difficult times," he said.

 

"You can see our plan. Our plan will deliver more and better jobs and the lowest unemployment seen in some 50 years."

 

The Prime Minister was asked how he was feeling about the upcoming election, given the recent attacks on his personal character.

 

Mr Morrison has been accused of being a bully and a liar by members of his own party, including Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce — claims he has denied.

 

"This election, others will seek to make it about me [but] it's about the people watching this right now," Mr Morrison said.

 

"It's about them. What we've demonstrated over these past three years is the ability to make those decisions that has ensured that Australia's recovery is leading the world."

 

In calling the election, Mr Morrison becomes the first prime minister since John Howard — more than 14 years ago — to serve a full term as the nation's leader.

 

The Coalition is seeking its fourth term in office, while Mr Albanese hopes to return Labor to government for the first time since 2013.

 

Mr Morrison said voters would face a choice when they walked into the voting booth.

 

He urged them to stick with a government they knew amid uncertain times, listing war in Ukraine, a deadly pandemic and an economy recovering from recession as the biggest issues Australia was facing.

 

Mr Albanese has claimed underdog status as he seeks to return Labor to government.

 

Labor's platform centres on policies like lifting childcare subsidies, placing more nurses in aged care homes, and providing nearly half a million fee-free TAFE places.

 

"Australians deserve better," Mr Albanese said.

 

"This government doesn't have an agenda for today, let alone a vision for tomorrow. They demonstrated that in their budget, which was nothing more than a ploy for an election campaign."

 

Mr Albanese, the infrastructure minister when Labor was last in power, briefly served as deputy prime minister when Kevin Rudd returned to the prime ministership in 2013.

 

He said he expected a Coalition scare campaign about his credentials to lead the nation.

 

"Fear can be a powerful emotion," he said.

 

"I imagine there will be quite a bit over the next few weeks but I want to appeal to your sense of optimism and desire for a better future."

 

The battle ahead

 

Mr Morrison's Coalition begins the election notionally with 76 seats — the bare minimum for a majority government.

 

Labor notionally has 69 seats, thanks to the creation of a new seat in Melbourne.

 

The Opposition needs four seats to get ahead of the Coalition and seven seats for a bare majority.

 

The ABC has tracked the travel of the leaders of Labor and the Coalition since late last year.

 

It offers a snapshot of where the campaign will likely be fought. Labor hopes to make gains in Western Australia, Queensland and Northern Tasmania, while the Coalition is seeking gains in New South Wales and the Northern Territory.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-10/may-21-election-scott-morrison-anthony-albanese-coalition-labor/100903580

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 10:27 p.m. No.16047080   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Prime Minister calls election for May 21

 

Sky News Australia

 

Apr 10, 2022

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has officially announced the 2022 federal election will be held on May 21.

 

Mr Morrison, speaking from Parliament House in Canberra, said the election will be “incredibly important” for Australians.

 

“That's because there is so much at stake for Australia and our future,” Mr Morrison said.

 

“This election is about you - no-one else. It's about our country and it's about its future.

 

“Above all, this election, as all elections are, this election is a choice.”

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5ol_CeOi_A

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 10:28 p.m. No.16047083   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

‘Australia is ready for a better future’: Anthony Albanese begins his election campaign

 

Sky News Australia

 

Apr 10, 2022

 

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese has promised to “restore faith” in the political system if he is given the “honour” of serving as the next prime minister.

 

“I will lead with integrity, and I will treat you with respect,” he said.

 

“I will restore faith in our political system by ending the waste and rorts and establishing a strong national anti-corruption commission, I won’t go missing when the going gets tough.”

 

Speaking on Sunday from the Commonwealth Parliament Offices in Sydney in his first media conference of the 2022 federal election campaign, Mr Albanese said he was “humbled” to put himself forward to lead Australia.

 

“This government doesn’t have an agenda for today, let alone a vision for tomorrow,” he said.

 

“We can and we must do better.

 

“The pandemic has given us the opportunity to imagine a better future, and Labor has the policies and plans to shape that future.”

 

Mr Albanese went on to warn Australians to prepare for a bit of “fear” over the six weeks to the May 21 federal election.

 

“But I want to appeal to Australians’ sense of optimism and hope for a better future,” he said.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzOEXFnuUOo

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 10:29 p.m. No.16047088   🗄️.is 🔗kun

'He is trying to shift the focus': 9News political editor Chris Uhlmann breaks down Scott Morrison's election pitch

 

Stuart Marsh - Apr 10, 2022

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison will attempt to shift the focus away from himself and onto his team during the 2022 federal election campaign, 9News political editor Chris Uhlmann says.

 

In his first campaign speech immediately after calling the election for May 21, Mr Morrison posed the government as proven economic performers against an untried Labor opposition.

 

Uhlmann said a key strategy of Mr Morrison's campaign will be distancing himself from the numerous recent public attacks on his character.

 

"He tried to frame this debate (as) this election is not about me, it is about you. Don't forget the major attack lines against the government is that Scott Morrison can't be trusted," Uhlmann said.

 

''He is now saying this election is all about you.

 

"So that is one of the main points to take away from this, he is trying to shift the focus and he is trying to move it on to his team."

 

A key shift in this year's election campaign would be Mr Morrison distancing himself from the presidential-style campaign of the individual that he won on in 2019.

 

"He mentioned his team several times. Remember last time the presidential campaign was all about him," Uhlmann said.

 

"This time he is talking about a team, a team with a plan and a record which he tried to reclaim for the government saying, look, on any measure, what we did in the pandemic actually the recovery is coming out reasonably well.

 

"It is a contrast between us, who you know, warts and all, and a Labor Party that you do not know."

 

Uhlmann said both leaders will need to address the prospect of greater geopolitical tension given Australia's proximity to China.

 

"We are entering a new Cold War. We need to work out how we deal with a rising China that is going to test us and test any future Prime Minister," he said.

 

"So part of the pitch of the government is if you want to feel safe, if you want to feel secure, then Scott Morrison is someone who can deal with that, or you can risk Anthony Albanese.

 

"This is the way the government wants to frame this, this is precisely the opposite of the way the Labor Party will try to frame it.

 

"They will say, tired, old, out of puff, now out of time, kick them out."

 

https://www.9news.com.au/national/australia-federal-election-2022-may-21-chris-uhlmann-analysis/0adeeb63-f627-4df0-82fa-0296ade0c5e4

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18oTgiEsJIE

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 9, 2022, 10:31 p.m. No.16047095   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7437

>>16047076

'I won't go missing when things get tough': Anthony Albanese responds after election date set

 

Stuart Marsh - Apr 10, 2022

 

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese has made his pitch to become the Prime Minister of Australia, pledging to restore faith in the country's political system.

 

Mr Albanese made his case in the first speech since Prime Minister Scott Morrison called the federal election to take place on May 21.

 

In a wide-ranging speech the leader of the Opposition pledged to provide cheaper childcare, greater investment in renewable energies and the establishment of an anti-corruption commission.

 

"I won't go missing when the going gets tough. I will accept the responsibility that comes with high office. I will lead a government that repays and rewards your hard work," Mr Albanese said.

 

"A government that reflects the decency and compassion and courage of the Australian people.

 

"I am humbled to put myself forward as Prime Minister of this great nation."

 

The Labor leader touched on how his childhood shaped his perception of Australia and provided him with experience of how many voters live.

 

"I grew up not far from here in Sydney and public housing, the son of a single mum. I learned the value of a dollar, I learned the importance of resilience," he said.

 

"But I also learned about the strength of community and the power of government to make a difference to people's lives.

 

"That experience of overcoming adversity and filling my mother's dreams for building a better life that she enjoyed, it took me into politics and it is what drives me today."

 

In his speech today, Prime Minister Scott Morrison asked voters to choose between what he described as an experienced incumbent government or an untried Labor cabinet.

 

In response to that, Mr Albanese said if elected his current cabinet is "the most experienced incoming Labor government in history".

 

"If you look at some of the quite frankly absurd attacks that have gone on from Mr Morrison, they just don't stack up," Mr Albanese said.

 

"One of those is about my experience. My experience is I've been Acting Prime Minister, I've been Deputy Prime Minister, I chaired the Parliamentary business committee for six years.

 

"So every piece of legislation that went through under the Rudd and Gillard governments I presided over."

 

https://www.9news.com.au/national/federal-election-2022-anthony-albanese-speaks-after-elction-date-set/759cd33f-bc99-4c6b-b5dd-32d20abc9013

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:17 a.m. No.16047405   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Factbox: Australian democracy at a glance

 

John Mair and Byron Kaye - April 10, 2022

 

SYDNEY, April 10 (Reuters) - Australia will hold a general election on May 21, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced on Sunday.

 

Here are some facts on how elections work in Australia:

 

  • Australia does not have a set date for national elections, but the maximum term for the House of Representatives is three years. The election is called by the prime minister. The previous election was on May 18, 2019.

 

  • There are two houses of parliament, with the government formed by the party or coalition holding a majority in the lower chamber, the House of Representatives. The prime minister is chosen by the governing party from the House.

 

  • All 151 seats in the House will be up for election. Morrison's Liberal-National coalition holds 76 seats, the opposition Labor party 68 and seven are held by minor parties and independents.

 

  • Since the last election, a review of electoral boundaries and population changes added one seat for the state of Victoria while Western Australia lost one.

 

  • The upper house, the Senate, has 76 members - 12 from each of the six states and two from each of Australia's two less-populous territories. Forty Senate seats - six from each state and the four territory seats - will be contested at this election.

 

  • State senators are elected for six-year terms, while territory senators are elected for three years. There are some circumstances when the House of Representatives and Senate cannot agree on legislation and the entire upper house can be dissolved for election.

 

  • Voting is compulsory for about 16 million Australians, who must register when they turn 18. Those who do not vote face a fine of A$20 ($15).

 

  • Australia has a preferential voting system for elections to the lower house. Voters rank candidates in order of preference on their ballot papers.

 

  • A lower-house candidate who gets more than 50% of the first-preference votes wins the seat. If no candidate reaches that threshold, the one with the fewest votes is excluded and their votes are distributed to the person each of those voters nominated as their second preference. This continues until one candidate passes the 50% threshold.

 

  • Since 2010 there has been a high turnover of prime ministers, following changes that allow the governing party to call a leadership vote without involving the electorate. In that period, Kevin Rudd (Labor), Julia Gillard (Labor), Rudd (for a second time), Tony Abbott (Liberal), Malcolm Turnbull (Liberal) and Morrison (Liberal) have served as prime minister.

 

  • Following changes to Liberal Party rules on internal leadership votes, Scott Morrison has become the first Prime Minister to serve a full three-year term since a John Howard-led coalition was voted out in 2007 after 11 years in power.

 

($1 = 1.3376 Australian dollars)

 

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/australian-democracy-glance-2022-04-10/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:22 a.m. No.16047410   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7413 >>7435

>>16047076

Australia PM Morrison first to serve full term in 15 years

 

ROD McGUIRK - 10 April 2022

 

1/2

 

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — In at least one sense, Scott Morrison is the most successful Australian prime minister in years.

 

He is the first to survive in office from one election to the next since 2007. That year, the government of Australia’s second-longest-serving Prime Minister John Howard was voted out after a reign of almost 12 years.

 

Between Howard and Morrison, there have been four prime ministers including Kevin Rudd who served twice during an extraordinary period of political instability in Australia.

 

Rudd’s second stint ended when voters ousted his center-left Australian Labor Party government in the 2013 election. The other three prime ministers were toppled by their own parties, which panicked amid poor opinion polling. So too was Rudd during his first stint that set the revolving door to the prime minister’s office spinning.

 

Morrison’s relative longevity can be explained in part by his conservative Liberal Party tightening the rules that enable them to activate their leader’s ejector seat.

 

But most put his survival for a full three-year term down to the credit Morrison is given for leading his coalition to a narrow victory in the last election in 2019 when Labor was favored to win. Some betting agencies had been so confident of a Labor victory that they had paid out the party’s backers before polling day.

 

Morrison’s coalition is again behind in most opinion polls. But the polls’ credibility has not recovered from the shock of the 2019 result and Morrison is now recognized as a masterful campaigner who does not surrender.

 

The 53-year-old former tourism marketer was labeled the “accidental prime minister” in 2018 when his government colleagues chose him to replace then-Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

 

It was yet another overthrow of a prime minister without involving voters for reasons not fully explained in a process that Australians increasingly loathe. Polls suggested Morrison would have one of the shortest tenures of any Australian prime minister with elections only months away.

 

His critics argue that his success has been a triumph of style over substance.

 

The satirical website Betoota Advocate labeled him “Scotty from Marketing” when he first came to power and the description has gained popularity since.

 

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese has been nicknamed Albo since he was a child in keeping with a time-honored Australian tradition of abbreviating names and often adding “o” at the end.

 

Likewise, Morrison is widely known as ScoMo. But there is conjecture around just how organic that nickname is.

 

“That’s what I’ve been tagged as, so I may as well embrace it,” Morrison said in 2017 when as treasurer he added “ScoMo” to his Facebook account name.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:23 a.m. No.16047413   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047410

 

2/2

 

Morrison sells himself as an ordinary Australian family man who is passionate about his Sydney Pentecostal church and his local National Rugby League football team, the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks.

 

His persona is described as “Daggy Dad,” an affectionate Australian term for an unfashionable father who can be amusing but can also be a source of embarrassment for teenage children.

 

During a family profile for Australia’s “60 Minutes” current affairs program broadcast nationally in February, he sang an amateurish rendition of a 1970s rock song “April Sun in Cuba” while strumming a ukulele.

 

He is the son of police officer and one-term mayor John Morrison and a descendant of British convict William Roberts, who arrived in Australia in 1788 with the first fleet of 11 ships that established the penal colony that became Sydney.

 

He promoted tourism for the Australian and New Zealand governments before entering politics.

 

He is seen by some as an incongruous mix of a committed Christian who made his name through ratcheting up a refugee policy that many church groups have condemned as inhumane.

 

Morrison rose to public prominence when the conservative coalition government was first elected under Prime Minister Tony Abbott in 2013 as the minister who stopped asylum-seekers from attempting to reach Australian shores by boat.

 

Australia used the navy to turn boats back to Indonesia, or it banished refugees to remote immigration camps in the poor Pacific island nations of Papua New Guinea and Nauru.

 

The policy has been widely condemned as a callous abrogation of Australia’s international obligations to help refugees. Australia’s human rights watchdog found in 2014 that Morrison failed to act in the best interests of asylum-seeker children in detention.

 

Morrison explained his deep belief in the righteousness of crushing the people-smuggling trade and preserving the safety of people who are tempted to board rickety boats to take the long and treacherous voyage to Australia.

 

The boats have stopped arriving and the government recently moved to neutralize the plight of refugees still languishing on the islands by accepting a New Zealand offer to resettle 150 a year.

 

Morrison remains proud of the refugee policy. He has a trophy shaped like a silhouette of a people-smuggler’s boat inscribed with the words: “I Stopped These.”

 

Sen. Concetta Fierravanti-Wells, an enemy of Morrison within his conservative Liberal Party, said the prime minister’s faith was a marketing ploy.

 

She described Morrison as the most ruthless person she had met in her public life.

 

“He is adept at running with the foxes and hunting with the hounds, lacking a moral compass and having no conscience,” Fierravanti-Wells said in her final speech to the Senate in March.

 

“His actions conflict with his portrayal as a man of faith. He has used his so-called faith as a marketing advantage,” she added.

 

Morrison referred to his Christian faith’s influence on his politics during his first speech to Parliament in 2008.

 

“So what values do I derive from my faith?” Morrison asked.

 

“My answer comes from Jeremiah, Chapter 9:24: I am the Lord who exercises loving kindness, justice and righteousness on earth; for I delight in these things, declares the Lord,” he said.

 

https://apnews.com/article/sports-scott-morrison-john-howard-kevin-rudd-australia-43ec2623eabecc8fd978d85f22246d9b

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:38 a.m. No.16047438   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7440

>>16047076

Federal Election 2022: The key seats where it will be won or lost

 

The pathway to victory will not be easy for the Coalition or the Labor Party as “both have a murky path ahead of them”.

 

Ellen Whinnett and Clare Armstrong - April 10, 2022

 

1/2

 

The election will be fought through hand-to-hand combat, with the Coalition and Labor fighting for single seats across the country and a host of previously safe seats coming into play due to the retirement of well-known local Members of parliament.

 

The Coalition must stem its losses in Western Australia, cling onto at-risk electorates in Queensland and try to pick up a couple of marginals in New South Wales in order to win a fourth term in office when Australians go to the polls on May 21.

 

Labor needs to pick up marginal seats in Victoria and Tasmania, capitalise on its popularity in Western Australia and defend its coalmining seats in regional NSW if it is to win majority Government for the first time since 2007.

 

“The pathway to victory is wider for the Labor Party than it is for the Liberal Party but both have a murky path ahead of them,’’ pollster Kosmos Samaras, from RedBridge Group, said.

 

To maintain its one-seat majority the Liberals would have to at least regain the south Sydney seat of Hughes, which they lost when sitting MP Craig Kelly defected to Clive Palmer’s United Australia Party (UAP). This would help offset the loss of the abolished Liberal seat of Stirling in WA, and the creation of the new seat of Hawke in Victoria, which is on a notional margin of 10 per cent for Labor.

 

The Coalition would then have to hold all of its seats, or pick up something in NSW to offset potential losses in Tasmania and Victoria.

 

Taking into account Stirling and Hawke, Labor needs to win another seven seats to claim majority victory.

 

The most obvious of these likely gains are in WA, where two and possibly three seats are up for grabs, while the Liberals are vulnerable in the NSW marginal seat of Reid, Victorian ultra-marginal Chisholm, and the Tasmanian seat of Bass.

 

Both major parties are bleeding votes to minor parties, but the Liberals are copping it from several directions, losing conservative voters to the anti-vax, anti-lockdown appeal of the UAP, as well as progressive inner-city votes to the well-organised and funded “Voices of’’ independents.

 

With the retirement of a number of well-known and established MPs, seats which were previously safe are now potentially in play. These include Lingiari in the Northern Territory, where Labor’s Warren Snowden is retiring, Casey in Victoria, vacated by Liberal Tony Smith, and even Flinders, where Liberal Greg Hunt is retiring. In South Australia, the resignation of Liberal Nicolle Flint has made Boothby vulnerable.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:39 a.m. No.16047440   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047438

 

2/2

 

Election analyst, psephologist Kevin Bonham, said a uniform national swing would see Labor taking out seats across the country.

 

However, the situation was different in each state and sometimes in each seat.

 

In Tasmania, Labor had lost Bass and Braddon last time due to policy errors, announcing money for the MONA museum and an AFL team in Hobart. “This was seen as southern-centric and used against them,’’ Dr Bonham said.

 

Labor was unlikely to make the same mistake again but will have to ensure it holds Lyons, with the seat’s 5.2 per cent margin inflated last time by the Liberal candidate being disendorsed.

 

Dr Bonham said the seats of Swan and Pearce, where the Liberal incumbents (Steve Irons and Christian Porter) were retiring, were both likely to fall to Labor.

 

In Queensland, prominent Liberal Peter Dutton’s marginal seat of Dickson remains a Labor target.

 

“Dickson is always hoped for, but it’s more hope than expectation I think,’’ Dr Bonham said.

 

“If there’s a swing on he could go because it’s a modest margin, but let’s see.’’

 

Still in Queensland, Dr Bonham said the Liberal seat of Longman was at risk due to its low margin. And while Brisbane wash target seat for Labor, the ALP had done well in the inner-city seats last time, and he believed it would be harder for them to improve enough to take Brisbane.

 

Labor will also target Flynn in central Queensland, where long serving Nationals MP Ken O’Dowd is retiring, and Leichhardt to the north.

 

In NSW, both parties have significant ground to defend, and opportunities to pick up.

 

Labor will have to work hard retain the ultra-marginal seat of Macquarie in Sydney’s West, Eden-Monaro and Gilmore in southern NSW, as well as the three electorates in the Hunter.

 

The Liberals plan to heavily target these seats, but will also have to defend strongly in Reid and Robertson where Labor is running effective local campaigns, as well as in Wentworth and North Sydney where “Voices of” candidates are mounting high-profile challenges.

 

The Nationals are hopeful they can end Labor’s century-long reign in the seat of Hunter off the back of the retirement of Joel Fitzgibbon, who had been the local member for more than 25 years.

 

Dr Bonham said the Coalition was in a much worse position that it had been at the start of the campaign in 2019.

 

“In the current polling Labor is absolutely miles ahead and would win things everywhere,’’ he said, but cautioned: “historically, that will be expected to tighten up.’’

 

Mr Samaras said he believed Labor would pick up two seats in WA, was a chance in Boothby in South Australia and would likely pick up Chisholm, the ultra-marginal suburban Liberal seat held by Gladys Liu.

 

“Tassie is an absolute shemozzle to try to predict.’’

 

In NSW, Mr Samaras said while there was a drop in the Liberal vote in Lindsay, Banks and Macquarie, most went to Palmer and would come back on preferences.

 

“There is a big drop in the Liberal primary but Labor is not benefiting from the decline.’’

 

“The Coalition needs to pick up seats in the Hunter Region – the electorate of Hunter, Paterson, Shortland, Greenway, that’s where they will go hunting.’’

 

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/federal-election/federal-election-2022-the-key-seats-where-it-will-be-won-or-lost/news-story/a35a9a38c7469ad9ee2d5883627ac0fc

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mackerras_pendulum

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 12:46 a.m. No.16047451   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7461 >>7471 >>9101 >>5928 >>8464 >>8475 >>2047 >>2085 >>2209 >>4788 >>4792 >>4804 >>1159 >>1180 >>1221 >>1273 >>9108 >>9127

Top US official Kurt Campbell reportedly heading to Solomon Islands to discuss Chinese security pact concerns

 

Andrew Greene - 9 April 2022

 

United States President Joe Biden is reportedly dispatching one of his top officials to Solomon Islands as concerns grow over a soon-to-be-signed security pact with China.

 

Last month, a senior Australian defence figure warned that a Chinese naval presence in the strategically located Pacific nation would "change the calculus" for Australia's military.

 

This week, two of Australia's top intelligence officials, Australian Secret Intelligence Service boss Paul Symon, and the Director-General of the Office of National Intelligence, Andrew Shearer, met with Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare.

 

Kurt Campbell — who serves as the US National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific — will now also travel to the tiny Pacific nation in April, according to the Financial Times.

 

According to the Financial Times, Mr Campbell will be accompanied by a top State Department official, Daniel Kritenbrink, for the visit.

 

Under a leaked draft of the China-Solomon Islands deal, Beijing would be allowed to station navy ships and defence personnel to protect billions of dollars in Chinese infrastructure investment in the developing country.

 

On Tuesday, the Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Admiral Sameul J Paparo, criticised the potential security pact, describing it as a "secret" arrangement that worried America and its partners.

 

Dutton says China's assurances are not sincere

 

Australia's Defence Minister, Peter Dutton, says China's assurances that it was not seeking to establish a military port less than 2,000 kilometres from Australia were not credible.

 

"At the moment, they're telling the Solomon Islands government that there won't be a military port in the Solomon Islands. I doubt that very much, and I don't think it's sincere, and I think it's propaganda that should be called out," Mr Dutton said.

 

Mr Dutton, however, declined to say whether he or any other government frontbenchers had recently spoken to any Solomon Islands leaders about Australia's concerns.

 

"As you know, the Director of National Security and the head of ASIS have most recently been in speaking [to] Prime Minister Sogavare," Mr Dutton told reporters in Townsville.

 

"There's been a lot of contact through our High Commissioner and through DFAT, and at the [Federal] Police Commissioner level, and many other ways in which we've been able to reach in, both in private and some of which has been disclosed publicly."

 

Last month, in an address to the Solomon Islands parliament, Mr Sogavare declared that there was no plan to allow China to build a naval or military base in his country, saying the suggestion was "misinformation".

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-09/us-official-reportedly-heading-to-solomon-islands-china-security/100979898

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:02 a.m. No.16047461   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7463

>>16047451

US to send officials to Solomon Islands due to tensions over China security pact

 

Washington fears Beijing will gain strategic toehold in Pacific close to Australia

 

Demetri Sevastopulo - APRIL 9 2022

 

1/2

 

The White House’s top Asia official is preparing to travel to the Solomon Islands in a rare high-level visit that underscores alarm in Washington over the Pacific nation’s security pact with China.

 

Kurt Campbell will fly to the Solomon Islands this month, according to four people familiar with the plan. He is expected to travel with Daniel Kritenbrink, the top state department Asia official. Their visit comes as the small Pacific nation emerges as a strategic battleground between the US and China.

 

The US has been increasingly worried about the Solomon Islands since it switched diplomatic allegiance from Taipei to Beijing in 2019. Those concerns have intensified after the leak of a draft security pact that would give China a toehold in a part of the Pacific that is closer to Australia, New Zealand and Hawaii than to Beijing.

 

The draft agreement — which has not yet been signed — paves the way for China to deploy troops and police on the islands. It also says Chinese security personnel would guard any Chinese navy vessels that dock in the Solomon Islands.

 

“It’s a pretty broadly scoped agreement that seems to leave the door wide open for future deployment of People’s Republic of China security and military forces to the Solomon Islands,” said a senior state department official.

 

“We’ve concerns about what this might mean for the security interests of our friends across the Pacific Islands.

 

“We would be concerned that if PRC security — or maybe even military forces — were to be introduced into the region in a non-transparent, non-co-operative, non-collaborative manner…That is very likely to increase tension.”

 

Manasseh Sogavare, the prime minister of the Solomon Islands, has denied that the pact would allow China to build a base. But underscoring the concern from the US and its allies, Andrew Shearer, head of Australia’s national intelligence office, and Paul Symon, head of its overseas spy service, this week visited Honiara, the capital.

 

During the second world war, the Solomon Islands was the location of the “Battle of Guadalcanal” which took place between 1942-43 and was pivotal in helping to turn the direction of the war against Japan, which wanted to build an air base on the main island. In January, Campbell told CSIS, a think-tank, that the Pacific was the most likely area for a “strategic surprise”, such as a Chinese base.

 

Charles Edel, an Australia expert at CSIS, said the pact was concerning because China had a record of denying it would do things — such as vowing not to militarise South China Sea islands — before proceeding.

 

“Chinese bases…would help create spheres of influence that sculpt the politics of the region, threaten our allies, and in a conflict have the potential to both delay and degrade the flow of US forces into the region,” said Edel. “When the Chinese military projects power further into the Pacific, it gives it more ability to watch, track and target US forces.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:03 a.m. No.16047463   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047461

 

2/2

 

Campbell in January also warned that the US and its allies had a “very short amount of time…to step up our game across the board”. His visit is designed to renew engagement and comes as the US plans to open an embassy in the country for the first time since 1993.

 

Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of former president John F Kennedy who has been nominated to serve as US ambassador to Australia, this week said it was important that Washington be “more visible” in the region.

 

One person said Campbell was creating an initiative called “Partners of Pacific” to help Pacific island nations counter coercive activity from China.

 

Mike Gallagher, a Republican congressman, said the pact was a “big deal” that underscored how Washington had not paid enough attention to islands from Papua New Guinea to Vanuatu. He said the US had to build more creative partnerships in the region, particularly to prepare for the possibility of a conflict with China over Taiwan.

 

“Some might think the Solomon Islands is small, but…it’s a big indicator of the fact that we’ve neglected this region for too long.”

 

Catherine Ebert-Gray, who managed relations with the Solomon Islands as US ambassador to Papua New Guinea until late 2019, said locals argued that they had for years asked the US to be more engaged, but Washington was juggling many priorities and Australia was doing a good job managing relations with Honiara. But she said the US focus started to return in recent years, even before it switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing.

 

“When I started my role as ambassador in the region there was zero interest in Washington in opening a new embassy, but we continued to make the case and as China’s influence continued to grow…there was a quick reversal,” said Ebert-Gray, now education director at the University of Colorado.

 

She also pointed to the Peace Corps decision to start a programme in the Solomons after two decades. In February, Antony Blinken, secretary of state, visited Fiji, where the US is also vying with China for influence, and pledged more regional help on climate change and Covid-19 for the region.

 

The state department official said the US donated more than 52,000 doses of Covid vaccines to the Solomons this week, following a donation of 100,000 doses late last year. He said the US was also helping clear unexploded weapons from the second world war, while the US coast guard was tackling illegal fishing.

 

Ami Bera, the Democratic chair of the House foreign affairs Asia subcommittee, said the US had to ensure China could not use security pacts in the region in the way that it employed “salami slicing” tactics in the South China Sea to gradually militarise a number of reefs and islands.

 

“Give them an inch, they’re gonna take a foot. Give them a foot, they’re gonna take a yard…You’ve got to stop them on that first inch,” said Bera, who has co-introduced the “Blue Pacific Act” to boost funding for diplomacy and development to counter China. “It’s a lot easier to prevent a war than it is to fight a direct confrontation.”

 

https://www.ft.com/content/b5030714-adf4-4b05-af90-5f66137dacee

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:05 a.m. No.16047471   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047451

Solomons clear on military bases: Dutton

 

Paul Osborne - APRIL 10 2022

 

Defence Minister Peter Dutton says he does not expect the Solomon Islands will allow China to establish a military base.

 

However Australia remains concerned about the growing militarisation of the region.

 

Foreign affairs officials found out about a security pact between China and the Solomon Islands when a draft was leaked on social media.

 

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has asked for a copy of the agreement, which had been "initialled" two weeks ago.

 

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has since met two of Australia's top intelligence officials in the capital, Honiara.

 

Mr Sogavare said his country was seeking to broaden its security partnerships.

 

Mr Dutton says the government is taking an interest in developments.

 

"The Solomon Islands has been very clear they won't allow a military base there," he told Nine on Sunday.

 

"But we are concerned that was essentially the same commitment given by President Xi to President Obama in the South China Sea and we now have 20 points of military presence by the Chinese in the South China Sea."

 

Asked of the prospects of conflict in the region, Mr Dutton said: "I think there is a likelihood.

 

"We need to be realistic about the threats in our own region and that is why Australia is standing with our allies," he said.

 

"We can't take for granted the democracy we've got, our freedom of speech, our adherence to the rule of law and the principles that have stood us well over decades. We need to stand up to bullies and we are doing that."

 

https://www.portnews.com.au/story/7693812/solomons-clear-on-military-bases-dutton/?cs=12961

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:25 a.m. No.16047493   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Ex-Labor campaigner has links to suspected Chinese ‘puppeteer’ Chau Chak Wing

 

James Campbell - April 10, 2022

 

An associate of the Chinese billionaire named in parliament as a suspected “puppeteer” working on behalf of a foreign power to interfere in the federal election was ­active in Labor’s campaign for a crucial marginal seat ­Anthony Albanese needs to win power.

 

Leaked WeChat messages show Chinese-Australian businesswoman Teresa Siu announced she was scaling back her involvement in the Labor campaign for the Sydney seat of Reid just days after ASIO ­announced it had blocked a foreign interference plot.

 

Ms Siu has links dating back more than a decade to billionaire property developer Chau Chak Wing, who was named in parliament as being the suspected “puppeteer” at the centre of the ASIO probe.

 

Dr Chau said the claims were baseless and that he had never interfered with any Australian democratic process.

 

Until recently Ms Siu was active in promoting the ALP candidate for Reid, Sally Sitou, on a Labor WeChat supporters group she created on the Chinese social media platform. The group was created prior to Ms Sitou’s endorsement for the seat, which is held by the Liberals’ Fiona Martin, and included the WeChat accounts of Chinese-language media in Sydney.

 

Senior Labor ­sources confirmed that Ms Siu had at one time been involved in Ms Sitou’s campaign.

 

The Sunday Telegraph has been told some Labor members raised concerns with party officials about Ms Siu’s involvement in the Reid campaign.

 

Her involvement in the campaign was abruptly scaled back in the days after ASIO’s director-general Mike Burgess warned that a foreign power had attempted to interfere in an Australian election using a “puppeteer”, who had “direct and deep connections with a foreign government and its intelligence agencies”.

 

Mr Burgess said the puppeteer had “hired a person to enable foreign interference operations and used an ­offshore bank account to provide hundreds of thousands of dollars for operating expenses”.

 

Although Mr Burgess did not name the country involved, it was later reported the spy chief was talking about the NSW Labor branch and the ploy was targeting the forthcoming federal poll.

 

Labor Senator Kimberley Kitching, who died last month, used parliamentary privilege to ask Mr Burgess if Dr Chau, who runs the Kingold Group, was the “puppeteer”. Mr Burgess dec­lined to answer the question, responding: “I will not comment on speculation of who is and who isn’t targets, in general or in specific, as you are asking me there.”

 

Dr Chau said the claim by Senator Kitching was “baseless’’, “reckless’’ and that he was shocked and disappointed that the claims were made without a “shred of evidence”.

 

“I have never had any ­involvement or interest in ­interfering with the democratic election process in ­Australia,” he said in a ­statement.

 

The day after reports ­alleged China was the country behind the attempt to influence the election, Ms Siu posted to the WeChat group, “I am so going to get rolled by my Party and you won’t see me on Sally’s campaign” followed by a sad face emoji.

 

The post prompted a sympathetic response from Kenrick Cheah, the ALP fund­raiser given the job of counting the $100,000 ­donations dropped at Labor’s Sussex St headquarters from billionaire property developer Huang Xiangmo, who was last year accused by ICAC of having helped to conceal the origins of the donation. Mr Xiangmo’s visa has since been cancelled by the federal government.

 

It also understood that an attempt by Ms Siu to involve herself in the Chinese social media campaign for Labor’s candidate in the Victorian seat of Chisholm was rebuffed.

 

A Labor campaign spokesman said: “Ms Siu has no current role in the Reid campaign, and no contact with the candidate.”

 

Ms Siu’s connections with Dr Chau date back many years although the exact ­nature of their relationship is unclear. For a number of years in the first decade of this century, one of the arms of Mr Chau’s Kingold Group was listed on Australian Electoral Commission returns as operating from the same Erskine St address as two of Ms Siu’s companies.

 

In 2011 then-treasurer Wayne Swan listed on his parliamentary register of member’s interests that he had “Accepted 5 x $100 Westfield Gift Vouchers from Teresa Siu (Kingold Group)” which were subsequently returned.

 

Just last year Ms Siu registered a company called Australian Chinese Friendship and Exchange Alliance Pty Ltd at the same Chatswood address that are the premises of the Australian Chinese Friendship and ­Exchange Association, of which Dr Chau is the patron.

 

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/exlabor-campaigner-has-links-to-suspected-chinese-puppeteer-chau-chak-wing/news-story/e1e5e9cf790a9a0cb6fbc5758706fe1e

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:31 a.m. No.16047499   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Townsville soldiers awarded medals for Afghanistan evacuation

 

Ashley Pillhofer - April 10, 2022

 

PROUD families watched on as their loved ones received national recognition for their role in evacuating thousands from Afghanistan after the fall of Kabul.

 

Over 400 Australian Defence Force members and civilian support staff received the Australian Operational Service Medal.

 

More than 100 were presented with the honour for their role in the Afghanistan Non-Combatant Evacuation Operation in August last year at a ceremony in Townsville on Saturday.

 

Speaking at Lavarack Barracks Defence Minister Peter Dutton said the group’s work to evacuate more than 4000 people was the capstone on the service of 39,000 soldiers who were deployed to the region and the 41 lives lost.

 

Normally a person must spend 30-days in-country to qualify for the medal but this criteria was changed after intervention from Herbert MP Phillip Thompson.

 

Mr Dutton said he pushed forward the suggestion from the former infantry soldier which was approved by the Governor-general.

 

“I spoke with the Chief of the Defence Force (Angus Campbell) about extending eligibility,” he said.

 

“They should be recognised.

 

“I don’t think every Australian understands the conditions, the pressure and the risk people were under. And to have survived that without any additional loss of life is quite remarkable.” Lance Corporal Chelsea Anderson of the 4th Health Battalion deployed alongside soldiers from 1RAR in August last year.

 

Lance Corporal Anderson worked at gates to Hamid Kazi Airport where she provided emergency and primary health care for soldiers and the thousands of refugees, civilians and visa holders who were evacuated from Kabul.

 

She said it was humbling to receive the honour in acknowledgment of the group’s work during the non-combatant evacuation.

 

The trip into Afghanistan was Lance Corporal Anderson’s first taste at an international deployment after previously working to support Operation Covid Assist in Australia.

 

“(It) was extremely different as this was international and also going into the unknown,” she said.

 

“The situation over there obviously was in the news and we didn’t really have any idea what we were getting into.”

 

Among the crowd on Saturday was her proud mother who made the trip from Victoria to see her daughter receive her medal.

 

“She is extremely proud and she will tell anyone,” she said.

 

Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion (1RAR) Lieutenant Colonel Scott Holmes said most troops were just a couple of days shy of the required 30 days to receive the media.

 

“We actually found out while a good portion of us were down doing Flood Assist in Northern NSW,” he said.

 

“It was pretty quickly spread around the troops before I even knew about it.

 

“The majority of the contingent who have been recognised were only a couple of days short of the qualifying period. It was a very near run.”

 

https://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/news/townsville/townsville-soldiers-awarded-medals-for-afghanistan-evacuation/news-story/5d3e8c69bc1924a84c22fca953056195

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:38 a.m. No.16047509   🗄️.is 🔗kun

EXCLUSIVE: Jeffrey Epstein victim demands Prince Andrew stands in court as witness in 'rape' case

 

Caroline Kaufman claims Prince Andrew was staying at the New York mansion of Jeffrey Epstein when the billionaire financier raped her. Her lawyer has called on the Duke of York to appear in court

 

Patrick Hill - 9 Apr 2022

 

Prince Andrew was tonight urged to keep a promise he made to help victims of sex ­trafficking – by ­appearing in court as a ­witness in a rape case.

 

Caroline Kaufman, 28, claims Andrew was staying at the New York mansion of his twisted late pal Jeffrey Epstein when the billionaire financier attacked her.

 

The assault allegedly happened during the Duke of York’s visit to convicted paedophile Epstein in December 2010, when they were infamously pictured together in the city’s Central Park.

 

Caroline’s lawyer, Spencer Kuvin, told the Sunday People: “Our client was attending an event that was at the Epstein mansion in New York. At that event was Prince Andrew. She has identified him as being there. He is potentially an eyewitness who can identify the fact she was in the home along with others.”

 

Weeks ago Andrew, 62, made an undisclosed payout, believed to be £12million, to Virginia Giuffre, 38, who ­accused him of sexual ­assaults when she was 17. The royal always denied her claims.

 

But when he settled the US civil court case, he issued a statement pledging “to demonstrate regret for his association with Epstein by supporting the fight against the evils of sex trafficking and by supporting its victims.”

 

Florida-based lawyer Mr Kuvin, whose client is suing Epstein’s estate for £385million, said: “We would appeal to Andrew to reflect on the statement he made. He is on record saying he wants to fight the evils of sex trafficking and to support its victims.

 

“We would expect him to be true to his word and help Caroline, a victim of Andrew’s one-time friends, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.”

 

Caroline, 17 at the time of the alleged offence, says she was invited to Epstein’s home by an associate for a “modelling interview”.

 

She claims she was escorted to a massage room by an older woman she ­believes to be Maxwell, 60.

 

The daughter of disgraced media tycoon Robert Maxwell is in a New York jail awaiting sentencing after being convicted in December of ­supplying under-age girls for depraved Epstein. Caroline claims Andrew was at the mansion but there is no suggestion that he was ­involved.

 

Mr Kuvin said: “She was met by Ghislaine Maxwell, who said she would take her to her boss, and she gave Caroline a bikini to put on.

 

“She was then escorted into a massage room where Epstein was naked on a massage table.

 

“Epstein got off the table, threw her against the table, and began to rape her.

 

“She was screaming for help but no one came. Maxwell told her Epstein was a powerful man and if she said anything, he would kill her and her family.”

 

Epstein, 66, was found dead in his New York jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. A spokesman for Andrew declined to comment.

 

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/jeffrey-epstein-victim-demands-prince-26676016

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:50 a.m. No.16047528   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7531

>>16040786

>>16040797

Disgraced founding pastor Brian Houston feuds online with Hillsong about his wife’s future

 

'Our beautiful church is losing its soul,' Brian Houston concluded in an Instagram post Friday in response to Hillsong board's treatment of his wife and co-founding pastor, Bobbie Houston.

 

Roxanne Stone - April 9, 2022

 

1/2

 

(RNS) — The status of Bobbie Houston, the long-time co-pastor and co-founder of Hillsong, the troubled global megachurch based in Australia, is uncertain after the church’s board and her husband, the church’s former head pastor Brian Houston, traded feuding online messages this week.

 

Brian Houston, who co-founded Hillsong with his wife in Australia in 1983, resigned from his position as global senior pastor on March 21, less than a week after the board released a statement revealing he had sent inappropriate text messages to a staff member and spent time in a woman’s hotel room.

 

No formal announcement has been made regarding Bobbie Houston’s role with the church.

 

In addition to her role as co-global senior pastor, Houston is also the founder and leader of Hillsong’s annual women’s gathering, Colour Conference and the Colour Sisterhood, a “global movement of women united around a mandate to make the world a better place,” according to the church’s website.

 

On Friday (April 8), her husband posted a message on Instagram claiming his wife was being “made redundant” by Hillsong. The Instagram post included a screenshot of a text message exchange that appeared to be between Bobbie Houston and a church leader, discussing her employment.

 

“Dear Bobbie,” the text message shown in the post reads, “I wanted to text you to let you know I will be sending an email shortly regarding your employment. Please let me know if you would like to talk about it or if you have questions.” The name of the sender was obscured in the Instagram post.

 

In his caption for the post, Brian Houston lashes out at his former employer, writing “after 39 years of exemplary service and extraordinary faithfulness and fruitfulness, this is the communication Bobbie received from the Hillsong Church board as she is made redundant (effective immediately) through no choice of her own.”

 

“Our beautiful church is losing its soul,” he concluded the post.

 

On Saturday, the Hillsong board sent a message to church members that referred to news Bobbie Houston was leaving the church but did not specifically address her status.

 

The board referenced ongoing negotiations with Houston over her role, stating Brian Houston’s resignation had “required the Board to initiate difficult and challenging conversations with Bobbie regarding the transition in her role as Co-Global Senior Pastor, given that Brian had resigned and was no longer working for Hillsong Church.”

 

The statement said the Hillsong Global and Australian boards had met with the Houstons on March 28 to “begin discussions regarding separation of their key roles and responsibilities,” but said “there is more work still to be done.”

 

A follow-up email was sent to Bobbie Houston Friday from a board member “outlining the redundancy plan which was part of our discussions at the prior meeting,” according to the statement. The text message was sent to “offer an opportunity for a pone call after she received the email.”

 

“Brian responded by making his feelings public on social media,” the statement said, adding that it was not correct that the Hillsong board “made her role redundant by text.”

 

“We are saddened by Brian’s public response and hope that he and Bobbie will understand the heart behind the decisions that are being made. The goal was to work together with them and keep the church safe in the process, not to hurt anyone,” read the statement.

 

The board’s statement did not indicate who would be taking over Bobbie Houston’s responsibilities. Phil and Lucinda Dooley, lead pastors of Hillsong South Africa, have been named interim global senior pastors.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 10, 2022, 1:51 a.m. No.16047531   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047528

 

2/2

 

A characteristic of Hillsong churches has been the co-leadership of a husband and wife team, who are listed as co-pastors of the church. The couples, though, appear to come as a pair and when the husband leaves or is let go, the wife’s employment also ends. This was the case for Laura Lentz after her husband was fired as pastor of Hillsong NYC. Jess Bogard also left at the same time as her husband from Hillsong Dallas.

 

Hillsong church has declined to comment further at this time on Houston’s employment status and their policies regarding employment of couples, citing the time difference between the U.S. and Sydney.

 

The Houston’s children are also employed by Hillsong. Their son, Joel Houston, is part of the Hillsong United band and a creative director for the church’s music brands. Their daughter, Laura Toggs, pastors Hillsong’s youth ministry alongside her husband. And their son, Benjamin Houston, is the global online lead pastor of Hillsong and a leader in the Hillsong L.A. church plant. Benjamin Houston was also on the global board of Hillsong, though his name has been removed from the leadership board’s website in recent months.

 

Under the leadership of the Houstons, Hillsong has grown from a small suburban church in Sydney to a Pentecostal powerhouse and multimedia empire, boasting locations around the world and an average global attendance of 150,000 weekly pre-pandemic. Hillsong’s music program has produced some of the most popular worship songs used in evangelical churches the world over, including “Oceans,” “What a Beautiful Name” and “Shout to the Lord.”

 

However, the past two years have brought scandal after scandal on the church and in the wake of Brian Houston’s departure, multiple prominent Hillsong pastors in the U.S. have resigned or announced they were disaffiliating from Hillsong. A Discovery+ documentary, released the week of Brian Houston’s resignation, painted the church in a less than flattering light and detailed alleged coverups and accusations of an abusive environment going back to its founding.

 

In January, Brian Houston had announced he was taking a leave from his pastoral duties during 2022 in order to prepare for his trial in Australia on charges that he failed to report sexual abuse committed by his father, Frank Houston who was also a preacher, against a young male in 1970. Court documents allege Brian Houston knew of his father’s abuse as early as 1999 and, “without reasonable excuse,” failed to disclose that information to police. Brian Houston has denied covering up the abuse. His trial will reportedly be held in late 2022.

 

Concerns have arisen over how Brian Houston and Hillsong have handled allegations of abuse within the church and about the conduct of its pastors, some of whom are celebrities in their own rights. Several Hillsong leaders, including the former lead pastor of Hillsong New York, Carl Lentz, and the former lead pastor of Dallas, Reed Bogard, have been accused of sexual abuse. Lentz has denied the accusations and Bogard has declined to comment.

 

And in Australia, a Hillsong staffer, Jason Mays, the son of the church’s human resources chief, pleaded guilty in 2020 to indecent assault against an American student at Hillsong College in Sydney.

 

An online petition started in early April on change.org has garnered nearly 10,000 signatures and demands “Hillsong consult ex-members and survivors in independent review.”

 

The board had noted in its announcement of Brian Houston’s resignation that it has “committed to an independent review of our governance structure and processes.”

 

https://religionnews.com/2022/04/09/disgraced-founding-pastor-brian-houston-feuds-online-with-hillsong-about-his-wifes-future-bobbie-houston/

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CcFknDalprU/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 1:39 a.m. No.16053169   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

‘Lethal’ attacks on Prime Minister Scott Morrison only marginal

 

SHARRI MARKSON - APRIL 10, 2022

 

Labor has engaged in a brutal character assassination of Scott Morrison, framing him as a bully and a liar who goes missing during a crisis.

 

The success of Anthony Albanese’s two-year strategy to target Morrison personally is reflected in the Prime Minister’s dive in the polls, fuelled by ferocious commentary from political enemies like Concetta Fierravanti-Wells.

 

The little-examined question is how lethal is this personal brand-damage for Morrison’s re-election prospects?

 

Internal Liberal research indicates it isn’t as devastating for the government as Labor strategists claim.

 

It boils down to where the voters who vehemently detest Morrison live.

 

The Prime Minister is diabolically unpopular in inner-city areas. Many of these seats are already held by Labor.

 

In those that aren’t, like Wentworth and North Sydney, a sighting of Morrison will be rare during the campaign.

 

Moderate Liberals want to keep the Prime Minister at arm’s length to give MPs like David Sharma and Trent Zimmerman the best chance of against independent candidates.

 

It’s a different story in many crucial marginal seats Morrison needs to win.

 

Far from a drag on the vote, he is well-liked, even popular.

 

This is the case for outer western Sydney suburban areas, regional NSW, like the Hunter, the central coast and the south coast, Victoria’s outer western suburbs and regions such as Dunkley, Corangamite and McEwen, and Tasmania and in Queensland.

 

Contributing to the Morrison government’s appeal in suburban areas has been their policy-focus on blue-collar workers and aspirational voters.

 

Internal Liberal polling, obtained by The Australian, shows that in the seat of Hunter, 26 per cent of voters dislike Morrison and 48 per cent like him, while 33 per cent have a negative view of Albanese and only 18 per cent like him.

 

In Dobell, 23 per cent of voters have formed a negative view of Morrison while 54 per cent had a positive response, compared with 28 per cent disliking Albanese and 24 per cent liking him.

 

“Yes, Labor has done a character-assassination job and have managed to damage (Morrison) in many different parts of the country,” a senior Liberal strategist concedes, “but our research is showing he is liked in marginal seats. If our research was not showing he was liked, we would not be putting him out there.”

 

Over the course of the campaign, Albanese can no longer get away with attacking Morrison and sidestepping questions on policy. He will need to withstand the scrutiny of a six-week campaign.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/lethal-attacks-on-prime-minister-scott-morrison-only-marginal/news-story/e10bbc10a8760669e61e1b9f0f18268e

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 1:46 a.m. No.16053178   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3179

>>16047076

Media attacks on Scott Morrison could lead to a second ‘miracle’

 

CHRIS MITCHELL - APRIL 11, 2022

 

1/2

 

While some in his party seem to want Scott Morrison to lose next month’s election, the media campaign against the PM may just help him to a second “miracle” win.

 

Several serving and former newspaper editors have told this column they have never seen such vilification of a national leader – they argue the treatment of Morrison by some sections of the media is worse than the Howard Derangement Syndrome aimed at John Howard between 1996 and 2007, and much worse than any of the sexist critiques of Labor’s 2010-13 PM Julia Gillard.

 

At the ABC, the Guardian Australia and Network Ten, anyone who wants to air unsubstantiated claims against the PM is given a free pass to label him a bully or a liar without evidence. These news outlets are reflecting the left wing venom of Twitter. But Twitter is far from the national pulse.

 

Morrison in the past month has been blamed for delays in flood relief to northern NSW, even though this is a state function. He has been hit by regular criticism of his character from state and federal MPs on his own side of politics, often timed to coincide with days that Newspoll has been in the field, and to feed into Labor’s “liar from the Shire” narrative.

 

Think of the media over-reaction to last Tuesday week’s speech by right wing senator Connie Fierravanti-Wells, who said Morrison had “no moral compass”. In much of the media it drowned out reaction to that night’s federal budget. Normally derided for her conservatism by the outlets that pumped up her criticism, Fierravanti-Wells was aggrieved she had lost her spot on the Senate ticket to retired Major General Jim Molan, who is clearly a better candidate.

 

Morrison also suffered self-inflicted damage with ructions inside his own NSW branch that prevented the Liberals naming candidates until last week in 12 federal NSW seats, because of a failed legal action by a state party executive member. While this excited the Twitter crowd, it probably meant little to voters.

 

This column on February 14 concluded: “Morrison seems likely to lose the election, but if he pulls off another miracle win it will be largely because many in the parliament and the media have no idea that for most working Australians, the key issues are jobs, prosperity, buying a home, staying healthy and standing up to China.”

 

Paul Kelly got to the heart of the politics. In a pre-Budget piece here on March 22 he contrasted the government’s economic outcomes – unemployment forecast at 3.75 per cent by year’s end, a Reserve Bank growth forecast of 4.25 per cent, inflation at half the levels of comparable countries and a world-beating pandemic death rate – with polls predicting an electoral wipe-out.

 

“The subjective mood contradicts the macro reality,” Kelly wrote.

 

The high “undecided” figure in Newspoll may suggest many voters see this conundrum and are unconvinced they should throw out a government that is performing better than almost any in the OECD for an Opposition Leader who simply ticks off on everything the government does.

 

Newspoll also suggests some of the Coalition’s conservative base may be parking their votes with Clive Palmer and One Nation, which are polling at 4 per cent and 3 per cent respectively.

 

These votes are probably a protest against Morrison’s move to the left on climate change. But such voters may not preference Labor or the Greens – their preferences are likely return to the Coalition.

 

Unless the government implodes during the campaign – still a possibility – non-partisan voters on polling day are likely to have a fair-minded view of Morrison’s flaws and achievements. Many this column has encountered during the past month resent what they see as the media’s unfair personal pile-on. Resentment at perceptions of media bias was on show in the 2020 US Presidential election when then president Trump, despite a four-year media pile-on, managed 74.2 million votes in a losing re-election bid. Published polls in the lead-up over-estimated Joe Biden’s vote by 4 per cent, although in the end he won 81.2 million votes.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 1:48 a.m. No.16053179   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16053178

 

2/2

 

In Australia, an example of voters rejecting unfair media treatment was Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party vote in the Queensland 1998 election. Hanson was not a candidate, having won the federal seat of Oxley in 1996. At the subsequent state election, the party she led nationally won 24 per cent of the vote and 11 seats, five from the Coalition and six from Labor.

 

Leaked Labor poll tracking published by The Courier-Mail before election day showed national media interviews during which Hanson was accused of racism increased her state party’s vote by 14 per cent in the final week of the campaign. Voters were not prepared to be told what to think by journalists.

 

Morrison’s handling of the media pile-on suggests he believes some voters are seeing through the partisan nature of attacks on him. He has been referring to criticisms by disaffected Coalition MPs as “slings and arrows”. He has said the prime ministership is a tough job and he needs to be strong to face down his critics and to face up to international bullies such as China and Russia.

 

Expect him, Peter Dutton and Josh Frydenberg to continue to reinforce the idea the Coalition is standing up to bullying. This will open doors for senior ministers to question Albanese’s personal strength and accuse Labor of adopting a small target strategy, because it lacks conviction.

 

Labor, burned by the rejection of its ambitious platform in 2019, has been determined to make the government the issue. Yet as longtime ALP campaign strategist Cameron Milner pointed out in The Australian on Thursday, Kim Beazley lost as a small target to Howard in the 1998 GST election and the 2001 Tampa election. Gillard had to reveal the “Real Julia” in the middle of the campaign when things faltered in 2010.

 

Former Queensland Labor senator John Black picked the problem for Albanese in The Australian Financial Review on March 28. Labor had been sitting on 55 two-party preferred on budget night in 2019 but polled 48.5 on election day. It is on 53 now, and needs to win seven seats to form majority government, but is not looking good in Queensland where it holds only six of 30 seats.

 

The Coalition is holding up in the capitals of the eastern states and on present polling would lose only Reid in Sydney and Chisholm in Melbourne, Black says. On present polling, Labor could win three seats in WA and Boothby in SA. But with Covid soaring in Perth and Adelaide it is not clear that anti-Morrison sentiment there will last until voting day. Tasmania could be a key for Labor, with Bass and Braddon in play.

 

On demographics, Black said the Coalition is holding up among working and middle class men in the capitals and among all people aged 50 to 64 nationally. It is losing support nationally among 40-somethings. Wealthy professional women in the top income quartile are deserting the Coalition in safe city seats: hence the Labor and GetUp-aligned “Voices of’’ candidates financed by Simon Holmes a Court’s Climate 200 group. Despite years of attacks on Morrison’s attitude to women, his popularity among female voters “is generally holding up”.

 

If Labor won three in WA, one in SA, and one each in Sydney, Melbourne and Tasmania it would be home.

 

But under that scenario, it cannot afford to lose a single seat.

 

Elections in this country are usually tight. Labor is the clear favourite now, but there is a path to victory for the Coalition if it campaigns well.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/media-attacks-on-scott-morrison-could-lead-to-a-second-miracle/news-story/d7132892a29ecb1ec93c98ada3e89c45

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 2:05 a.m. No.16053201   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6334

>>16047076

‘We love you Scott’: Prime Minister Scott Morrison welcomed in Nowra

 

Scott Morrison is on the campaign trail on the NSW south coast but it was an adoring fan that caught his attention.

 

news.com.au - April 11, 2022

 

Scott Morrison may have been dodging leadership questions as he conducted TV interviews on his first election stop on the NSW south coast but it was an adoring fan that caught the attention of the Prime Minister overnight.

 

While Mr Morrison was confronted by frustrated locals while visiting the Edgeworth Tavern in Lake Macquarie last week, it was a different story in Nowra.

 

As the Prime Minister was about to face the cameras for interviews with the ABC and SBS, Mr Morrison was spotted by a fan from her car, who subsequently yelled, “we love you, Scott”.

 

Pictures show Mr Morrison interacting with the woman, who subsequently revealed she was from “The Shire” – or Sutherland Shire region in Sydney – where Mr Morrison has roots as the MP Cook.

 

Mr Morrison landed in Nowra just before 4pm, where he spoke to media before a quiet night to hit the election trail today.

 

Appearing on ABC News from the region, when asked if the truth could be that Australians are tired of him, and not just politics, he deflected: “Well, it’s been a tough few years. People have been getting through the pandemic and Australia is now coming out of that pandemic with one of the strongest jobs records and strongest economic growth records amongst the advanced world.

 

“And so we now need to make a big decision, and that decision is to keep a strong economy, which means a stronger future guaranteeing the essential services Australians rely on or risking it all by going on a different path with a Labor Opposition whose economic record just doesn’t measure up.

 

When questioned again, he said: “This election is about the people watching right now. It’s not about any individual.

 

“It’s not about me or anyone else. It’s about you, who are watching, and your priorities, and ensuring that your job, your future, training for young people right across the country, the investment in the infrastructure that we’re delivering a stronger economy, delivering that stronger future.”

 

On Sunday, Mr Morrison Morrison announced Australia will head to the polls for the 2022 federal election on May 21.

 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese starts the election campaign as the clear favourite according to the latest Newspoll but there’s some worrying signs for the ALP’s primary vote.

 

An exclusive Newspoll conducted for The Australian on the eve of the campaign also reveals that the gap between the Liberal Party and the ALP is tightening.

 

Labor begins the election campaign with a two-party preferred lead of 53:47 which would see the Prime Minister lose 10 seats and government.

 

In a worrying sign for Anthony Albanese however, the latest Newspoll reveals Labor’s primary vote has now fallen to 37 per cent – a drop of more than 4 points just over a fortnight.

 

https://www.news.com.au/national/federal-election/we-love-you-scott-prime-minister-scott-morrison-welcomed-in-nowra/news-story/3628f039b12ddb5a29a796e7e17eb130

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 2:10 a.m. No.16053203   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3205 >>0058

>>16047076

Federal election: Anthony Albanese stumbles at first campaign hurdle, unable to say what cash rate, unemployment rate are

 

OLIVIA CAISLEY - APRIL 11, 2022

 

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese has failed to answer two important yet simple questions on the first morning of the six-week election campaign.

 

Mr Albanese stumbled over key economic figures and was forced to call in his finance spokeswoman, Katy Gallagher, to answer what the unemployment rate is.

 

Campaigning in the ultra-marginal Tasmanian seat of Bass - held by Liberal MP Bridget Archer on the razor thin margin or 0.4 per cent - on Monday, Mr Albanese dodged questions about the RBA cash rate. It has been 0.1 per cent for almost 18 months.

 

Asked what the rate was, Mr Albanese struggled to answer.

 

“We can do the old question and over 50 different figures,” he said. “The truth is … the Reserve Bank is … that over the coming period, the Reserve Bank has said there will be multiple interest rate increases regardless of who is in government.”

 

Mr Albanese also could not nominate what the unemployment rate was. “The national unemployment rate at the moment is … I think it’s 5.4. Sorry,” Mr Albanese said. “I’m not sure what it is.”

 

It comes months after the Prime Minister was criticised for not knowing the price of milk or cost of bread when giving a speech at the National Press Club.

 

Mr Albanese was joined in the regional Tasmanian city of Launceston by Senator Gallagher, who was called upon to answer the same questions and did so correctly.

 

“The Reserve Bank current rate is point one and the unemployment rate is at four per cent,” she said.

 

Scott Morrison was able to correctly name the nation’s cash rate and unemployment levels, as he pitched the Coalition’s economic credentials while campaigning in the Labor-held seat of Gilmore on the NSW South Coast.

 

“0.1 per cent is the cash rate, been there for some time,” Mr Morrison said.

 

“The unemployment rate I’m happy to say is 4 per cent, falling to a 50 year low. It came down from 5.7 per cent when we were first elected.

 

“More importantly, as we went into the pandemic, we were facing unemployment rates up around 15 per cent. Now it’s 4 per cent.

 

“That’s why our economy is coming back strongly. We put the policies in place to ensure that could occur. I know our economic plan will continue to work in the future because Australians and small businesses are working with - working right now.”

 

Mr Albanese also confirmed Jim Chalmers would be his Treasurer should Labor win government, but said he “expects” the rest of his team to stay the same.

 

When asked whether he would guarantee that opposition home affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally and opposition defence spokesman Brendan O’Connor would become ministers of their respective portfolios if Labor wins government, Mr Albanese only guaranteed one position.

 

“Jim Chalmers will be the Treasurer of Australia if I am elected,” he said. “I’ve said that multiple times… I expect that everyone will be in their current jobs, that is my starting point.

 

“Is it possible that someone says I don’t want to do the job or what have you, that happens from time to time. But it doesn’t happen over someone like Jim Chalmers being the Treasurer of Australia.”

 

Earlier, the Opposition Leader pinned stagnant wage growth on Mr Morrison, arguing that wages had been held back “by design”.

 

“We want to see real wages increase in people’s first term,” he said. “And we want to identify ways in which particular sectors can be improved.

 

“The Reserve Bank governor has warned on multiple occasions that wage constraint, which is according to senior members of the government, the former finance minister, is a key feature of the economic architectures.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/federal-election-anthony-albanese-stumbles-at-first-campaign-hurdle-unable-to-say-what-cash-rate-unemployment-rate-are/news-story/54205d59e938599c9bc8f9e40a9b3aaa

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 2:14 a.m. No.16053205   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16053203

Federal election 2022: Anthony Albanese’s day-one stumble to spook business, households

 

GEOFF CHAMBERS - APRIL 11, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese’s failure to name the unemployment and cash rates will spook millions of small business owners and households.

 

The Opposition Leader’s embarrassing slip-up on day one of the six-week campaign feeds into Scott Morrison’s claim that Albanese lacks the experience to lead the post-pandemic economic recovery and budget repair.

 

Albanese made the rookie campaign error of guessing the unemployment rate when he clearly didn’t know: “I think it’s 5.4 per cent, sorry.” He was 1.4 percentage points off and the figure he quoted was higher than the jobless rate before the pandemic struck in 2020.

 

When new labour force figures are released on Thursday, the rate is expected to fall from 4 to 3.9 per cent – hitting its lowest level in 50 years.

 

Albanese didn’t even try to name the record low cash rate of 0.1 per cent – a figure imprinted in the minds of every small business owner and mortgage holder.

 

The mistakes show Albanese isn’t thinking about the economy.

 

The University of Sydney Bachelor of Economics holder, who handed down his budget reply speech less than two weeks ago, has exposed himself to 40 days of Coalition attacks over his “campaign amnesia”.

 

Earlier in the year, Morrison was attacked for not knowing the price of a bread and a litre of petrol. Albanese’s first day nerves plays into the narrative of Coalition strategists that he will crumble in the campaign.

 

After three years of personal attacks on Morrison and abandoning Bill Shorten’s policy agenda, and with polls expected to narrow ahead of the May 21 election, Albanese will face pressure like he’s never experienced in his 26-year parliamentary career.

 

If Labor gets off to a slow start, they’ll start playing catch-up and get desperate.

 

That’s exactly what Morrison wants.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albaneses-dayone-stumble-to-spook-business-households/news-story/b913e9ba33031ab777a5d11cdd1be7c7

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 2:57 a.m. No.16053223   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Assange clocks up three years in UK prison

 

Callum Godde - April 11 2022

 

The three-year anniversary of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's arrest is spurring a renewed push for Australia to step up diplomatic efforts to secure his release.

 

The 50-year-old Australian was dragged from London's Ecuador Embassy on April 11 in 2019 to face extradition to the United States on espionage charges over WikiLeaks' release of confidential US military records and diplomatic cables.

 

He has since been held at a high-security prison in Belmarsh, southeast of London, and last month married attorney and long-term partner Stella Moris from within the walls.

 

Three years on, Australia's Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance has called on the federal government - now in caretaker mode ahead of the May 21 poll - to use its close ties with the US and UK to end the extradition push and drop all 18 charges against him.

 

The union, of which Mr Assange has been a member since 2009, argues the scope of the US charges could imperil any journalist around the world who writes about its government.

 

"Julian Assange's work with WikiLeaks was important and in the public interest: exposing evidence of war crimes and other shameful actions by US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan," MEAA Media Federal President Karen Percy said on Monday.

 

"The stories published by WikiLeaks and its mainstream media partners more than a decade ago were picked up by news outlets around the world. The charges against Assange are an affront to journalists everywhere and a threat to press freedom.

 

"The US government must see reason and drop these charges, and the Australian government should be doing all it can to represent the interests of an Australian citizen."

 

In December, the UK's High Court overturned a ruling the publisher should not be extradited to the US as his mental health problems meant he would be a suicide risk.

 

He was then denied permission to launch an appeal but could still challenge the decision by judicial review once the UK government ratifies his extradition.

 

WikiLeaks was awarded the Walkley Award for Most Outstanding Contribution to Journalism in 2011, one of Australia's most prestigious media prizes.

 

https://www.goulburnpost.com.au/story/7694445/assange-clocks-up-three-years-in-uk-prison/?cs=14264

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 3:11 a.m. No.16053237   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3688 >>6498 >>4779

SAS soldier felt ‘threatened’ to testify against Ben Roberts-Smith

 

PERRY DUFFIN - APRIL 11, 2022

 

An emotionally vulnerable SAS soldier has told a court he felt “threatened” Nine newspapers would accuse him of a war crime murder unless he came to court to testify against Ben Roberts-Smith.

 

The soldier, anonymised as Person 56, stepped into the Federal Court witness stand on Monday morning as the high profile defamation trial resumed after a week of silence.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith is suing Nine newspapers claiming they falsely defamed him as a war criminal.

 

Nine insists the stories are true and has called multiple SAS soldiers to testify in support of their allegations.

 

Person 56 was asked first about a mission to the Afghan village of Darwan where Mr Roberts-Smith is accused of kicking an unarmed farmer down a steep drop into a dry creek bed.

 

Nine claims Mr Roberts-Smith ordered another soldier to execute the wounded Afghan - claims denied by the Victoria Cross recipient.

 

Person 56, on Monday, told the court he did not witness any kick or execution and was not with Mr Roberts-Smith through the entire raid.

 

The soldier said he didn’t hear anything said over troop radio about enemies killed in action but there was talk of someone being kicked down a cliff when the elite troops returned to base.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith’s barrister, Arthur Moses SC, did not begin by asking questions about Darwan, however.

 

Instead he focused his cross examination on communications between lawyers for Person 56 and Nine newspapers.

 

Person 56 agreed he did not want to be involved in the high profile defamation lawsuit and repeatedly refused Nine’s requests to meet and discuss the allegations.

 

But in August 2021, the court heard, Nine’s lawyers contacted Person 56 and said they knew he was “exposed” because of a second mission weeks later.

 

Nine’s lawyers told Person 56 he and Mr Roberts-Smith were accused of killing two detainees, known as PUCs, at the town of Fasil in October 2012.

 

“(Nine) believes that Person 56 and BRS are the two individuals responsible for the execution of the PUCs at Fasil,” Nine’s lawyers told Person 56’s lawyers.

 

The lawyers told Person 56 they could “steer clear” of the allegation if he agreed to speak about Darwan, the court heard.

 

Person 56 agreed he felt “threatened” to testify for Nine or they would out him about Fasil.

 

“(You understood) if you did not agree to speak with the respondent’s lawyers about Darwan and help them get what they need for their case against Mr Roberts-Smith, then they would subpoena you as a hostile witness and ask you questions about other matters, including Fasil?” Mr Moses asked.

 

“And you considered that to be a threat?”

 

“Yes,” the soldier replied to each question.

 

The SAS soldier objected to giving evidence about Fasil on the grounds of self incrimination and Justice Anthony Besanko ruled he would not need to testify on the mission.

 

Person 56 has mental health issues and his wife has terminal cancer, the court heard.

 

Nine claims Mr Roberts-Smith’s patrol detained and executed two Afghans after they were found with explosive components in their HiLux at Fasil.

 

Another SAS soldier on the mission, Person 16, told the court a young Afghan was “shaking like a leaf” after they were detained by the road side and led away by Mr Roberts-Smith.

 

Person 16 said he later asked Mr Roberts-Smith what happened to the scared teenager.

 

“I shot that c*nt in the head,” Person 16 claims Mr Roberts-Smith responded.

 

“(I) blew his brains out, it was the most beautiful thing I‘ve ever seen.”

 

Mr Roberts-Smith totally denies he killed anyone and denies those comments.

 

Earlier this year, Nine asked Justice Anthony Besanko to allow them to subpoena Person 56 to give evidence - the SAS soldier simultaneously asked the court to leave him out of the trial.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith’s lawyers also asked for Person 56 to be excused, but Justice Besanko allowed Nine to subpoena the soldier.

 

After months of evidence Nine is nearing the end of its extensive witness list - though at least one soldier is expected to be recalled.

 

Mr Moses, on Monday, said he believed one of Nine‘s witnesses had perjured himself and the barrister wants to question him further.

 

From next week the trial will dramatically change pace as Mr Roberts-Smith begins calling his own witnesses who are expected to cast doubt on Nine‘s claims he killed six unarmed Afghans and bullied his fellow soldiers.

 

The trial continues.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/breaking-news/sas-soldier-felt-threatened-to-testify-against-ben-robertssmith/news-story/4f90bc780bc8f94c1224aef9f82caac3

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 3:18 a.m. No.16053242   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Australian Border Force and United States Coast Guard train in Australia’s north

 

Australian Border Force - 11/04/2022

 

Officers from the Australian Border Force (ABF) and the United States Coast Guard (USCG) recently conducted a joint interoperability exercise in strategically important waters in Far North Queensland, further enhancing their relationship.

 

The exercise – involving an ABF Dash-8 plane and USCG Cutter Stratton, and its long range interceptor boat – was staged inside of Australia's Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) as the Stratton sailed towards Papua New Guinea (PNG).

 

The two agencies enjoy a long history of cooperation, focused on strengthening civil maritime security in the region to ensure safe and secure trade and travel as well as suppressing crimes committed at sea.

 

ABF Commissioner Michael Outram said the exercise demonstrated the strong relationship between Australia and the United States on civil maritime security.

 

“This exercise highlights that responding to on-water threats is complex, and that success is best achieved through bilateral and multilateral cooperation," Commissioner Outram said.

 

“It was also our honour to host the USCG delegation from District Fourteen in Honolulu, Hawaii when they recently visited our ABF headquarters in Canberra to discuss joint activities in the Pacific."

 

USCG Vice Admiral Michael McAllister, Commander Pacific Area, said incidents involving illegal fishing, narcotic and firearm trafficking as well as piracy and violence at sea impact economic prosperity.

 

“When such activities cross maritime boundaries they can be challenging to regulate and enforce," Vice Admiral McAllister said.

 

“The transnational nature of these threats requires a joint approach consistent with international obligations and law. Australia and the United States are committed to future activities like this successful joint exercise."

 

The exercise acted out a maritime intercept scenario, with the ABF Dash-8 tasked with providing visual imagery of foreign fishing vessels up to 290 nautical miles from the USCG Cutter Stratton.

 

The USCG interceptor small boat acted as a target vessel suspected of illegal fishing while the Dash-8 tracked from the air. The Dash-8 located the boat and provided imagery and position details to USCG Cutter Stratton, which then responded to the threat.

 

The exercise demonstrated the interoperability of the two agencies, including real time maritime domain awareness capabilities. The crew from both the ABF Dash-8 and USCG Cutter Stratton, as well as the officers on the Maritime Border Command (MBC) watch floor at the ABF headquarters in Canberra, all developed increased awareness and skills during the joint exercise.

 

The event allowed a sharing of operational experience throughout the planning and execution phases of the exercise and built on existing relationships, providing opportunities to discuss civil maritime security issues in the region.

 

Background information on assets used

 

The 418-foot long USCG Cutter Stratton is capable of travelling at 28 knots with a maximum range of 12,000 nautical miles. Stratton is the 3rd Legend-class cutter of the USCG and her motto is “We Can't Afford Not To".

 

The 35-foot long range interceptor is capable of traveling at 40 knots with a maximum range of 240 nautical miles. It enables USCG Cutter Stratton's crew to conduct boarding operations over the horizon from the Cutter's location.

 

The ABF Dash-8 has a cruise speed of 242 knots and an endurance of seven hours with a maximum range of 2,000km. The Dash-8 is able to send real time imagery as well as other maritime domain information to the ABF headquarters.

 

Learn more about the MBC here:

 

https://www.abf.gov.au/about-us/what-we-do/border-protection/maritime

 

https://www.abf.gov.au/newsroom-subsite/Pages/australian-border-force-united-states-coast-guard-train-australias-north-11-04-2022.aspx#

Anonymous ID: 16924e April 11, 2022, 6:29 p.m. No.16057508   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8961

Australian diplomat jumps to death from NYC condo tower

by Larry Celona April 11, 2022

 

An Australian diplomat jumped to his death from a high-rise condo tower in Midtown Manhattan on Monday, sources said.

 

The 31-year-old plunged from the 27th floor of the building on Fifth Avenue near West 33rd Street at about 5:30 p.m., according to law enforcement sources.

 

He was pronounced dead at the scene by first responders.

 

The diplomat left behind a suicide note, the sources said. His name was being withheld pending family notification.

 

https://nypost.com/2022/04/11/australian-diplomat-jumps-to-death-from-nyc-condo-tower/

Anonymous ID: 3c50dd April 11, 2022, 9:11 p.m. No.16058350   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) activities that had previously been covert, including actions in Iran, Vietnam, Laos, the Congo, Cuba, and Guatemala.

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 11, 2022, 11:54 p.m. No.16058961   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16057508

Husband of Australian diplomat jumps to death from NYC condo tower

 

Larry Celona - April 11, 2022 - 9:08pm - Updated

 

The husband of an Australian diplomat jumped to his death from a high-rise condo tower in Midtown Manhattan on Monday, sources said.

 

The 31-year-old plunged from the 27th floor of the building on Fifth Avenue near West 33rd Street at about 5:30 p.m., according to law enforcement sources.

 

He was pronounced dead at the scene by first responders.

 

The man left behind a suicide note, the sources said. His name was being withheld pending family notification.

 

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 1-800-273-8255 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

 

https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/

 

https://nypost.com/2022/04/11/australian-diplomat-jumps-to-death-from-nyc-condo-tower/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 12:05 a.m. No.16058982   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8999 >>6291

>>16047076

Another blow for Anthony Albanese as senior ally Kristina Keneally is forced off the campaign trail after testing positive for Covid

 

PAUL OSBORNE - 12 April 2022

 

A senior federal Labor MP has contracted COVID-19 and will have to isolate for the next week, two days after the campaign for the national election began.

 

The candidate for the NSW seat of Fowler in Sydney's southwest, home affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally, said she woke up on Tuesday morning feeling ill.

 

'This morning I woke up feeling rotten and tested positive for Covid,' she posted on Twitter.

 

'I'll be isolating at home in Liverpool for the next 7 days…'

 

Ms Keneally is attempting to make the transition from NSW senator to lower house MP in the poll, which was called on Sunday and will be held on May 21.

 

Fowler is a safe Labor seat previously held by Chris Hayes, who's leaving politics.

 

'A big thank you to the ALP Fowler volunteers for campaigning without me at train stations this morning - very grateful,' she said.

 

Meanwhile, Australians stuck in virus isolation on election day as a confirmed case or close contact will still be able to cast their vote.

 

For the first federal election of the COVID-19 era, the Australian Electoral Commission is working on a nation-first telephone voting system for those subject to isolation orders on the day of the May 21 poll.

 

Voters who miss pre-polling and postal vote options will have to make a declaration they are subject to a health order to access the emergency measure.

 

Confirmed COVID-19 cases and most close contacts are currently required to spend seven days in isolation across the country.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10709643/Kristina-Keneally-Anthony-Albanese-suffers-blow-frontbencher-comes-Covid.html

 

https://twitter.com/KKeneally/status/1513657199507124227

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 12:11 a.m. No.16058999   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16058982

Local independents Dai Le, Frank Carbone to take the fight to Kristina Keneally in Fowler

 

DENNIS SHANAHAN - APRIL 12, 2022

 

A highly successful local political independent team will campaign against Anthony Albanese’s hand-picked candidate for the Western Sydney seat of Fowler, former NSW Premier and Labor Senator, Kristina Keneally.

 

Fairfield city mayor, Frank Carbone, and deputy mayor, Dai Le, who got 90 per cent of the western Sydney local government area vote last December, have decided to campaign against Senator Keneally who lives in Sydney’s salubrious northern beaches areas.

 

Ms Le, a Vietnamese refugee who has lived and worked in Fairfield all her life in Australia, will be the independent candidate supported in the campaign by Mr Carbone.

 

Ms Le told The Australian on Tuesday: “I have been humbled by my opportunity to represent the local people so far and want to fight for locals here is Western Sydney.”

 

“It would be wrong of me to go to the rich northern suburbs and try and get elected there and it is the same for Kristina Keneally to try and run here in Western Sydney,” she said.

 

The revelation came as Scott Morrison campaigned in the neighbouring Labor seat of Parramatta where another outside candidate, former Kevin Rudd adviser, Andrew Charlton, was parachuted into the candidacy from the Eastern suburbs.

 

The Prime Minister spruiked the local ties for the Liberal candidate, Maria Kovacic, and said: “She’s from Western Sydney, she’s run businesses in Western Sydney. She’s raised her family here in Western Sydney.”

 

In Fowler, the retiring Labor MP, Chris Hayes, wanted a local woman to replace him and supported lawyer Tu Le but she was dumped by the ALP national executive and replaced by Senator Keneally who was living in Scotland Island but is now renting in Liverpool and has promised to buy in the western suburbs electorate if she is elected.

 

Mr Carbone and Ms Le ran an independent team for the Fairfield City council elections and won 10 of the 13 spots.

 

Labor Party MPs have appealed to Mr Carbone, a former Labor member, not to run amid speculation the two local politicians would pair for the federal election on May 21.

 

Mr Carbone told The Australian he had decided not to run himself because of family reasons but, he said, he would be campaigning fully for Ms Le as part of a strategy they have been working on for months.

 

“We will run a big campaign, we have videos ready, posters and local campaigners because we believe it is an insult to the people of the west to have an outsider forced on them,” he said.

 

Ms Le said that during the Covid-19 lockdowns Western Sydney had been treated as outcasts and “demonised by the affluent and privileged suburbs of Sydney”.

 

“I want to represent local people and as an independent get federal funds directed to this area,” she said.

 

Based on local government and state government elections Mr Carbone thinks Ms Le can get 30 per cent of the primary vote, and given the number of other independents and the Liberal candidate, Senator Keneally will find it difficult to reach a primary vote which will give her victory.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/local-independents-dai-le-frank-carbone-to-take-the-fight-to-kristina-keneally-in-fowler/news-story/c54d12030a297e0d5242e660a6481497

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 1:26 a.m. No.16059101   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9104 >>5928

>>16047451

Machine guns and automatic rifles on weapons import list for secret Chinese security team in Solomon Islands

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 12, 2022

 

1/2

 

The Solomon Islands government said it had “no objection” to a Chinese request last year to import automatic rifles, pistols, two machine guns and a sniper rifle for a secret 10-person security team to ensure “the safety and security of the Chinese Embassy”.

 

The Chinese request was made in early December, after rioting in the capital Honiara, amid negotiations between the Chinese and Solomon Islands governments on a new security agreement between the countries.

 

Documents obtained by The Australian show the Solomon Islands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade said it had “no objection to the request”, noting local security personnel “could not guarantee the safety of the embassy and staff” during November riots in Honiara that targeted Chinese interests.

 

The Chinese Embassy sought approval for each member of the security team to be armed with a 9mm automatic pistol and an automatic rifle. Two machine guns and a sniper rifle were also on the list of weapons to be imported, together with ammunition for all of the guns.

 

“In the context of enhancing the safety and security of the Chinese Embassy in Solomon Islands … the government of the People’s Republic of China has decided to send a plain clothes security team (10 personnel) with necessary light weapons and equipment to the Chinese Embassy in Solomon Islands,” the embassy said in the leaked letter obtained by The Australian.

 

“The deployment of the security team will not be made public by the Chinese side.”

 

It said all of the security personnel would hold diplomatic passports – giving them immunity from prosecution under local laws – with the official status of “Attache of the Chinese Mission”.

 

A team of Chinese police trainers was also deployed to Solomon Islands in February.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 1:29 a.m. No.16059104   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16059101

 

2/2

 

The request, and the Solomon Islands response, have emerged amid Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare’s determination to sign a new security pact with China that Australian officials fear could lead to the establishment of a Chinese base in the country.

 

Two of Australia’s top security officials – Office of National Assessments director-general Andrew Shearer and Australian Secret ­Intelligence Service Paul Symon – travelled to the Solomon Islands last week provide a classified briefing to Mr Sogavare on the likely ramifications of the security agreement with Beijing.

 

But Mr Sogavare said he would sign the deal, arguing it was “domestically focused”, and rejecting suggestions it would lead to a Chinese base in his country.

 

Scott Morrison said on Tuesday that Mr Sogavare had made it “very clear” there would be no Chinese base in his country, but Australia was still in talks with his officials on “possible rotation” of Chinese vessels through Solomon Islands.

 

“That’s a serious issue that we’ll continue to press. At the same time, we must always respect the fact that Solomon Islands are a sovereign country. They’re not a state of Australia,” the Prime Minister said.

 

“There was a long time when Australia used to treat the Pacific as an extension of own our country. They didn't like it. They didn’t like being treated like that and nor should they.”

 

Labor Leader Anthony Albanese accused the government of failing to head off the security agreement.

 

“What I wouldn’t have done is sit back and do nothing,” he said. “Why wasn‘t a minister dispatched to the Solomons?

 

“Australia needs to step up, not just in a title, we need to step up in reality and develop those relationships with the Solomons and other nations in the Indo-Pacific.”

 

Joe Biden’s National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, Kurt Campbell, is scheduled to visit Solomon Islands this month in a last-ditch effort to convince Mr Sogavare not to sign the agreement with Beijing.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/machine-guns-and-automatic-rifles-on-weapons-import-list-for-secret-chinese-security-team-in-solomon-islands/news-story/33291f1e1f34845b1ce193e85739dd16

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 1:38 a.m. No.16059114   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9115

Ties with US, not China, the cause of Australia’s headache

 

Global Times - Apr 11, 2022

 

1/2

 

On May 21, Australians will go to the polls for a general election to decide who will lead the country. Incumbent PM Scott Morrison has spared no efforts in hyping up the so-called China threat theory in an attempt to prove that only his party can safeguard Australia's security. Thus, the question - what Australia's future China policy will look like - has been placed under scrutiny by the rest of the world. Bloomberg made a simple and blatant argument - China is "one of the headaches facing Australia's next PM."

 

However, Bloomberg missed the point. The headache occurs only because Australia has been following the US too closely in containing China. After the Australian election, if the hostility toward China continues, the headache will continue. Yet if Australian politicians can return to rationality and maturity, stumbling blocks in China-Australia ties will be greatly reduced.

 

There was a time when Australia didn't have a "headache" vis-a-vis its ties with China. In quite a long period after the two countries established diplomatic relations in 1972, China has been one of the largest trading partners of Australia. The latter's economy soared because it sold iron ore, wine, dairy and beef to China, and because an increasing number of Chinese people invest and study in down under.

 

But Australia's headache started after the US carried out a strategic rebalance to Asia, followed by the Indo-Pacific Strategy. Since around 2016, Australia, with no solid evidence, started to push hard the "China threat theory". Ties between the two countries have taken a nosedive.

 

The so-called China's threat to Australia is not real, but the fear of it has spread fast on the latter's soil thanks to the Australian media industry which is under the tight control of the US. American forces have kept feeding the Australians the so-called resources or proof that China is infiltrating Australia's internal affairs. Washington also has the power to manipulate Australian politics. Those who dare not please the US will be driven out of the office.

 

As a result, Canberra has been dancing to Washington's pipe all these years. Ranging from the Five Eyes and QUAD to AUKUS, Australia is now at the center of the US' Indo-Pacific Strategy.

 

Australia has been quite high-profile in its anti-China words and deeds. All it says sounds that the rise of China is only a threat and a challenge, without understanding that China's emergence is a long-term historical trend, or the fact that China can be a mutually beneficial partner.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 1:38 a.m. No.16059115   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16059114

 

2/2

 

Apart from viewing China as an imaginary enemy, Australia also has its own fish to fry - becoming a hegemon in the Pacific region, and it thinks only the US can help it to realize the goal. Canberra believes tying itself to Washington's chariot is in Australia's national interests.

 

Not exactly. It will be difficult for the Australian economy to completely cast off its dependence on the Chinese market. Australia is now seeking to diversify its exports markets and its role in the industrial chain and supply chain. For example, Australia and India on April 2 signed a comprehensive interim free trade agreement. It has also been promoting economic and trade ties with Southeast Asian countries.

 

Nevertheless, there is a huge gap between China and those countries in terms of trade and market. For Australia, no country can be an alternative to China. Not India, Southeast Asia, Japan, or not even the US.

 

Australia lacks a strong pursuit of independence and autonomy in its strategy. Over time, the gradual loss of autonomy will only do more harm to the country.

 

For instance, it wishes to obtain rewards from Western countries through its anti-China policy, including more strategic space, key cutting-edge technologies, more access to markets, intelligence sharing, and advanced military weapons. But what the West can offer is limited. At least when it comes to economy, trade, industrial and supply chain, China can provide much more.

 

The upcoming election will be a battle between Morrison and Labor leader Anthony Albanese. It was the Labor Party-led government which established diplomatic ties with China 50 years ago. In 1972, then prime minister Gough Whitlam said, "The serious distortion in our foreign policy has now been corrected." Ironically, the country came to the distortion again.

 

Worse, given the current global political environment, it will not be as easy as 50 years ago to correct it. Any Australian politician who would raise the tone of fixing China ties now may likely be pinned the label of surrendering or kowtowing to China.

 

The US is the biggest influence behind China-Australia relations and it is the root cause of Australia's headache.

 

But is China really an enemy? Does leeching on to the US bring more benefits? Perhaps Australia still needs a long time to think it through.

 

The article was compiled by Global Times reporter Li Aixin based on an interview with Xu Shanpin, an adjunct research fellow at the Center for Australian Studies, China University of Mining and Technology. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202204/1259060.shtml

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 1:57 a.m. No.16059135   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Mathew Campbell pleads not guilty to covert filming of children as part of Jadd William Brooker’s online SA paedophile syndicate

 

A married man who allegedly said he had “an obsession I can’t control” has denied involvement with a notorious online paedophile ring and will stand trial.

 

Sean Fewster - April 12, 2022

 

An alleged member of an online SA paedophile syndicate accused of having “an obsession I can’t control” with a child he covertly filmed has been ordered to stand trial.

 

In the Adelaide Magistrates Court on Tuesday, Mathew Campbell pleaded not guilty to seven counts of producing child exploitation material.

 

Mr Campbell, 38, of Salisbury Park, and his husband Stewart Iain Berry, 37, of Salisbury Park, were jointly charged with child exploitation offences.

 

The charges arose from investigations into the online syndicate led by Australia’s worst-ever child sex offender, Jadd William Brooker.

 

The duo are accused of installing hidden cameras in their home to film children, and Mr Campbell allegedly told his husband he had “an obsession I can’t control” with one of them.

 

Mr Berry, a senior Correctional Services officer, has previously flagged his intent to broker a plea bargain with prosecutors.

 

Last month, Mr Campbell argued he had no case to answer despite footage of him setting up, moving and operating an allegedly covert camera in the couple’s bathroom.

 

Magistrate Karim Soetratma, however, said the evidence tendered thus far was capable of going before a jury.

 

On Tuesday, Mr Campbell said their client had considered his position since last month’s ruling and would plead not guilty to all counts.

 

Mr Soetratma remanded him on continuing bail to face the District Court in July, where he will be arraigned.

 

https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-sa/mathew-campbell-pleads-not-guilty-to-covert-filming-of-children-as-part-of-jadd-william-brookers-online-sa-paedophile-syndicate/news-story/e5c8d9af5e9c6fa4894f5b0e132d3026

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 2:02 a.m. No.16059144   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9147

Officers escape punishment for SAS soldier ‘crimes’

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 11, 2022

 

1/2

 

The Chief of the Defence Force, General Angus Campbell, has shelved any punishment for seven senior army officers who failed to prevent war crimes on their watch in Afghanistan, and has exonerated a further 21, saying they should “learn from their experiences”.

 

The move follows an edict from Defence Minister Peter Dutton that Defence wait for criminal investigations into the findings of the 2020 Brereton report – a process likely to take years – before officers face any consequences for war crimes by soldiers under their command.

 

The decision, revealed in documents obtained under Freedom of Information laws, means not a single officer has been sacked or demoted for command failures identified in the four-year Brereton inquiry, which found “credible information” that 25 special ­forces soldiers killed 39 Afghan prisoners and civilians.

 

All are eligible for promotion and can keep distinguished service medals and Orders of Australia earned on deployments marred by war crimes.

 

Former Special Air Service and 2nd Commando Regiment chiefs and those who held the role of Special Forces Commander Australia have also been exonerated, despite the Brereton report’s finding that Australian-based commanders bore a “greater responsibility” than those in Afghanistan for “cultures and attitudes that ­enabled misconduct”.

 

The decision comes despite Defence’s move to issue termination notices issued to 17 lower-ranked soldiers following the Brereton report for “alleged failure to meet ADF expectations and values”. General Campbell said the fact that alleged crimes ­occurred under officers from troop to task group commander level “concerns me”, acknowledging “command accountability is my responsibility”.

 

He said the officers in question were accountable “for what happened under their command”, and noted Justice Paul Brereton’s finding that there was “insufficient curiosity of tactical commanders in this regard”.

 

But General Campbell said “potential administrative actions” against seven serving and former officers would be suspended until the Office of the Special Investigator concluded its investigation into the alleged crimes identified by Justice Brereton.

 

“My decision to suspend ­potential administrative action means that these officers will still be able to continue their careers in the army, which may include currently planned or future promotions, posting selections and changes to service category,” General Campbell said in a July 2021 instruction to Chief of Army Rick Burr.

 

Several weeks earlier, Mr Dutton told General Campbell it was his “strong view” that the criminal investigations by the OSI “must take precedence over other disciplinary actions you are considering”.

 

“This suspension is to minimise any risks to OSI investigations and should remain in place only until the OSI has completed its investigations,” he said in a June 2021 letter.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 2:03 a.m. No.16059147   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16059144

 

2/2

 

General Campbell said he had decided not to pursue ­administrative action against 19 officers because alleged war crimes on their watch “occurred so infrequently” that a “detectable pattern of behaviour” could not be identified. He encouraged them to continue to serve and encouraged them to “learn from this experience”.

 

A further two officers would also not face administrative ­action, he said, despite numbers of incidents under their command “that may have given rise to a ­potentially detectable pattern of behaviour”. “They are also encouraged to learn from their experience,” he said.

 

General Campbell said he understood that allowing the ­Office of the Special Investigator’s work to take priority “means there can be no immediate closure of these matters for the officers concerned, or for the Australian Army”.

 

“This is regrettable and may be personally challenging for many,” he said.

 

A separate document ­released to The Australian under FOI laws reveals Defence initiated changes early in 2000 to honours and awards regulations to ensure Defence could strip medals and Orders of Australia from soldiers who had committed ­serious crimes.

 

The advice from General Campbell to Mr Dutton said some officers had returned ­Afghanistan campaign medals voluntarily as “a matter of conscience”.

 

But, as a result of Mr Dutton’s instruction to suspend administrative action in relation to the Brereton report’s findings, General Campbell said medals returned voluntarily were yet to be officially cancelled.

 

The released documents were prepared ahead of a July 30, 2021, Defence plan promising “transformational reform” to “restore the moral authority, trust, confidence and respect essential to achieving the Defence mission”.

 

“The people of the Australian Defence Force must be in no doubt as to what is expected – the highest professional, ethical, legal and command accountability standards,” General Campbell said in the reform plan.

 

But a former army officer who served with SASR for more than a decade said the wider ADF community was “incensed by the glaring double standard that not one SASR officer has ever been held to account”, despite “some of the most egregious Australian war crimes” occurring under their command.

 

Mr Dutton and Labor ­defence spokesman Brendan O’Connor declined to comment.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/officers-escape-punishment-for-commando-crimes/news-story/89d7fd2c07e9038030f572bcdd3dba2a

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 12, 2022, 2:35 a.m. No.16059190   🗄️.is 🔗kun

United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) Tweet

 

The OSI team was grateful for the opportunity to meet with the @AusFedPolice Commissioner & Assistant Commissioners to discuss items of mutual interest during their recent visit to the Australian Embassy in DC (@AusintheUS)!

 

https://twitter.com/RealAFOSI/status/1512490708560592899

 

https://www.osi.af.mil

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 1:40 a.m. No.16065880   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5882 >>0058 >>6235

>>16047076

Election 2022: Anthony Albanese rewrites his own economic history

 

SHARRI MARKSON - APRIL 13, 2022

 

1/2

 

Anthony Albanese has tried to ­inflate his status as an “economics adviser” to the legendary reformist centre-right Hawke government in a bid to pump up his damaged economic credentials but was in fact a “research officer” to a hard-left out-of-cabinet minister and was ­strongly opposed to the major ­reforms of the time, including ­privatisation, HECS and financial deregulation.

 

Mr Albanese sought to re-­establish his economic credentials on Tuesday after being caught not knowing the cash rate or the ­unemployment rate a day earlier.

 

In doing so, he claimed during a press conference he “became an economic policy adviser to the Hawke government” after spending four years at Sydney Univer­sity. However, the only position Mr Albanese held in the Hawke government, which was in office from 1983 to 1991, was working for Tom Uren, who was minister for territories and local government and then administrative services.

 

The late Uren was also minister assisting the prime minister for community development and ­regional affairs. Uren was not in cabinet and had no role in economic policy with the Hawke ­administration.

 

And in a biography on Mr Albanese written by journalist Karen Middleton, for which he participated, she also describes him as a “certain research officer working for Tom Uren” and a “protesting activist” during the Hawke government.

 

Uren’s memoir, Straight Left, does not mention Mr Albanese as an economics adviser.

 

There is only one passage referring to Mr Albanese in the entire book. Mr Uren says that for the first year or two that Mr Albanese worked for him they spoke only occasionally.

 

“Anthony was an activist in Young Labor and was one of the main organisers of the Left in NSW,” Uren wrote. “When I first put him on my staff some of my comrades on the Left said, ‘Oh, you’re putting a young Trot on your staff’.”

 

A spokesman for Mr Albanese said – despite Uren not having an economic portfolio in government – that he was employed in the ­office as an economist.

 

“Anthony Albanese was ­employed as an economist by Tom Uren, who served as minister for local government, territories and administrative services between 1985 and 1989. He gave Mr Uren advice on issues including taxation and economic matters,” he said.

 

Not only did Mr Albanese not advise the Hawke government on economics policy, but he opposed the major economic reforms of the Hawke government – as did Uren.

 

It’s a point author Troy Bramston makes in his new book, Bob Hawke: Demons and Destiny.

 

“Anthony Albanese, a delegate to the national conference, was among those in the Left who voted to return to a regulated ­exchange rate,” Bramston writes.

 

“Albanese opposed many of the major reforms of the period, from fiscal consolidation and privatisation to cutting tariffs, ­exporting uranium and introducing HECS.”

 

Mr Albanese gave an interview to the Sydney Morning Herald in 1987 to complain that the Hawke government had lost touch with voters over its economics policy. “When they talk about wages, budget deficits and cuts, they talk about it like it is out of a textbook,” he said.

 

“Someone like Keating can put himself up as a possible Labor PM but he is more comfortable mixing with millionaires and business executives than he is with working-class people.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 1:40 a.m. No.16065882   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16065880

 

2/2

 

In his own biography, Albanese: Telling it Straight, Middleton writes that Labor figures “Bruce Childs and fellow Left convener Gerry Hand would blast their own government’s measures, using briefing notes prepared for them by young Left staffers including a certain ­research officer working for Tom Uren.

 

“The advisers would begin combing through the budget as soon as it was handed down.

 

“‘We would stay up all night – literally all night,’ Anthony says.”

 

Mr Albanese discusses in the biography how, during the ALP NSW state conference ahead of Mr Keating’s 1985 tax summit, he and other young Labor delegates protested as the treasurer ­explained “his reasoning for proposing to pay for income tax cuts with a consumption tax”.

 

Middleton writes how the “protesting activists” threw Monopoly money in the air.

 

At the 1991 Australian Labor Party centenary conference, Mr Albanese also criticised the Hawke government, saying the profits of the Prices and Incomes Accord (an agreement between the ACTU and the Labor Party) “have been wasted and squandered in an orgy of speculation and unproductive investment”.

 

In defending his economic credentials, Mr Albanese on Tuesday said: “I’m absolutely across the economy and what we need to do, which is why I have a practical plan to deal with the economic challenges that Australia faces.

 

“I have an economics degree from Sydney University. I studied both orthodox economics and political economy. I spent four years there doing it, and then I became an economic policy ­adviser to the Hawke government.”

 

Uren was best known during his time in the Hawke government for overseeing the construction of New Parliament House, playing a role in the creation of self-government for the ACT, and increasing funding for local ­government and community housing.

 

The late Labor Left icon was highly critical of Hawke’s economic reforms, describing unfettered market forces as “the law of the jungle”.

 

In a media interview on Tuesday, Mr Albanese said Uren had been a mentor to him.

 

Uren wrote in his autobiography that Hawke rushed into the decision to float the Australian dollar and allow foreign banks into Australia.

 

He described his relationship with Hawke as “confrontation” and accused the Labor prime minister of making economic ­decisions to “benefit the elitist ­element”.

 

“My view was that the Hawke government, particularly in its early days, was making decisions to benefit the elitist element,” he wrote.

 

“I think the decision to float the dollar, allowing foreign banks to come into Australia, was made too quickly. We did not consider the deeper implications.

 

“I think what worried me deeply was Keating’s headlong rush to free up the Australian economy to market forces and allow the market to run its own race with blind faith that it would stimulate our economy.

 

“We went down that path far too quickly. As far as I’m concerned, unfettered market forces are the law of the jungle.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/albanese-rewrites-his-economic-history/news-story/422ca5bd2ce58b7277c59dd60d3097f1

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 1:45 a.m. No.16065891   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Election 2022: Don’t underestimate Scott Morrison, says Bill Shorten

 

TROY BRAMSTON - APRIL 13, 2022

 

Bill Shorten says Labor must learn the lessons of the last election not to underestimate Scott Morrison as a campaigner or take the result for granted, as he put aside past disagreements and ­declared he and Anthony Albanese shared a mutual respect as leaders past and present.

 

“The key lesson for Labor is: don’t underestimate Scott Morrison and don’t count your chickens until they are hatched,” Mr Shorten told The Australian in an exclusive interview.

 

“We enter this election, according to the polls, ahead of (the Coalition) and I would just keep doing what we are doing.”

 

The former Labor leader said he had left his differences with Mr Albanese in the past, there was now “mutual respect” ­between the two, he welcomed being asked for advice and he was eager to again be a minister in a Labor ­government.

 

“I’m on Team Labor and I want Anthony Albanese to be the next prime minister of Australia. Our core message is a good message for Australia: a better future, not leaving anyone behind, more ­secure jobs. I think our fundamental economic formula is ­pretty sound, so just stick at it.”

 

Since Mr Albanese succeeded Mr Shorten as Labor leader after the 2019 election, the two have met a few times for one-on-one talks about policy and strategy. They recently had a more relaxed discussion over dinner on Valentine’s Day and talked about their families and fitness regimes.

 

“They have been good meetings,” Mr Shorten said. “He ­occasionally has been good enough to ask about my experience as a former leader and any insights. We have a very strong topic in common that is the ­failings of Scott Morrison so they have been very constructive discussions.”

 

As a former leader, Mr Shorten hopes to be a sounding board in government like Jim Scullin was for John Curtin in the 1940s and play a key role in government like Bill Hayden played for Bob Hawke in the 1980s. Simon Crean, another former opposition leader, served as a minister in the Rudd and Gillard governments.

 

“John Curtin lent upon Jim Scullin and I think Scullin stayed another 16 years after he was prime minister,” he said.

 

“(Alexander) Downer served (John) Howard as foreign minister. And Bill Hayden is a perfect example. The point about former leader roles is that constructively they can add a level of experience to a government.”

 

Mr Shorten served as Labor’s leader from 2013 to 2019 and has been the party’s spokesman for the NDIS and government ser­vices since the last election. He is keen to hold the portfolio in government and ensure Australians living with a disability are ­involved in the “co-design” of any changes to the scheme.

 

“I would love to continue the work from opposition into government about getting the NDIS back on track,” he said. “I’m very committed. We are going to unveil our disability policy soon. It is now a $23bn scheme with 503,000 people receiving pack­ages. It is one of the few areas where the commonwealth is in ­direct service delivery.”

 

The comments from Mr Shorten come after the death of his close friend and colleague Kimberley Kitching, and concern about how she was treated within Labor’s Victorian branch, which had not re-endorsed her pre­selection, and by Labor’s Senate leadership.

 

“I know if she were here with us still, all her energy and activism and enthusiasm and the powerful force of her personality would have been dedicated to a Labor victory in May,” Mr Shorten said at her funeral. “Kimberley would want everyone in her Labor family to channel their grief, gather their strength and move onwards from here together.”

 

The eulogy was widely interpreted within Labor as drawing a line under party division.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/election-2022-dont-underestimate-scott-morrison-says-bill-shorten/news-story/88b39cf1fef49818361735bfa48ffb9d

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 1:54 a.m. No.16065912   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Albanese’s misstep marks a strategic shift in this election campaign

 

DENNIS SHANAHAN - APRIL 13, 2022

 

It’s only day three of the campaign and already there has been a turning point. It’s a result of Anthony Albanese’s failure to name the unemployment and cash rates but it goes well beyond a tactical error and distraction.

 

The 2022 campaign has now undergone a strategic shift: the main election debate is now about the economy: exactly where Scott Morrison and Josh Frydenberg want it to be.

 

Since the Opposition Leader’s tactical blunder on Monday, the economy has been front and centre for the Opposition Leader and Labor frontbenchers as Albanese has tried get his campaign back on the rails and restore some personal credibility.

 

Even a tried and true Labor strength of Medicare and a vow on Wednesday to “strengthen Medicare” was sidetracked into Albanese’s increasingly shrill defences of his record and economic credentials.

 

The basic assumption for months before the election was called was that if Labor could concentrate on the Prime Minister’s perceived failings and unpopularity with a frustrated electorate the ALP was on a winner.

 

But, if the argument is to be about economic management and recovery after the global pandemic and recession, the Coalition is far more likely to win thanks to world-beating employment and growth figures.

 

On Wednesday Jim Chalmers, Labor’s Treasurer if the ALP wins, issued a challenge to Morrison that if he wants a debate on the economy “to bring it on”.

 

“So if Scott Morrison wants his economic record to be a big part of the election campaign, we say bring it on,” Chalmers boldly declared.

 

This was just before his leader once again was subjected to scrutiny about his economic knowledge, his accuracy on various essential figures and his claim he was an economic adviser to the Hawke Government.

 

Well, this is exactly what Morrison and Josh Frydenberg want, and given this first week of campaigning is curtailed for Easter, it’s difficult not judge the first week a victory for the Coalition against the odds and polls.

 

Some Labor MPs take solace in the fact that Albanese’s big blunder occurred early in the campaign rather than later and believe the Easter truce declared for Good Friday and Easter Sunday will give him time to reframe his campaign and get back to the ground he wants to fight on.

 

But, because Albanese has continued to dig a hole for himself on economic and experience claims – overreaching as he tries to fill a curriculum void in the six weeks of a campaign instead of having done so in a three-year term as Labor leader – there is a real danger what may have been a one-day, one-week horror will bleed into the rest of the campaign.

 

This is particularly the case since Morrison and the Treasurer – and Shadow Treasurer – want the economy to be the central debate.

 

Albanese’s “brainfreeze”, “ignorance”, “gaffe” and mind “going blank” is more than a simple journalistic “gotcha” moment about grocery prices because it is leading to a strategic shift in the campaign and one that favours the Coalition.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/albaneses-misstep-marks-a-strategic-shift-in-this-election-campaign/news-story/1df9ee24e65087bc3be183d1c43278ed

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:04 a.m. No.16065928   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5951 >>5990 >>6581

>>16047451

>>16059101

Minister Zed Seselja’s Solomon Islands dash to stymie deal with China

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 12, 2022

 

Minister for the Pacific Zed ­Seselja has flown to the Solomon Islands in a last-ditch bid to convince Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare not to sign a security pact with Beijing that could open the way for a Chinese base 2000km off Australia’s coast.

 

Mr Seselja departed Australia on Tuesday afternoon, hours after The Australian revealed the Solomon Islands government ­expressed “no objection” to a Chinese bid to import more than 20 automatic weapons into the country, including two machine guns, to arm a secret 10-person ­security unit.

 

The Chinese request was made in early December amid negotiations between the Chinese and Solomon Islands governments on the new security agreement.

 

The extraordinary visit during the election caretaker period came after Scott Morrison ­expressed concern over the “possible rotation” of Chinese navy vessels through Solomon Islands’ ports under the security deal.

 

Anthony Albanese said a Labor government would have done more than “sit back and do nothing”. “Why wasn’t a minister dispatched to the Solomons?” the Opposition Leader said before Mr Seselja’s trip was announced.

 

Leaked documents reveal the Chinese embassy sought ­approval for each member of a plainclothes security team to be armed with a 9mm automatic pistol and an automatic rifle. Two machine guns and a sniper rifle were also on the list of weapons to be imported, together with ­ammunition for all of the guns.

 

It said the armed team was ­required to protect the Chinese embassy following riots in the capital in November.

 

The embassy said all of the ­security personnel would hold diplomatic passports – giving them immunity from prosecution under local laws – with the official status of “attache of the Chinese mission”.

 

“The deployment of the security team will not be made public by the Chinese side,” it said.

 

The Solomon Islands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade said it had “no objection to the request”, noting local police “could not guarantee the safety of the embassy and staff” during ­November riots in Honiara that targeted Chinese interests.

 

A press statement issued by Mr Sogavare’s office on Tuesday warned of “fake news”, saying “there is nothing to be concerned about”. But it did not deny the weapons were allowed into the country.

 

Mr Seselja said he would meet with Mr Sogavare during the two-day trip to discuss the security agreement, and hoped “to further strengthen Australia’s relationship” with the country.

 

“We look forward to ongoing engagement with Solomon ­Islands, and with our Pacific family members, on these very ­important issues,” he said. “Our view remains that the ­Pacific ­family will continue to meet the security needs of our region.”

 

He will also meet with Australian Defence Force and Australian Federal Police serving in the capital as a security assistance force.

 

Solomon Islands Opposition Leader Matthew Wale said ­Australia needed to become smarter in its diplomacy with Mr Sogavare.

 

“The problem has long been that Australian government officials have worked as if Sogavare is trustworthy,” he said.

 

“This emboldened him to think he can make decisions with regional implications with little consequence. He is exploiting the limits of what democratic governments like Australia can do to stop him.”

 

Mr Seselja will be followed in Solomon Islands later this month by Joe Biden’s national security co-ordinator for the Indo-Pacific, Kurt Campbell, who will also urge Mr Sogavare not to progress the security agreement.

 

But Mr Sogavare has branded Western criticism of the deal as “insulting” and said he is determined to sign the pact.

 

He earlier ignored high-level intelligence briefings from two of Australia’s top spies – Office of National Assessments director-general Andrew Shearer and Australian Secret ­Intelligence Service Paul Symon – who travelled to the Solomon Islands to warn of the agreement’s security ramifications.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/minister-zed-seseljas-solomon-islands-dash-to-stymie-deal-with-china/news-story/33291f1e1f34845b1ce193e85739dd16

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:13 a.m. No.16065951   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6581

>>16065928

Solomon Islands Government

 

GOV’T CAUTIONS AGAINST FAKE NEWS AFTER LEAKED DOCUMENTS

 

April 12, 2022

 

The Government today has cautioned the public to be alert against fake news or misinterpreted commentaries on social media forums following leaked documents containing official correspondences between the Solomon Islands Government and the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) Embassy in Honiara.

 

The Government said relevant Ministries will issue an official statement soon.

 

“There is nothing to be concerned about” the Government further stated.

 

It is anticipated that more fear mongering, lies and propaganda will be forthcoming from people who are hell bent on creating instability for their own interests.

 

The Government encourages social media commentators not to be emotionally swayed by the leaked documents as clarifications are forthcoming in an official statement.

 

https://solomons.gov.sb/govt-cautions-against-fake-news-after-leaked-documents/

 

 

STATUS OF CHINA’S REQUEST FOR DIPLOMATIC SECURITY PERSONAL

 

April 13, 2022

 

The request by the Chinese Embassy in Honiara to the Solomon Islands Government to allow diplomatic Chinese security personnel to protect the Embassy during the November 2021 riots was considered and held in abeyance by the Government.

 

The Government made this clarification in relation to so-called leaked documents circulating on social media that relayed correspondences between Officials of the Chinese Embassy in Honiara and the Solomon Islands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade (MAFET) and the Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Services (MPNSCS).

 

The request was made in light of the November 2021 violent riots where business establishments in the City were burnt, lives lost and business owners made homeless as well as ongoing threats directed at the Chinese Embassy.

 

“It was a dark chapter in Solomon Islands history where local Police Forces were overstretched during the riot period and as a State we were not in a position to guarantee safety and security of resident diplomatic personnel in particular the People’s Republic of China’s diplomats,” a Government statement today said.

 

The Government clarified that it is a receiving State’s obligation under Article 22 of the Vienna Convention to protect all sending State’s resident diplomats.

 

All Embassies and High Commissions are considered foreign territories in the receiving state. Host country authorities can only enter with the permission of the Head of Mission. Such request is standard protocol and normally used by some countries to protect their diplomats and Consuls abroad.

 

The fragility of the security environment during the unrest period and the fact that their security could not be guaranteed prompted the Chinese Embassy to formally submit a request to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade seeking temporary deployment of Diplomatic Security Personnel to protect their diplomats and the Embassy.

 

The request was reviewed against the changing security environment and held in abeyance as the Government continue to monitor the security situation.

 

The Government confirmed that China’s Embassy Security Personnel have not entered the country, no arms have been shipped apart from a separate consignment of training replica arms stored by RSIPF and China’s Police Liaison officers conducting training with Royal Solomon Islands Police Force.

 

The listed riot equipment is public information and received by Royal Solomon Islands Police Force.

 

“It is regrettable that misinformation from anonymous sources continue to distort facts and tarnish the good relations between Solomon Islands and the People’s Republic of China,” the statement said.

 

The Solomon Islands Government will continue to work hard in protecting all people from violence and fear and condemned those that serve narrow interests and attempt to undermine the country’s stability.

 

https://solomons.gov.sb/status-of-chinas-request-for-diplomatic-security-personal/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:26 a.m. No.16065990   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8464 >>3812 >>4008 >>0093 >>2060 >>1196

>>16065928

Australia's Pacific Minister Zed Seselja urges Solomon Islands Prime Minister not to sign China security deal

 

Andrew Greene - 13 April 2022

 

Australia's Minister for the Pacific has used a visit to Solomon Islands in the middle of the federal election campaign to "respectfully" urge the country's Prime Minister not to sign a controversial security deal with China.

 

Senator Zed Seselja travelled to Honiara — with Labor's support during the caretaker period — to directly press the government's concerns over an agreement that could allow a Chinese military presence close to Australia.

 

In a statement after his meeting with Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, Senator Seselja said Australia remained committed to supporting Solomon Islands to meet its security needs "swiftly, transparently and with full respect for its sovereignty".

 

Senator Seselja said Australia had been a "strong partner" to Solomon Islands for many years, supporting its security needs through the recent Solomons International Assistance Force and, earlier, through the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands.

 

"We have asked Solomon Islands, respectfully, to consider not signing the agreement and to consult the Pacific family in the spirit of regional openness and transparency, consistent with our region's security frameworks," Senator Seselja said.

 

Speaking to the ABC after his meeting, Senator Seselja added that it was a "frank" discussion with Mr Sogavare.

 

"We've had a dialogue," he said.

 

"We expressed our view and our concern.

 

"We maintain that Australia can fill the security needs [of Solomon Islands], and the region. Working together, we can make sure that all of the security needs of the Solomon Islands are taken care of."

 

An overseas trip by a minister during an election's "caretaker" period is considered unusual and highlights the growing anxiety in Australia over the soon-to-be-signed deal between China and Solomon Islands.

 

Under a leaked draft of the document, Beijing could be allowed to station navy ships and defence personnel to protect billions of dollars in Chinese infrastructure investment in the developing country

 

Earlier today, Prime Minister Scott Morrison dismissed suggestions that his government had dropped the ball on its relationship with Solomon Islands after a leaked draft of the security pact took Australia by surprise.

 

Mr Morrison insisted Australia continued to work closely with Honiara, despite the Australian government currently operating in caretaker mode during the election campaign.

 

"We will continue to work through these sensitive issues as a Pacific Islands family," Mr Morrison said.

 

"The suggestion that Australia should be heavy-handed on these matters is wrongheaded and completely misunderstands how these matters should be handled."

 

Visiting US Marines boss warns 'geography matters'

 

The visiting Commandant of the US Marine Corp, David Berger, has highlighted the geographic importance of Solomon Islands, while warning the West is failing to block China's gradual advances across the Indo-Pacific.

 

"You could argue that the approaches that we've taken in the last 10 years are not working out here," General Berger said in an appearance at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

 

"They're moving forward. They're not picking a fight. They're achieving their objectives. We're not successfully deterring it because — what some people call grey-zone or however you want to call it — we haven't figured out quite how to stop that."

 

General Berger also highlighted the modern-day strategic importance of Solomon Islands, pointing to its significance during the pivotal World War II Battle of Guadalcanal.

 

"Where the Solomon Islands are, matters," he said. "It did then. It does now.

 

"The Solomon Islands, their location matters. It's clearly a point of contention and competition."

 

Asked whether Australia had failed, diplomatically, to stop the proposed Chinese security deal, General Berger responded: "It's not for me to judge pass or fail. It does highlight the strategic location of places in the Pacific for sure," he said.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-13/pacific-minister-solomon-islands-china-security-deal/100989656

 

https://twitter.com/ZedSeselja/status/1513999519083790336

 

https://twitter.com/ChiefAusArmy/status/1514112226243715073

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:29 a.m. No.16066003   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Leifer wants jury to decide abuse charges

 

Karen Sweeney - April 13 2022

 

Ultra-orthodox school principal and accused child abuser Malka Leifer is set to go on trial in August.

 

The 55-year-old was ordered to stand trial after pleading not guilty to 90 charges of child sexual abuse in October last year.

 

A five-week trial was expected to begin late this year but on Wednesday prosecutors and defence teams agreed to bring the hearing forward.

 

The trial is now expected to begin before County Court Judge Mark Gamble - the head of the court's criminal division - on August 1.

 

It had been thought the trial could not begin until at least late October, because of a number of Jewish holidays in September and October.

 

Defence lawyers previously told the court Leifer was considering a judge-alone hearing of her case.

 

She will instead have the case heard by a jury, barrister Ian Hill QC said on Wednesday.

 

Leifer is accused of abusing sisters Dassi Erlich, Nicole Meyer and Elly Sapper during her time at the Adass Israel School in Melbourne's inner eastern suburbs between 2004 and 2008.

 

She has been remanded in custody until another directions hearing on May 11 ahead of pre-trial legal arguments in July.

 

https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7698185/leifer-wants-jury-to-decide-abuse-charges/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:36 a.m. No.16066026   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Australian Defence Space Command delegation visits CFSCC, CSpOC

 

Tech. Sgt. Luke Kitterman, Combined Force Space Component Command Public Affairs - April 12, 2022

 

VANDENBERG SPACE FORCE BASE, Calif. – Combined Force Space Component Command commander Maj. Gen. DeAnna Burt (fourth from right) stands with Australian Defence Force air and space attaché Air Commodore John Haly (fifth from right), along with other members of Australia’s Defence Space Command and leaders from CFSCC and the Combined Space Operations Center, in front of the CFSCC headquarters building on Apr. 11, 2022, at Vandenberg Space Force Base, Calif. Haly spent part of the day with CFSCC leadership and toured the CSpOC to become more familiar with the organizations’ space command and control mission. Haly’s visit offered a valuable opportunity to grow the U.S-Australia partnership in the space domain. Australia’s Defence Space Command officially launched on Mar. 22, 2022. (U.S. Space Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Luke Kitterman)

 

https://www.vandenberg.spaceforce.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/2997684/australian-defence-space-command-delegation-visits-cfscc-cspoc/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 2:56 a.m. No.16066080   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0215 >>0223 >>0289 >>6672 >>6730 >>7927 >>1343

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

13 April 2022

 

Today, we kick off our "Meet MRF-D 22" series with the Command Element. Led by the historic 5th Marine Regiment, the MRF-D 22 Command Element provides leadership and command and control for the Marine Air Ground Task Force. Check out the link below for more information, and stand by for the rest of our series this week.

#MRFD

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/345158000980023

 

 

Meet MRF-D 22: the Command Element

 

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin - 04.10.2022

 

DARWIN, AUSTRALIA. – The Marine Rotational Force–Darwin (MRF-D) command element writes a new chapter in the story of MRF-D.

 

The flexibility and agility of a Marine Corps Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) is realized though the coordination of individual actions across the entire formation. This coordination is the responsibility of the command element. From administration and logistics, to intelligence, operations, and communications, Marines and Sailors within this element work tirelessly to ensure MAGTF operations are efficient and effective. For the first time in MRF-D’s eleven year history, these command element responsibilities will be fulfilled by a standing regimental headquarters from 1st Marine Division.

 

“We are proud of the history of our Division, and our Regiment, and look forward writing the next chapter of that history side-by-side with our Australian Allies. When we look back on our shared past, we see that we have always found success – together, regardless of the threat or circumstance. The tough and realistic training we’ll conduct together over the next few months will set conditions for our future success. Whether we’re responding to a natural disaster or a man-made crisis, we’ll be ready to go tomorrow because of the work we’re doing together today,” said Colonel Chris Steele, the commanding officer for MRF-D 22.

 

5th Marines’ reputation for tenacity was first earned during World War I, and was also evidenced during the battles of Guadalcanal and New Britain. This fighting spirit has been reaffirmed time and again in places ranging from Chosin and Pusan, to Hue City, Al Anbar and Sangin.

 

“We have a strong core staff, and had no shortage of volunteers wanting to join our team prior to this deployment. The opportunity to come to Australia is one that everyone wants. These augments were a welcomed addition, and have given us the depth required to compete on the modern battlefield,” said Lieutenant Colonel Tim Kronjaeger, the operations officer for the MAGTF.

 

The MRF-D 22 command element is built to command and control air and ground forces across extended ranges and in the most austere environments. Prior to their arrival in Australia, and in preparation for their pending deployment, members of the MRF-D command element participated in a large scale exercise that afforded them the opportunity to partner with elements of the U.S. Navy’s 3rd Fleet and advance their capability to execute expeditionary operations in support of naval warfighting.

 

“Our headquarters Marines and Sailors combine to form an advanced and versatile team, and provide our subordinate commands vital support across all warfighting functions,” said Captain Joseph DiPietro, the Headquarters Company Commander. “I am constantly impressed with what these kids can do and how they compete against increasingly challenging adversity.”

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/418217/meet-mrf-d-22-command-element

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 10:45 a.m. No.16068464   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8475 >>0093 >>6624

>>16047451

>>16065990

US warns Solomons on China

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 13, 2022

 

One of America’s top foreign policy makers has warned Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare that China will become his country’s “owner and minder” if he pushes ahead with a security agreement with Beijing.

 

US Senate foreign affairs committee chairman Bob Menendez said it was not in the interests of the US, Australia or the Solomon Islands for a Chinese base to be ­established in the Pacific nation, and Mr Sogavare needed to understand “what it means to all of us if that were the pathway forward”.

 

The warning came as Australia’s Minister for the Pacific, Zed Seselja, “respectfully” urged Mr Sogavare during a meeting in ­Honiara to abandon the security deal with Beijing, which Western allies believe will open the way for a Chinese base 2000km off Australia’s northeast coast.

 

Mr Sogavare has vowed to sign the agreement but insisted there will be no Chinese base, branding the suggestion as “insulting”.

 

“My hope is there is a broader, deeper understanding that China at the end of the day will be your owner and minder,” Senator Menendez told Sky News.

 

“That’s what their ultimate goal is. And they have shown that in ­Africa and other parts of the world, where it seems they are coming in with good intentions, and then their coercive economic policies, their coercive practices, ultimately put you being owned by China.”

 

Senator Lindsey Graham, in Australia with Senator Menendez as part of a congressional delegation for meetings about the AUKUS ­security agreement, said China’s threat and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had done more to unite the Republican and Democratic parties “than anything we could have done ourselves”.

 

He said Australia had paid “a heavy price to stand up to China”, and the US appreciated what it had done.

 

Their comments came ahead of a visit to Solomon Islands by Joe Biden’s Indo-Pacific adviser, Kurt Campbell, in coming days, which will pile further pressure on Mr Sogavare to walk away from the pact.

 

On the election hustings in Geelong, Scott Morrison denied his government had “dropped the ball” in allowing China to strengthen its foothold in the Solomon Islands, or that the US was unhappy with Australia’s handling of the matter.

 

“We have a very close relationship with the United States, and that has not been at their view and I reject that absolutely,” the Prime Minister said.

 

Senator Seselja, who flew to Honiara on an extraordinary visit during the election caretaker period, said Australia was committed to supporting the Solomon Islands to meet its security needs “swiftly, transparently and with full respect for its sovereignty”.

 

“We have asked Solomon ­Islands respectfully to consider not signing the agreement and to consult the Pacific family in the spirit of regional openness and transparency, consistent with our region’s security frameworks,” Senator Seselja said after his meeting with Mr Sogavare.

 

“We look forward to ongoing engagement with the Solomon ­Islands government, and with our Pacific family members, on these very important issues.”

 

He said Australia had been a strong partner to the Solomon Islands for many years, supporting its security needs in two missions. Australia had also contributed more than $160m this year in development aid to Solomon Islands.

 

The head of the US Marine Corps, who is in Australia to meet Australian Defence chiefs and visit the US Marine Rotational Force in Darwin, said the West was failing to prevent creeping Chinese ­influence in the South Pacific.

 

Marine Corps Commandant David Berger said China’s interest in the Solomon Islands was driven by the nation’s strategic ­location, and declared the US and Australia needed to highlight “what this means, long term”.

 

“‘A lot of things change in warfare,” General Berger told the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in Canberra. “Not geography. Where the Solomon Islands are matters. It did (in WWII), it does now.”

 

He said China was not “picking a fight” but achieving its ­objectives. “We’re not successfully deterring it (because of) what some people call grey zone … We haven’t figured out quite how to stop that,” he said.

 

Earlier, Deputy US Secretary of State Wendy Sherman spoke to Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele to emphasise America’s commitment to the country and the region.

 

Ms Sherman spoke to Mr Manele about a planned new American embassy in Honiara, and “our joint efforts to broaden and deepen engagement between our countries in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific region”.

 

She also put in a call to Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade secretary Kathryn Campbell, expressing “concern about recent developments in the Indo-Pacific”.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/us-warns-solomons-on-china/news-story/8e485a603cae9778dd1dca9219bfb20b

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 13, 2022, 10:47 a.m. No.16068475   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6624

>>16047451

>>16068464

Australia is 'growing with freedom': Lindsey Graham

 

Sky News Australia

 

Apr 13, 2022

 

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham says Australia has paid a “heavy price” for standing up to communist China and the United States stands with the nation more than ever before.

 

He told Sky News Australia that China was using every lever it could to beat Australia after standing up to the country.

 

“You decided to stand up the Chinese Huawei system which is basically if you bought it China would know everything about you, is our theory of the case,” Senator Graham said.

 

“You’ve paid a heavy price for standing up to China and what I want to do is make sure that after this visit you understand that we appreciate what you’ve done and we’re more with you than ever.

 

“I feel comfortable in Australia, I wouldn’t mind living here, I think I’d be lucky to be able to live in a place that’s growing with freedom.

 

“I wouldn’t want to live in communist China.”

 

Democratic Senator Robert Menendez, sitting alongside Mr Graham, said the two chose to visit Australia because it was the “epicentre” of the global challenge against China.

 

“While, yes, we’re all focused on Ukraine and Russia, we understand the importance of this relationship, we understand this is the epicentre of where the future lies in terms of what type of world we want to live in,” he said.

 

The two congressmen are visiting Australia as part of a bipartisan delegation of American senators and congressmen to flesh out how the new AUKUS alliance can best be utilised to push back against China in the Pacific region.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHMncGakmMQ

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 2:36 a.m. No.16073507   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3508

>>16047076

Prime Minister Scott Morrison's security car crashes in Tasmania during election campaign

 

abc.net.au - 14 April 2022

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has cancelled his campaign events for this afternoon after a car accident involving his security detail.

 

The car, which was carrying two federal police and two Tasmanian police officers, was following the Prime Minister when it rolled near Elizabeth Town in northern Tasmania.

 

In a statement, the Prime Minister's office said the four officers had been taken to hospital for further assessment.

 

Mr Morrison, who has been campaigning in Tasmania, was not injured or involved in the accident.

 

Tasmania Police said the crash involved the unmarked police car and a Mitsubishi Triton.

 

In a statement they said initial enquiries indicated "the Triton has collided with the rear of the police vehicle, while attempting to merge".

 

In a statement on his Facebook page Mr Morrison sent his best wishes to the officers and their families.

 

"I am relieved they have all been safely transferred to hospital where they are receiving care," Mr Morrison said.

 

"Our police do an amazing job in keeping us all safe. I am incredibly grateful to all the police who look after me and my family.

 

"We have all got to know each other over the years. They are selfless, professional and incredibly generous. I hope to hear further good news about their condition.

 

"Jen and I also send our thanks, love and best wishes to them and their families."

 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese wished the officers involved in the crash a quick recovery.

 

"They do a fantastic job and I wish all a speedy recovery," he said.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-14/prime-minister-election-security-car-crash-tasmania/100992714

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 2:38 a.m. No.16073508   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3511

>>16047076

>>16073507

Scott Morrison’s security team in car crash

 

Scott Morrison has wished his security team well after they were injured in a car crash with Tasmanian police officers.

 

Gabriel Polychronis - April 14, 2022

 

1/2

 

Two of Scott Morrison’s protective detail and two Tasmanian police officers have been injured following a shocking car crash in Tasmania.

 

The unmarked police vehicle, a Toyota Prado, was following the Prime Minister as he travelled to a campaign event when a Mitsubishi Triton smashed into the back of it while attempting to merge on the Bass Highway.

 

The police car rolled off the road just outside Elizabeth Town about 1.30pm.

 

Two Tasmanian police officers and two Australian Federal Police officers from Mr Morrison’s security detail suffered non-life-threatening injuries and were rushed to hospital.

 

News Corp was told they were all conscious when rushed to hospital.

 

Mr Morrison was not involved in the crash.

 

He later issued a statement saying: “Earlier this afternoon two of my protective detail, along with two Tasmanian police officers, were involved in a terrible car accident while they were supporting my visit to Northern Tasmania.

 

“I am relieved they have all been safely transferred to hospital where they are receiving care.

 

“Our police do an amazing job in keeping us all safe.

 

“I am incredibly grateful to all the police who look after me and my family.

 

“We have all got to know each other over the years. They are selfless, professional and incredibly generous.

 

“I hope to hear further good news about their condition.

 

“Jen and I also send our thanks, love and best wishes to them and their families.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 2:39 a.m. No.16073511   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16073508

 

2/2

 

Tasmania Police said “initial enquiries indicate the Triton has collided with the rear of the police Toyota Prado, while attempting to merge”.

 

It is understood the Prado then crashed through two sets of railing before rolling down a grassy embankment, coming to a rest on its side.

 

An investigation into the crash is ongoing.

 

Both vehicles were travelling west between Deloraine and Latrobe.

 

The four police officers – a man and a woman from the AFP and two men from Tasmania Police – suffered non life-threatening injuries.

 

Images of the wreckage show the unmarked police car with a smashed windshield and heavily dented roof.

 

At least three officers could be seen lying on the ground being treated by paramedics.

 

Mr Morrison was travelling to a defence industry event, which was cancelled.

 

Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews wished the injured members of the Australian Federal Police and Tasmanian Police a “speedy recovery”.

 

“They were on duty, providing protection to the Prime Minister,” Ms Andrews said.

 

“My thoughts are with them and their families, and I thank them for their service.”

 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese posted a note on Facebook saying: “Best wishes to the Australian Federal Police and Tasmania Police personnel assisting the PM who were involved in the car crash in Tasmania today. They do a fantastic job and I wish all a speedy recovery.”

 

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/federal-election/election-2022-live-numbers-dont-add-up-for-labors-anthony-albanese/news-story/1c64f5184df40d830ed8a0b7efa794df

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 3:15 a.m. No.16073542   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3546

>>16047076

Election 2022: Peter Dutton blasts disrespectful voters, Anthony Albanese

 

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has called for Aussie voters to show respect to leaders of our country, after saying Anthony Albanese is clearly not up to the job of being PM.

 

Charles Miranda - April 14, 2022

 

1/2

 

Australian voters need to remind themselves they live in a lucky country when compared with nations like Ukraine and show respect for their leaders, Defence Minister Peter Dutton said on Thursday.

 

Mr Dutton, responding to the controversy of activists crashing the campaigns of both leaders, said respect needed to be shown during the election campaign.

 

He said while both Labor and Liberal parties had “enthusiastic” supporters behind them, that was no excuse for disrespect.

 

The 20-year-old activist who gate crashed Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s private western Sydney event earlier this week was cited.

 

“I think one of the things we should remind ourselves of in this campaign is when you look at the Ukraine and what is happening in Europe, the uncertainty in other countries at the moment sometimes we do take for granted what we have got in this country, how fortunate, how lucky we are and how our democracy is pretty fragile on occasion, we haven’t even realised it,” he said.

 

“So I think it is a great thing that people can express a view but whether you are with the Young Liberals, Young Labor or whoever you are, Young Greens, whatever, you’ve got to express it respectfully and in the end the office of prime minister is a very high office in our country and whether its Liberal or Labor we have to show respect to the person in that position. I think sometimes we should remind ourselves of that, everyone is after a great moment on Snapchat or YouTube or whatever but do it respectfully.”

 

Mr Dutton also said he thought “Albo has had a shocker” so far on the campaign trail.

 

“Let’s call it what it is. It has given people an insight of somebody who has hidden himself from public view for months.

 

“Now you understand why. He is clearly not up to the job and not prepared for the job. It is clear to Australians that the rumblings within the Labor Party about the leader and he can’t go the distance in the campaign.

 

“That all makes sense to people now. People have a bit of a taste. It is a bit of Mark Latham about it of 2004. I think that you will see more from Anthony Albanese by way of mistakes and just demonstration that he is not ready for the top job in the country.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 3:17 a.m. No.16073546   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16073542

 

2/2

 

DUTTON BLASTS ALBANESE OVER NATIONAL SECURITY

 

People smugglers in Vietnam and Sri Lanka are rubbing their hands in glee over a potential Labor government, with leader Anthony Albanese’s soft approach likely to “restart the boats”, Defence Minister Peter Dutton has warned.

 

Announcing a more than $500 million tranche of weapons acquisitions from a Brisbane defence supplier on Wednesday, Mr Dutton said Labor could not be trusted with national security whether it was to deal with a restart of refugee boats, Chinese aggression or even making friends in the Pacific.

 

Mr Dutton said he had followed Mr Albanese’s career from across the parliamentary dispatch box for more than 20 years and it was unbelievable the Labor Opposition leader was now 20 days before an election trying to pretend to be strong on security.

 

“It just doesn’t pass the pub test,” Mr Dutton said.

 

Mr Dutton lampooned Mr Albanese “as twisting and contorting”, not knowing who he was claiming to be – reincarnated from former Labor leader Bob Hawke, laughably comparing himself to former Coalition leader John Howard and even marketing himself as Brisbane premier Annastacia Palaszczuk “version 2.0”.

 

“I think the Australian public can sniff a fake here,” he said.

 

Mr Dutton said he knew “the preconditions were there” for the refugee boats to resume voyages to Australia like they had during the Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard Labor government years and smugglers from Vietnam and Sri Lanka were thinking “bring it on”.

 

“The threat will never go away, but Anthony Albanese is sending smoke signals that the Labor Party has the same policy as Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard which equates to boats restarting and people being back on water, and that’s not what we want,” Mr Dutton said.

 

“The preconditions are there for the boats to recommence.

 

“They would be looking at Labor’s policy at the moment, rubbing their hands together, thinking ‘fantastic, bring it on, game back on’.

 

“If you look at Brendan O’Connor – my opposite, at least for the moment – there are 12,000 who came on his watch. Women and children drowned when he was the Home Affairs Minister.

 

“We don’t even know if Kristina Keneally would be the Home Affairs Minister. I think the Albanese roadshow is (about to) run into some pretty rough territory.

 

“The people smugglers won’t try and risk their arm against a Morrison government, I’ll tell you that,” Mr Dutton said.

 

On China he said a Labor government would no doubt dispatch Penny Wong as foreign minister to Beijing and she would be told Chinese relations could improve if Australia stopped the defence build-up.

 

“She would fall for it,” he said, adding there was a split between the Labor Left and Right on how to deal with China.

 

The Federal Government announced on Tuesday it was dispatching officials to the Solomon Islands capital, Honiara, to discuss Australia’s concerns with the government signing a military deal with China.

 

Mr Albanese said this sort of ministerial attention should have been taken when the deal was first revealed but instead the critical security issue was “fumbled”.

 

ASIS head Paul Symon and Office of National Intelligence (ONI) Director-General Andrew Shearer met with the Pacific nation’s prime minister, Manasseh Sogavare, two weeks ago over the China deal, which the Solomon Islands leader had earlier said he would sign.

 

https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/national/federal-election/defence-minister-peter-dutton-questions-anthony-albaneses/news-story/4075b06e1c1c2d46559d3539d380f4af

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 3:56 a.m. No.16073665   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3667

>>16047076

Election 2022: Forget the spin, the Labor leader simply isn’t prepared

 

PETA CREDLIN - APRIL 14, 2022

 

1/2

 

When Scott Morrison visited the Governor-General to seek an election on May 21, that didn’t just begin a fight to the finish between the Prime Minister and his rival; it began an engagement between two political armies that have been mobilising for months for this encounter.

 

Mostly unremarked and nearly always invisible is the gargantuan amount of behind-the-scenes work that goes into federal election campaigns; the travelling campaign teams of major party leaders, their respective national campaign headquarters, the state party head office campaign units and, often underestimated, the seat-by-seat ground game.

 

In 10 years as a Howard government ministerial adviser, I was a policy wonk in the national and state campaign teams. Then, as chief of staff to an opposition leader, I ran Tony Abbott’s travelling campaign operation in 2010 and 2013. From experience, I know Anthony Albanese’s economic car-crash on Monday would have sent shockwaves through every level of Labor’s operation that would still be reverberating at week’s end.

 

Forget the spin; Albanese’s failure to know the local and national unemployment rates and the Reserve Bank cash rate wasn’t a simple matter of being a few digits out. For the first couple of questions he deliberately tried to fudge, a sign he was worried about what was coming next; so, when the blunt question came on the unemployment rate (4.0 as everyone now knows), he had nowhere to hide. There’s a lesson here for journalists who talk too much and think the question is about them; clarity is key and direct can be deadly. And it was.

 

Political leaders shouldn’t need a cheat sheet to know headline macro-economic numbers because they’re as fundamental as breathing if you want to shape national policy. The Opposition Leader simply isn’t prepared: either because he doesn’t have what it takes or because his backroom team isn’t prepping him as it should; or, if they are, he’s not taking it seriously.

 

It has all the hallmarks of a Labor team that thinks this election is already won, despite Bill Shorten’s sage reminder on Wednesday that it isn’t, and don’t underestimate Morrison. It’s a fatal flaw in recent Labor campaigning. For years Labor underestimated John Howard, attrib­uting his victories in 2001 to the Tampa asylum-seeker standoff and in 2004 to Mark Latham, never properly acknowledging his ability to connect with ordinary Australians. It is only when Labor gave Howard his due and respected him as a formidable opponent that they beat him; that they sought to create Kevin Rudd as a Howard-lite character says it all.

 

Abbott was similarly underestimated in 2010, yet he reduced Labor to minority government after one term; indeed, in a forerunner for today’s circus, if the NSW Liberal Party hadn’t left pre­selecting candidates until the day the election was called the result might have been in Abbott’s favour. That was Abbott’s great strength as a campaigner: he never let events knock him off course. Not the advent of Julia Gillard and not the return of Rudd. Abbott had a strategy he believed in, driven by values and conviction, and he stuck with it; hence his landslide victory in 2013.

 

In 2016, Malcolm Turnbull suffered a 14-seat loss because he thought Shorten was unelectable and he knocked off campaigning at lunchtime.

 

There are lessons here for anyone who wants to learn them, as wise heads in Labor will be trying to tell callow campaigners who think they know it all.

 

Labor insiders tell me Albanese’s office is full of like-minded mates from university days; that there’s barely a hardhead among them who will tell the leader what he doesn’t want to hear but needs to know. I copped a barrage over the years for being blunt, but sycophants are a dime a dozen in politics; more prized are people prepared to tell you the unvarnished truth and put their job on the line to help you keep yours.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 3:57 a.m. No.16073667   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16073665

 

2/2

 

Clearly the Albanese travelling team needs to sharpen up. Both the Prime Minister and the Opposition Leader have upwards of 50 personal staff ranging from senior advisers on key topics such as economics and national security; advisers covering all other portfolio areas; media advisers; program co-ordinators, especially advancers to ensure events go smoothly; right down to PAs and transcribers. In a campaign, 20 or so hand-picked staff members spend the whole five weeks on the road with the party leader, and following every move are two media packs: one with the Prime Minister and one with his opponent.

 

Labor reportedly is putting more seasoned staff on the road with Albanese in a bid to lift his performance.

 

I don’t recall any media event – be it in regional Australia or the full glare of the Canberra press gallery, where Abbott was not first put through his paces by his team.

 

Indeed, his deputy chief of staff, Andrew Hirst, is now running his second election campaign as Liberal Party federal director, so he will be reading the Albanese play for what it is: a team that’s not as prepared as it should be; a leader who has not assimilated what should be fundamental; and a strategy that owes as much to campaigns past as a well-crafted plan for 2022.

 

Talk now of a post-Monday reset for the Labor leader has all the hallmarks of 2010’s “real Julia” about-face. That Labor campaigners are already talking about changing their game plan after one bad day is a sign of panic. The real danger isn’t that Albanese made the big mistakes he did; it’s that he doesn’t recover from them. Already on Wednesday he cut his daily press conference short, and his body language and dry mouth were telling.

 

Politics is a confidence game, and the leader’s confidence is like electricity in a campaign. When it’s on, the energy powers the whole team. When it isn’t, it’s like working in the dark, and even the best campaigners must fumble their way forward.

 

Dragging out a rebadged version of the old Rudd-era GP superclinics, as Labor did on Wednesday, smacked of “in an emergency break glass”; a desperate move given the Australian Medical Association labelled such clinics “a bad experiment”. But “whatever it takes”, the pollster would be saying, “you’ve got to make this election about Medicare if you want to resurrect things after Monday”. This election, Labor is running its national campaign headquarters out of Sydney, reflecting its well-founded optimism of picking up seats in NSW given recent Liberal Party chaos. It should help that its campaign chief, Paul Erickson, has Tim Gartrell as Albanese’s chief of staff, given Gartrell was the Kevin07 campaign chief. This should mean, for the first time in a long while, better co-ordination between the leader’s travelling team and campaign HQ.

 

The Liberals are based out of Brisbane because they know holding Queensland is key to holding government. In both locations, Erickson and Hirst will have amassed 100 or so of their respective campaigning best: frontbenchers’ staff with policy expertise, specialists for key seats, media handlers, crisis teams, social media creatives, ad teams, pollsters and more, as well as party elders who’ll act as a sounding board when needed.

 

Albanese has had his “get out of jail” card; he’s in the last-chance saloon, doomed to fail in his quest for majority government if he makes another big mistake. Will it happen? He’ll do his best to avoid it, and as a seasoned professional politician (however light-on he might be in Treasury and national security portfolios) there’s every chance his shocker on Monday will be forgotten by polling day in five weeks.

 

Don’t underestimate, though, how much this will play with his confidence and have the campaign hardheads question his capacity to win. While Labor is becoming the natural party of government at a state level, and with a professional political talent pool to draw on, plus the unions, it has won majority government only once in the past nine federal elections. The electoral arithmetic is still tough for the Coalition, but at least now there’s a contest.

 

Peta Credlin is the host of Credlin on Sky News, 6pm weeknights.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/election-2022-biggest-risk-for-albanese-after-shocker-is-loss-of-confidence/news-story/b86899266fd56618c746e13eea0a6168

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4 a.m. No.16073677   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16040836

Australia’s first XE infection detected in NSW as virologists keep eye on sub-variants

 

Mary Ward - April 14, 2022

 

NSW health authorities have reported Australia’s first case of the XE coronavirus infection, however new sub-variants being detected in Africa and Europe may be a cause for greater concern when mandatory tests for international arrivals are scrapped next week.

 

The case of XE, which is a merging of Omicron’s BA.1 and BA.2 sub-variants known as a “recombinant”, was detected in a recently returned overseas traveller last week.

 

While the World Health Organisation has said XE may be 10 per cent more transmissible than the BA.2 variant, there is no evidence abroad that it has led to more severe disease. However, virologists were concerned by the development of Omicron’s BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants, which have been reported in growing numbers in France and South Africa.

 

The bulk of XE infections have been reported in the UK, particularly in the south-east of England. Other cases have been detected around the globe, usually in international travellers.

 

A recombinant infection occurs when two separate virus strains merge, forming a new, single strain.

 

Associate Professor Stuart Turville, a virologist at the Kirby Institute, said recombinant strains were to be expected when the timelines of different strains of a virus overlap, as has occurred with the Omicron BA.1 and BA.2 variants in NSW.

 

He said it seemed the Omicron recombinants were similar enough to BA.1 and BA.2 that they should induce comparable illness. Omicron antibodies should also help prevent reinfection against its recombinants.

 

“The spike proteins are intact, so it is not going to be a seismic shift, like when Omicron displaced Delta,” he said.

 

Professor William Rawlinson, a virologist with the University of NSW, said people who have been infected with recombinants overseas have so far not shown worse outcomes.

 

“We need to keep a close eye on the relationship between these cases and severity of disease,” he said. “The reality is that the natural evolution of the virus means is that it will likely become transmissible over time.”

 

With the first XE infections in the UK detected in January, Rawlinson said it was unlikely to significantly shift infection patterns in Australia.

 

“If it was going to spread at a rapid pace, I think we would have seen it,” he said.

 

Turville said there was growing concern among virologists about the development of Omicron’s BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants, which are yet to be detected in Australian surveillance programs.

 

“They have a key change in [spike protein mutation] L452R which will make it harder for antibodies to bind to. It will make the virus fitter,” he said.

 

World Health Organisation authorities told reporters they were following the two sub-variants closely on Wednesday, although its director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said low sequencing and testing rates worldwide were making it difficult.

 

“Our ability to monitor trends is compromised as testing has significantly reduced,” he said.

 

While the vast majority of coronavirus infections in NSW are never genomically sequenced, those that are provide an insight into which COVID-19 strains are emerging or becoming dominant as community transmission continues.

 

Omicron’s newer BA.2 sub-variant has been the dominant infection in NSW for several weeks.

 

From Monday, international arrivals will no longer need to test negative to COVID-19 before leaving for Australia, meaning it is likely more variants will be detected locally.

 

NSW Health prioritises genomic sequencing for people hospitalised with COVID-19, as well as conducting surveillance on infections in international arrivals, pregnant women and other groups of interest, meaning the rates of different variants reported by the surveillance are not necessarily reflective of those in the general community.

 

NSW has previously reported two recombinant infections: one “Deltacron” infection, a combination of the Delta and Omicron variants, and another BA.1/BA.2 infection (which was not XE).

 

https://www.theage.com.au/national/nsw/australia-s-first-xe-infection-detected-in-nsw-as-virologists-keep-eye-on-sub-variants-20220414-p5adjo.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4:05 a.m. No.16073688   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16053237

Roberts-Smith prepares to call first witness as Nine evidence wraps up

 

PERRY DUFFIN - APRIL 14, 2022

 

Nine newspapers have wrapped up their defence against Ben Roberts-Smith’s defamation lawsuit, opening the door for the Victoria Cross recipient to begin calling his witnesses from next week.

 

The newspapers have been calling witnesses since February to help substantiate articles that claimed Mr Roberts-Smith is a war criminal, bully and abuser.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith, a highly decorated SAS veteran, denies each of Nine’s claims and launched defamation proceedings in 2018.

 

For weeks dozens of the normally secretive SAS community have walked into Sydney’s Federal Court and claimed they witnessed executions and brutality from Mr Roberts-Smith and other comrades.

 

Among the documents were interviews between Mr Roberts-Smith and officials from the Australian War Memorial, phone records related to prepaid phones and sensitive documents from the Department of Defence.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith gave evidence in the middle of 2021 in which he disputed every one of Nine’s claims of illegality and explained the hurt caused by the articles and allegations.

 

But from Tuesday a very different cohort of SAS soldiers will step into court, this time it is expected they will testify Mr Roberts-Smith did not carry out execution killings in Afghanistan.

 

The first will be a senior soldier known as Person 5 who is expected to deny he or Mr Roberts-Smith ordered a junior soldier to execute an Afghan in 2009 so he could be “blooded”.

 

Then another soldier, known as Person 11, is expected to deny he shot and killed an unarmed farmer who Mr Roberts-Smith had allegedly kicked down a hill.

 

Person 11 is expected to testify, as did Mr Roberts-Smith, that they shot dead a Taliban spotter in a cornfield during that raid.

 

More soldiers will likely denounce a culture of rumours and gossip within the elite fighting force which Mr Roberts-Smith has claimed triggered the media firestorm in 2018.

 

There will be approximately 20 witnesses in total testifying in support of Mr Roberts-Smith’s case before Justice Anthony Besanko begins considering his verdict.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/breaking-news/robertssmith-prepares-to-call-first-witness-as-nine-evidence-wraps-up/news-story/a799cdaab2ac89cc549972564b8a09be

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4:37 a.m. No.16073812   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3817 >>3832 >>0276

>>16065990

USMC chief says marines operating concepts a natural fit for Australia

 

Brendan Nicholson - 14 Apr 2022

 

1/3

 

A more agile and capable US Marine Corps will be well placed to work closely with the Australian Defence Force to protect sensitive areas such as maritime choke points in the region, says its commandant, General David Berger.

 

Berger is overseeing sweeping changes to the marines under the ‘Force Design 2030’ program to prepare the corps for a rapidly changing strategic environment. He is in Australia for talks with Australian commanders.

 

Speaking at ASPI on Thursday, he said that for almost 20 years the marines invested heavily for operations in the Middle East. ‘That’s what our country needed us to do. And we’re very good at that. And because the Marine Corps has all of the air and ground and logistics—the whole package— it’s a natural fit for that.’

 

But in the long term, the marines’ value to the US military joint force was as an expeditionary element that was forward all the time and which could gather information while preventing an adversary from doing the same. That presence could ‘open the door to places’, Berger said.

 

‘Some of it is back to our roots where we came from.’

 

The marines have had to adjust their structure and posture, how they train and manage their people, their warfighting concepts, what platforms they use and what capabilities and weapon systems they need wherever they operate to make sure they stay ahead of change happening around the world, Berger said.

 

‘As a service chief, we have two responsibilities to make sure we provide the forces today for a conflict, but also to make sure that five, 10 years from now we’re in the right spot. We have made the investments in the right places so that the future is in a good place.’

 

A likely challenge for the marines and for allies such as Australia would be to keep maritime choke points open to allow commerce to flow freely and they would need to develop the tools to do that.

 

‘You have to be able to monitor that, to engage an adversary who wants to close it down. So, we need things like anti-ship capabilities, the surveillance, the collection capabilities in the maritime domain that we don’t have right now. We need the ability to move laterally, both by air and on the surface at a tactical level, with greater frequency and in smaller numbers than we do right now.

 

‘But I would say, beyond a piece of hardware, the most important part is that human part of operating in an austere, expeditionary, maritime environment without any developed infrastructure, but getting a job done. And being able to transition quickly if there’s a crisis.’

 

Berger agreed with ASPI Executive Director Peter Jennings that similarities between the Marine Corps and the ADF meant the two could operate well together.

 

‘It’s easy for us to work alongside somebody who’s working to figure, to develop, to refine the tactical and operational concepts that bring together the different capabilities from silos into a whole. This is what we do every day as a marine corps. So it’s a natural fit for us to work alongside.’

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4:37 a.m. No.16073817   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3818

>>16073812

 

2/3

 

Explaining the concept of the marines’ ‘expeditionary advanced base operations’, Berger said that involved the deployment of ‘stand-in’ forces where a stand-off approach—staying outside the range of an adversary’s intelligence-collection and weapon systems—was not enough.

 

‘The stand-in role for the US Marine Corps is to remain forward persistently, all the time with the partners that we have in the face of an adversary to collect against them. To prevent them from collecting against us and other friendly nations. To be in a posture basically, so that if something were to heat up, you’re in the right position already. You’re not fighting your way in.’

 

This posture would add to the stand-off capability of the entire force and increase its depth and breadth. ‘This is a sweet spot, a natural role for the Marine Corps moving forward. We are expeditionary, we’re amphibious. It builds on the competencies we already have.’

 

Australia’s expanding amphibious capability would work well with the US Marines, Berger said, so the stand-in force would be alongside an ally in a crisis, ready to help.

 

Facing a competitor intent on expanding and disrupting the region’s security framework, the marines had to be able to operate from advance bases they would set up, tear down and move on from. ‘You need to have that agility,’ Berger said.

 

Berger said he would not ask Australia to adjust its forces to fight with the US, but instead would listen to what the ADF wanted to do. ‘First step, where do they want to go?’

 

‘My purpose in spending all day today with the ADF is where are they going, and how can we be a partner?’ He said he’d received great advice from ADF chief Angus Campbell.

 

To drive the sort of changes he was bringing to the Marine Corps and to find and develop the ideas that would provide an edge over adversaries, Berger said personnel at all levels must be empowered to embrace risk. Once that began to produce results, Congress tended to support that process.

 

‘Two things I have going for me. One is really smart people around us that are willing to understand risk and take it. Second, I have a boss, bosses, in our Department of Defense who are taking the risk alongside of me. Third, I have Congress. Congress historically looks at the military as wasteful, slow to change, so they are not rewarding, but they’re acknowledging the move that the Marine Corps is making and the associated risk, and are giving us the resources to do it.

 

‘My payback to them is I’ve got to keep them informed, I’ve got to tell them the things we’ve learned in the past six months, year. “These things are not working; we’re going to shift over here.” But I have to keep them informed all the way, or they may think I’m going off the reservation somewhere.

 

‘My obligation to my boss and to Congress, keep them informed all the time. And be honest, be open. Tell them what’s not working. So far, it’s worked.’

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4:38 a.m. No.16073818   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16073817

 

3/3

 

Asked what lessons from the war in Ukraine might be relevant to the Indo-Pacific, Berger said that while he was cautious about drawing conclusions when a conflict was still underway, proper logistics planning was vital and that was relevant to the partnership between Australia and the US.

 

‘Logistics, logistics, logistics. That is the limiting factor. That’s the driving factor in how far and how fast you can go. It can’t be the last thing that you plan. Whoever’s handling logistics, they’d better be in the room from minute one.’

 

A second factor was the incredible, rapid progression of the power of information—from use of smartphones to the strategic release of information. He pointed to the power of President Volodymyr Zelensky’s tailored messaging to his people, to Russia and Russians, and to the wider world.

 

And while it was possible to compare the sizes and ranges of opposing forces, a more telling factor in warfare was human endeavour. Why did the Russian plan not go the way it was laid out on paper and what role did the human part play in that, from conscript to senior leader?

 

And the Ukrainians? ‘They’re defending their home turf. Their backs are against the wall. Their families are in the basement. I mean there’s a huge element there that goes beyond the six-month to two-year conscript from Russia that’s, “I don’t know why I’m down here. I don’t know what we’re doing here. I’m cold. I’m out of food.” The human element is incredible. We should never underestimate that. We have a lot to learn on the human factor.’

 

The Ukrainians knew it would be a huge mistake to take Russia on symmetrically force-on-force, head-to-head, so they wisely chose not to do that. ‘They’re operating as asymmetric as you can imagine—and it’s working.’

 

China would be watching closely and trying to figure out what in Europe applied in the Indo-Pacific. ‘I don’t know what lessons they will learn, but I would bet everything, every dollar that I have in my bag that they’re focused on learning … because they’ve been doing that for the last 15 years.’

 

In terms of deterring China from invading Taiwan, Berger said there was a lot to learn or relearn about deterrence.

 

‘I would say first you make it really difficult for them.’ Coalitions, networks, alliances, partnerships were a problem for Beijing. ‘We need to make that iron clad. We need to make that indivisible.’ The Taiwanese had to be provided with enough to make themselves defendable in terms of arms and other capabilities so that it became a very difficult problem for China to invade.

 

Berger said the sharing of information and intelligence between the US and Australia was the gold standard, and it was important to paint a clear picture of Beijing’s intentions and thinking.

 

On the marines’ rotational presence in Darwin, Berger said: ‘I think the limits of that will be as far as Australia wants to go, will allow us to go.’

 

Darwin allowed the marines to train at scale, alongside a partner at a high end. ‘You can use every tool in the toolkit and press things to the limits in terms of realism. It’s awesome.’

 

If the ADF thought bases in the Northern Territory were worth utilising for training or operating, the marines would be right there alongside it, Berger said. ‘This is expeditionary advanced based operations. How do you move in, set up shop quickly, defend it and then break it down 96 hours later? This is what we do.’

 

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/usmc-chief-says-marines-operating-concepts-a-natural-fit-for-australia/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 4:41 a.m. No.16073832   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0276

>>16073812

In-conversation with General David H. Berger, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps

 

ASPICanberra

 

Apr 14, 2022

 

Recently, ASPI was joined by General David H. Berger, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps. In conversation with ASPI’s Executive Director Peter Jennings, General Berger discussed defence reform and capability acquisition, the US-Australia alliance and the strategic outlook in the Indo-Pacific, including the latest developments between China and Solomon Islands.

 

Note: The welcome and introduction of the session unfortunately had to be removed due to technical issues.

 

Bio:

General David H. Berger assumed the duties of Commandant of the Marine Corps on July 11, 2019. A native of Woodbine, Maryland, General Berger graduated from Tulane University and was commissioned in 1981.

 

He commanded at every level – including a Reconnaissance Company; 3d Battalion, 8th Marines in Haiti during Operation SECURE TOMORROW; Regimental Combat Team 8 in Fallujah, Iraq during Operation IRAQI FREEDOM. As a General Officer, he commanded 1st Marine Division (Forward) in Afghanistan during Operation ENDURING FREEDOM; I Marine Expeditionary Force; U.S. Marine Corps Forces Pacific/Fleet Marine Forces Pacific; and Marine Corps Combat Development Command.

 

General Berger’s staff and joint assignments include serving as Assistant Division Commander of 2d Marine Division; policy planner in the Strategic Plans and Policy Directorate, J-5; Chief of Staff for Kosovo Force (KFOR) Headquarters in Pristina, Kosovo; and Director of Operations in Plans, Policies, and Operations, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps; Deputy Commandant for Combat Development and Integration.

 

General Berger’s formal military education includes the U.S. Army Infantry Officer Advanced Course, U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College, and U.S. Marine Corps School of Advanced Warfighting. He holds multiple advanced degrees including a Master of International Public Policy from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aCC4Vl6-Jw

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 14, 2022, 5:20 a.m. No.16074008   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16065990

Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s Regular Press Conference on April 13, 2022

 

Reuters: An Australian minister asked the Prime Minister of Solomon Islands on Wednesday not to sign a proposed security agreement between Solomon Islands and China. The minister also said that Australia would allocate AUD 160 million in support this year to Solomon Islands. Do you have any comment?

 

Zhao Lijian: I would not comment on the issue pertaining to Australia-Solomon Islands relations. I want to stress that security cooperation between China and Solomon Islands is based on equality and shared benefits. It is within the sovereignty of our two countries, consistent with international law and customary international practice. It is beneficial to social stability and lasting security of Solomon Islands and conducive to promoting peace, stability and development of Solomon Islands and the South Pacific region. The security cooperation does not target any third party, does not contradict the cooperation between Solomon Islands and other countries, and can complement the existing cooperation mechanisms in the region. Relevant countries should view this in an objective and reasonable light, and respect the sovereignty and independent choice of China and Solomon Islands. Instead of stoking confrontation and creating division among the Pacific island region, they should do more things that are good for regional peace, stability and development.

 

…..

 

Bloomberg: A Japanese official has said that it isn’t true that the Japanese government has been approached to join the AUKUS security pact. That denies an earlier report that said the US, the UK and Australia have floated the idea to Japan. Does the ministry have a comment on this?

 

Zhao Lijian: China has taken note of relevant reports. By forming the so-called AUKUS, the three countries are essentially ganging up for bloc politics and provoking military confrontation through military cooperation. It indicates the typical Cold War mentality. Under AUKUS, the three countries engage in highly sensitive military cooperation involving nuclear-powered submarines and hypersonic weapons. This not only heightens nuclear proliferation risks and undermines the international non-proliferation system, but will also aggravate arms race in the Asia-Pacific and harm regional peace and stability. China is gravely concerned with and firmly opposed to it.

 

The US, the UK and Australia should recognize Asia-Pacific countries’ aspiration for peace, development and cooperation, discard the Cold War and zero-sum game mentality, faithfully fulfill their international obligations and do more things for regional peace and development.

 

https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xwfw_665399/s2510_665401/2511_665403/202204/t20220413_10667525.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 1:52 a.m. No.16080036   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0042 >>0058 >>6252

>>16047076

Federal election 2022: Anthony Albanese forced to clarify turnback gaffe

 

JOE KELLY - APRIL 14, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese has been forced to clarify that a Labor government would not dismantle offshore processing if he was elected on May 21 in a second major stumble after just four days of campaigning.

 

With senior Labor figures conceding the first week was already a “write-off” after the Opposition Leader incorrectly guessed the unemployment rate at 5.4 per cent, Mr Albanese on Thursday threw Labor’s border protection policy into doubt and opened up a fresh line of attack for Scott Morrison.

 

Campaigning in the Hunter in NSW, Mr Albanese was quizzed on how he would respond to any attempt by people smugglers to test a new Labor government.

 

“We will turn boats back,” Mr Albanese said. “Turning boats back means that you don’t need offshore detention.”

 

The government also questioned whether Mr Albanese was proposing a fundamental rewriting of Australia’s existing border protection policies on the fly.

 

Informed of the comments from Mr Albanese on 2GB radio, Defence Minister Peter Dutton responded by saying: “I doubt he said that.”

 

“That would be a remarkable departure from the Labor Party policy,” Mr Dutton said. “That would be a weakening of the policy that even Julia Gillard had … Maybe he’s made a mistake in a press conference again.

 

“The wheels are falling off the Anthony Albanese bus,” he said.

 

Mr Albanese was forced to clarify his remarks a short time later, saying he was not suggesting that offshore processing would be removed – only that the success of the boat turn-backs meant there were fewer arrivals.

 

“At the moment, there aren’t people who have gone into offshore detention in recent times because the boats have been turned back. It’s been effective,” Mr Albanese said.

 

At the 2015 ALP national conference, there was a major factional fight over Bill Shorten’s push to embrace boat turn-backs in a bid to neutralise the Coalition attack on border protection.

 

Mr Albanese voted in person for a Left motion to insert a line into the national platform declaring that Labor “rejects turning away boats of people seeking asylum.”

 

The motion was also supported by Tanya Plibersek and Penny Wong through a proxy vote, but was defeated in a key victory for Mr Shorten.

 

Mr Albanese explained his position at the time by saying: “I couldn’t ask someone else to do something that I couldn’t see myself doing.

 

“If people were in a boat including families and children, I myself couldn’t turn that around.”

 

Campaigning in Tasmania on Thursday, the Prime Minister attacked Mr Albanese for initially opposing the Coalition’s tough border policy and argued that Australians did not know what the Opposition Leader stood for.

 

“Anthony Albanese has had every position on border protection,” Mr Morrison said. “He has supported everything he has opposed and he has opposed everything that he has supported.”

 

“We have seen that across so many issues. I am not surprised that Australians are confused about what he stands for.”

 

Mr Morrison also promoted his credentials on border protection as the minister who implemented Operation Sovereign Borders in 2013.

 

“If people want to weigh up and understand these issues of border protection, they can believe someone who came up with it, stood up to the opposition on it — which included Anthony Albanese — implemented it, safely stopped the boats, protected our borders, closed the detention centres and got the children out.”

 

“Or they can listen to Anthony Albanese, who has been a complete weathervane on this issue. Who is this guy?”

 

The clarification from Mr Albanese followed his day one gaffe where he incorrectly guessed the unemployment rate at 5.4 per cent – well above its actual level of 4 per cent – and could not nominate the Reserve Bank’s official cash rate of 0.1 per cent.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/federal-election-2022-anthony-albanese-forced-to-clarify-turnback-gaffe/news-story/7d7aa0dff06decedfefe72ffbe27ac11

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 1:55 a.m. No.16080042   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16080036

Albanese’s second blunder worse than the first

 

SIMON BENSON - APRIL 14, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese has made his second serious political stumble in the space of just four days.

 

Arguably it is worse than his first.

 

Unlike his inability to nominate the unemployment rate or the official cash rate on Monday, Albanese’s failure today to provide a clear position on asylum seeker policy was not the product of a gotcha moment.

 

It was a serious policy blunder that left the Labor leader dangerously exposed in the ideological battleground that contributed heavily to Labor’s 2013 election loss.

 

Albanese’s historical position on asylum seeker boats is well known.

 

The three pillars of the border protection architecture are turning back boats when safe to do so, regional offshore processing for those who can’t be turned back and temporary protection visas.

 

Labor is opposed to TPVs. Today Albanese gave the impression that he didn’t support the current offshore processing arrangements despite the policy being established under the Gillard and Rudd governments.

 

Without the three policies working in tandem, the border protection deterrence model simply doesn’t work. While the humanity of it can be debated, its effectiveness is well established.

 

It’s no wonder that Defence Minister Peter Dutton – the former Home Affairs Minister – was genuinely surprised when told of Albanese’s gaffe while on his regular Ray Hadley radio slot.

 

He didn’t believe that he had said it.

 

But even Albanese’s attempts to mop it up later left the same ambiguity hanging over Labor’s rhetorical support for Operation Sovereign Borders.

 

It was a bad mistake by the Labor leader to make with the Coalition seeking any opportunity it gets to create doubt about Albanese’s national security credentials.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/albaneses-second-stumble-worse-than-the-first/news-story/39c7a0c70bee7fc906c6cbecc06abe26

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 2:05 a.m. No.16080058   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0060 >>0076 >>6276

>>16053203

>>16065880

>>16080036

What Labor needed this week was a sharper, edgier, supremely prepared leader. It got three own goals

 

After week one of the election campaign, Labor and Albanese are hoping for Easter resurrection

 

Michelle Grattan - 15 April 2022

 

1/2

 

A week ago, Anthony Albanese appeared well placed as the election was about to be called. Now he has comprehensively blown the first campaign week.

 

This isn't to say he can't recover. But it does raise big questions about his ability to perform under intense pressure, which has always been a concern for Labor, and about the competency of his campaign team.

 

We heard a lot in recent weeks about the slimmer, fitter, better-dressed Opposition Leader. He was "match fit", they said. All OK, but there's a lot more to being "match fit".

 

What Labor needed this week was a sharper, edgier, supremely prepared leader.

 

Now critics will say, "The media are being too hard — so what if he can't recall a couple of numbers (even if they are the unemployment rate and the cash rate)?"

 

But details matter in the jungle of a campaign, where your opponent can inflict a nasty blow if you slip. And the media help in the process. With the 24-hour news cycle, it is nearly impossible to put a gaffe behind you. It is endlessly replayed.

 

Most importantly, when Albanese is trying to convince people he can match his opponent on economic competence, mistakes on basic numbers are doubly bad.

 

It's made a mark with voters

 

Focus groups are conducted all the time in campaigns by the political parties and media, and Albanese's mistake has registered with participants. Although, it should be added, so did his apology.

 

In research for the University of Canberra and The Conversation this week in the seat of Wentworth, a male insurance worker said: "He's a good guy but I'm not sure he's up for it. It really wasn't a good look yesterday that he couldn't bring all those numbers up."

 

A man working in IT said: "I'm a little concerned that he didn't know just basic economic figures […] He owned up to it pretty quickly which made me like him a little bit more but at first I was alarmed."

 

Wentworth is a contest between a Liberal MP and a high-profile independent, but those involved in other focus group research have a similar story.

 

Albanese's bad head for numbers was not his only problem in these first campaign days.

 

He foolishly exaggerated his economic credentials — which speaks to his desperation to establish them in the public mind.

 

He described himself on Tuesday as having been "an economic policy adviser to the Hawke government", when he actually was a research officer to Tom Uren, at that stage a junior minister.

 

Karen Middleton in her biography, Albanese: Telling it Straight, says he wrote "reports and policy proposals", including notes on the economy for Uren's electors, and a position paper for the Left faction on dividend imputation before the 1985 tax summit.

 

Ragged week continued

 

On Thursday came a third own goal — this time leaving open a gate for the government to charge through.

 

Asked about border policy, Albanese reaffirmed Labor would turn back boats if they appeared. He also said offshore processing wouldn't be needed if boats were turned back.

 

Taken literally, this was a statement of the obvious. But it invited an interpretation that Labor had scrapped its commitment to offshore processing. It hasn't, but the slightest imprecision is dangerous because Labor has always been vulnerable on the issue.

 

Albanese clarified, but it had been another example of failing to take enough care.

 

Through the week, Albanese did try to smarten up his presentation, and make his news conferences tighter. However his preparation remains underdone, and within Labor there's criticism of the narrowness of the group running things and the high degree of centralisation of the campaign.

 

A ragged week hits both a leader's confidence and that of his team. How it shakes out will depend in part on whether the next round of polls show any shine has been taken off Labor's vote.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 2:06 a.m. No.16080060   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16080058

 

2/2

 

The tables turned on Morrison

 

Albanese's problems have made Scott Morrison's first week rather easier than he might have anticipated.

 

But by Thursday the Prime Minister was starting to feel the heat, with the travelling media peppering him over his stubborn resistance to setting up a robust integrity commission (rather than the pallid model he proposed).

 

It's clear Morrison, who demands Labor agrees to his model before introducing legislation, has little intention of trying to forge a deal if re-elected. This will play poorly for him in the "teal" seats where high-profile independents are challenging Liberal incumbents.

 

Morrison was appearing with the member for the Tasmanian seat of Bass, Bridget Archer, who crossed the floor in a bid for a debate on a crossbench bill for an integrity commission.

 

At Thursday's news conference Archer acquitted herself as well as she could in the circumstances. But another Liberal candidate, Morrison's "captain's pick" for the Sydney seat of Warringah, held by independent Zali Steggall, was in a heap of trouble this week and the PM found himself in the middle of it.

 

Katherine Deves had social media posts last year (now deleted) that talked about transgender children being "surgically mutilated and sterilised" and criticised police for participating in "Wear it Purple" day, celebrating diversity.

 

Morrison on Monday praised Deves for "standing up for something really important" — that was, ensuring girls and women playing sport were "playing against people of the same sex". Deves, he said, was "standing up for things that she believes in, and I share her views on those topics".

 

By Wednesday, when more had come out about Deves, and she apologised for her inflammatory posts, Morrison said lamely: "They're not views that I was aware of."

 

To which the obvious question was: Why not?

 

Morrison and his factional ally, minister Alex Hawke, had delayed a batch of preselections until the last moment. Morrison had led the three-person selection committee for a suite of candidates, including the candidate for Warringah.

 

Why hadn't the Liberal party vetted Deves properly? If it had, and was aware of the social media posts, did it think no-one would notice?

 

It will be another mark against Morrison and Hawke when the election post-mortem in NSW examines the preselection fiasco. That post-mortem will be excoriating if Morrison loses, more benign if he wins.

 

Over Easter, the pace of campaigning slackens; the parties don't stop but they try to match the rhythm of the holiday. Somewhat spooked by the early glitches and knowing Albanese needs a run of good weeks ahead, Labor is looking to Easter as a chance to regroup.

 

Many voters, meanwhile, will probably take the opportunity for a brief respite from all this politicking.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-15/election-albanese-morrison-tables-turned/100993738

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 2:20 a.m. No.16080076   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16080058

Labor leader Anthony Albanese forced to clarify whether key health pledge formally costed

 

Stephanie Dalzell - 15 April 2022

 

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese has once again been forced to clarify comments he has made on the election campaign trail, hampering efforts to refocus the Labor campaign over the Easter long weekend.

 

Labor insiders had hoped the four-day weekend would give the opposition the chance to reset its political fortunes after a highly publicised stumble over the unemployment rate during the first week of campaigning.

 

But after Mr Albanese unveiled a policy on Tuesday to fund 50 urgent care clinics if his party was elected, on Wednesday he declared the $135 million plan had been "fully costed" by the independent Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO).

 

Yesterday, Labor's Finance Spokeswoman Katy Gallagher was forced to issue a late-night clarification on social media.

 

"The costing of Labor's Urgent Care Centre policy is based on work done by the PBO, but for the avoidance of any confusion, has not been formally costed by the PBO," she wrote.

 

Speaking after a Good Friday church service in Sydney's south-west, Mr Albanese sought to put an end to the confusion.

 

"The policy is fully costed — it is informed by work that was done by the PBO," he said.

 

Labor sources later argued that while the party itself had costed the policy, it was based on work done by the Parliamentary Budget Office.

 

Health Minister Greg Hunt on Thursday seized on the comments, repeating the Coalition's argument a Labor government would struggle to manage the economy.

 

"This is an embarrassing economic and health backflip for Anthony Albanese and his team," Mr Hunt said.

 

"Anthony Albanese said this project was fully costed yesterday. He's either ill-informed, not across the facts, or have they fudged the figures?

 

"You just can't trust Labor with health, because you can't trust them with economic management."

 

Morrison also under fire for broken election promise and captain's pick

 

Both federal leaders entered Good Friday hoping for a campaign ceasefire, downing the tools to attend church services.

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison is facing criticism over a controversial captain's pick for the once blue-ribbon Sydney seat of Warringah.

 

Katherine Deves has been forced to issue another public apology for offensive transphobic comments.

 

In a now-deleted social media post from January obtained by News Corp and Nine Newspapers, she claimed "half of all males with trans identities are sex offenders" after also comparing her anti-trans comments to the resistance against the Nazis.

 

In a statement, Ms Deves said she apologised for her comments.

 

"In my dedication to fighting for the rights of women and girls, my language has on occasion been unacceptable. It has hurt people and detracted from my arguments," the statement said.

 

Labor started the election campaign ahead in the opinion polls, while Mr Morrison faced accusations of lying and racism.

 

But a week is a long time in politics, and sources on both sides have told the ABC the Coalition's prospects have improved in the first week of the campaign.

 

The leaders are expected to return to the hustings tomorrow, before going head to head on Wednesday in their first debate of the election campaign.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-15/labor-anthony-albanese-election-clarify-health-pledge-costed/100994654

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 2:49 a.m. No.16080093   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0095

>>16065990

>>16068464

Shame on freedom as US and Australia threaten Solomons: Global Times editorial

 

Global Times - Apr 15, 2022

 

1/2

 

The Pacific island country of the Solomon Islands is overwhelmed by the sudden "enthusiasm" of the US and Australia. The Australian Minister for International Development and the Pacific, Zed Seselja, made a "rare" visit to the Solomon Islands on Tuesday. Seselja's visit followed the trip of two of Australia's top intelligence chiefs to the Pacific island country. Meanwhile, the commander of the US Marine Corps and US senators visiting Australia also took turns to warn the Solomon Islands. Kurt Campbell, the US National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, will travel to the Solomon Islands, according to media reports.

 

The real intentions of the US and Australia on the Solomon Islands are well known - to disrupt the draft security cooperation agreement reached between China and the Solomon Islands last month. The riots, which broke out in Honiara, capital of the Solomon Islands in November last year have resulted in severe economic losses. The country has become more aware of the need to strengthen its own policing capacity and actively promote the diversification of foreign security cooperation. As a result, the Solomon Islands decided to expand and deepen its security partnership with many countries and China is one of them.

 

The security agreement between China and the Solomon Islands is a law enforcement and security cooperation between two sovereign and independent countries on the basis of equality, mutual respect and mutual benefit. The pact is in line with international law and international practice. It does not target any third party, nor does it have any military purpose. In this regard, no one has the right to interfere. The US and Australia conspire to urge the Solomon Islands to "consider not signing the agreement" is a gross interference in the Solomon Islands' internal affairs and a huge insult to the integrity of the Pacific island country. The Chairman of the US Foreign Relations Committee and Democratic Senator, Bob Menendez, called on the people's right to choose but he just did not allow the Solomon Islands to choose freely. In their eyes, the Solomon Islands are only free to choose to be a vassal of the US and Australia or be isolated from the world.

 

Menendez even warned the Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands, Manasseh Sogavare, that China could become "owner and minder" of the Pacific nation if it pushes forward the security cooperation agreement with Beijing. To be more precise, the US is the "owner," Australia is the "minder," and the Pacific island countries are the "backyard" that the "owner" authorizes the "minder" to manage. Washington, who claims to be the "owner," has forgotten this Pacific island country, with an area of 28,400 square kilometers and a population of 600,000, for a long time. When the Solomon Islands faced an existential crisis because of climate change and when it was in turmoil due to intense ethnic conflict, both Washington and Canberra turned a blind eye. The US embassy in the Solomon Islands has been closed for 29 years.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 2:49 a.m. No.16080095   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16080093

 

2/2

 

But after the Solomon Islands established diplomatic ties with China and its relationship with Beijing has become increasingly close, especially after the signing of the draft security cooperation agreement, Canberra and Washington suddenly discovered the "strategic significance" of the country and they rushed to send officials to the country. This shows that Canberra and Washington do not care about the survival and security of the Solomon Islands. What they really care about is the geopolitical value of the country which became prominent after they regard China as a "strategic competitor."

 

Under the competition or games with China, the US only sees confrontation and so-called spheres of influence. The US hypes the "China threat theory" by speculating issues as "military bases" to find reasons and excuses for the US to seek hegemony and squeezes or even does not allow China's engagement with the South Pacific. This is the essence of the US "Indo-Pacific strategy." As Washington's "minder," Canberra this time grossly interferes in the security cooperation agreement between China and the Solomon Islands and said it will fund the country over AU$160 million this financial year. Canberra has precisely followed Washington's "carrot and stick" tactic and has learned its arrogance and snobbery.

 

The US and Australia have never understood why they cannot quell the willingness of these countries to develop cooperation with China after they have used so much pressure. The fundamental reason is that China's cooperation with these countries is genuinely based on mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit and is aimed at the well-being of the people of the countries without any political conditions attached. For the US and Australia, who have never looked at these countries from an equal footing, they will never want to understand this reality, but the historical trend will teach them.

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202204/1259397.shtml

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 3:59 a.m. No.16080215   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7888

>>16066080

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

14 April 2022

 

Part two in our Meet MRF-D 22 series highlights the Air Combat Element of our MAGTF. Check out what our aviators and aviation support will do for our team in Australia.

#MRFD

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/345765537585936

 

 

Meet MRF-D 22: the Air Combat Element

 

Capt. Joseph DiPietro - 04.10.2022

 

DARWIN, AUSTRALIA. – The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D) Air Combat Element (ACE) is critical to accomplish Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) missions and tasks. As one of the Major Subordinate Elements of the MAGTF, the ACE offers much more than just aircraft in the skies.

 

Led by Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 268 (VMM-268), and joined by detachments from Marine Air Control Group 38 (MACG), Marine Wing Support Squadron 174 (MWSS), and Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 24 (MALS), the MRF-D 2022 ACE provides mobility, response, and awareness to the MAGTF.

 

“The Red Dragons are excited to join 5th Marines as part of the MRF-D 2022 rotation,” said Lieutenant Colonel Vanessa Clark, the commanding officer for the ACE. “Honored to be working hand in hand with the ADF, the importance of the United States-Australia team cannot be overstated. We look forward to maximizing every bilateral training opportunity with the ADF to strengthen our relationships and further interoperability initiatives.”

 

VMM-268 is a Hawaii-based Osprey squadron that originally activated as HMM-268, a CH-46 unit in 1979. Since activation, VMM-268 supported operations during the Gulf War, the Global War on Terror, Operation IRAQI FREEDOM, and Operation INHERENT RESOLVE, along with other major events and exercises. VMM-268 transitioned to the MV-22 in 2015 and supported MRF-D in 2018.

 

MRF-D 2022’s ACE is capable of long range tactical insert of personnel and cargo, personnel recovery, casualty evacuation, and humanitarian relief. Compared with traditional rotary wing platforms, the MV-22 extends the operational reach of the MAGTF which will be showcased during the exercises of this year’s rotation. With the additional support from MACG, MWSS, and MALS, the ACE can support assault support transport, aviation command and control (C2), tactical datalink communications, short-range air defense, airfield services, and aviation ground support.

 

“The addition of robust C2 capabilities of MACG-38 to this year’s ACE enables MRF-D’s contribution to the combined/joint common operational picture” said Major Geoffrey Melvin, the MACG detachment commander. “Working closely with 5th Marines during STEEL KNIGHT allowed us to demonstrate our versatility and understand the difficulties inherent in supporting combined/joint maritime and airspace coordination.”

 

Darwin and its people have played a vital role in the success of MRF-D, which continues to highlight the importance of the United States-Australia relationship towards maintaining peace, prosperity, and security in the Indo-Pacific region. The ACE looks forward to continuing to foster its relationships within the MAGTF as well as with the ADF and Australian people, highlighting what a modern and agile force can offer across the spectrum of aviation oriented capabilities.

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/418218/meet-mrf-d-22-air-combat-element

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 4:01 a.m. No.16080223   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16066080

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

15 April 2022

 

In part three of Meet MRF-D 22, we recognize the critical warfighting function that is logistics. The LCE provides sustainment, transportation, and countless other areas of support to the MAGTF.

#MRFD

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/346415587520931

 

 

Meet MRF-D 22: the Logistics Combat Element

 

Capt. Joseph DiPietro - 04.10.2022

 

DARWIN, AUSTRALIA. – The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D) logistics combat element (LCE) will sustain the fight for MRF-D 22.

 

Led by Combat Logistics Battalion-5 (CLB), the MRF-D 22 LCE increases readiness and sustainment across the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF), and ensures the force avoids culmination prior to mission accomplishment.

 

“Our goal is to provide responsive and flexible combat service support to the MAGTF, and to enhance logistics operations alongside our ADF counterparts,” said Lieutenant Colonel Shawn Meier, the commanding officer for the LCE.

 

CLB-5 activated in 2006, shortly after the Marine Corps implemented the combat logistics unit structure. Since then, the unit supported combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, supported Special Purpose MAGTF Crisis Response Central Command, and even deployed to Australia as part of MRF-D 20. CLB-5 brings the personnel and equipment to support transportation, maintenance, engineering, resupply, medical care, and heavy equipment to the MAGTF for short and long-term sustainment.

 

“We have a unique and versatile set of capabilities with this rotation, which include an enhanced medical footprint and engineer integration in our formations,” said Major Dan Coultes, the LCE operations officer.

 

The MRF-D 22 LCE will work closely with the ACE to provide logistics support to the MAGTF, but it also brought a new flavor of CLB to Australia. The subordinate hierarchy, centered on the combat logistics companies, includes an integrated engineer leadership structure, which allows for a seamless coordination of efforts. An internal role 2 medical staff and updated vehicles also bolster the logistics capabilities to the MAGTF.

 

“Our Marines and Sailors work their tails off to ensure the rest of the force has what they need to do its job,” said Sergeant Major David Hernandez, the sergeant major for the LCE. “No matter how far or challenging, we will get support to the fight.”

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/418219/meet-mrf-d-22-logistics-combat-element

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 4:19 a.m. No.16080276   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0281

>>16073812

>>16073832

General David H. Berger, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Tweet

 

I was honored to participate in today’s Last Post Ceremony at the Australian War Memorial. We paused for a moment to honor Australians who have given their lives to defend our shared values. Their sacrifice will never be lost or forgotten.

 

https://twitter.com/CMC_MarineCorps/status/1514186838134730756

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 4:21 a.m. No.16080281   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0289

>>16080276

General David H. Berger, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Tweet

 

Our Australian @DeptDefence partners have fought alongside Americans in every major U.S. military action of the last century. Today I sat down with several ADF leaders to discuss how we can work closer to defend our interests in @INDOPACOM and across the globe.

 

https://twitter.com/CMC_MarineCorps/status/1514206455888420870

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 15, 2022, 4:24 a.m. No.16080289   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16066080

>>16080281

General David H. Berger, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps Tweet

 

Marine Rotational Force-Darwin has been a crucial means of strengthening our interoperability with the Australian Defence Force. Now in its 11th year, Marines are still maintaining our close partnership with the ADF at all levels. @MrfDarwin @DeptDefence @USEmbAustralia

 

https://twitter.com/CMC_MarineCorps/status/1514738735661076482

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 2:46 a.m. No.16086207   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Election 2022: Week of blunders rattles Labor leader as momentum shifts

 

SIMON BENSON - APRIL 15, 2022

 

Resurrection, hope and renewal.

 

For Anthony Albanese, the election campaign this Easter has taken on the theme of redemption. For Scott Morrison, there is now hope.

 

Yesterday was meant to mark a religious détente. The Labor leader and the Prime Minister had called a campaign truce. Yet both leaders sought to capitalise on faith.

 

The Prime Minister ended the week with Josh Frydenberg at a synagogue in East Melbourne for a Passover service. Albanese attended a Good Friday service in south-west Sydney at St Charbel’s Maronite Church before visiting an aged care home with his girlfriend Jodie Haydon.

 

But for Albanese it was nothing less than a shocker.

 

And it wasn’t just a one-day nightmare, the horror endured for a full week. At the end of it, the Labor leader looked rattled and defensive.

 

There is now policy confusion and contradictory messaging. The optics are of a Labor campaign team in disarray, with a leader not across his brief and not in control.

 

It was one of the worst starts to a federal election campaign for an opposition leader in living memory – arguably worse than Mark Latham – and one that comprehensively overshadowed the uncomfortable issues Scott Morrison had to face.

 

Given that voters often tend to tune in to the first and last weeks of a campaign, and pay less attention to the fluff in between, the first impressions that many voters will now have of Albanese will be negative ones. Considering the softness of Labor’s support already, this is significant.

 

Albanese’s stumbles will have damaged his personal standing at a time when the record levels of popular support for Labor were already in decline. The question for Albanese is now a deeply personal one and goes to his character. Can he recover from here?

 

The first-day gaffe – failing to nominate two key economic indicators on unemployment and interest rates – was not a failure of the campaign team. It was all on Albanese.

 

The student who neglected his homework, expecting to get marks for just turning up to the exam, Albanese played directly into doubts about Labor’s economic credentials and its claimed ideological transformation.

 

The second blunder, on asylum seekers, was also on Albanese. Having left enough ambiguity in his answers to questions over offshore processing, he played into another vulnerability for Labor. He can argue the toss over what he really meant, but haziness on this issue for Labor is electoral death.

 

Having realised the stuff- up on Monday, the campaign team tried to pivot to health.

 

But again, Albanese botched it after claiming that their policy on GP clinics had been costed by the Parliamentary Budget Office when in fact it hadn’t.

 

Not only had the leader mismanaged the economic argument that Labor posed no risk, he mismanaged the pivot to Labor’s core strength. He left the door open to Morrison to do what he does best.

 

Albanese has enjoyed three years as Opposition Leader having evaded scrutiny of any substance. He has rarely been asked a hard question, and rarely has the answer mattered.

 

Albanese has now learned a valuable lesson that a leader can’t discover until they do it. All the experience as an opposition leader can’t prepare you for a campaign.

 

Albanese’s missteps will have a significant psychological impact. For him, as well as the campaign.

 

It has given Morrison and the Coalition an early advantage but also dramatically altered the dynamics of the campaign machine.

 

The Coalition has shifted from a defensive posture to an offensive one. It is now a contest of confidence for the Labor leader as he battles to recover over the Easter weekend and reset the contest against an opponent who has been through this before and triumphed.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/election-2022-week-of-blunders-rattles-labor-leader-as-momentum-shifts/news-story/64ece83cd1c7582bb8644d5f963818f4

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 2:48 a.m. No.16086213   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Election 2022: Scott Morrison seeks second coming of a miracle and Josh fights climate challengers

 

GREG BROWN - APRIL 15, 2022

 

Scott Morrison and Josh Frydenberg both had plenty to pray about as they walked side by side into a synagogue in East Melbourne for a Passover service.

 

Good Friday and the first day of Passover landed on the same day this year and brought a moment of relative calm to the election campaign for a Prime Minister who is searching for a second miracle win and a Treasurer fighting off a ­credible challenge in his seat of Kooyong from Climate 200-backed independent Monique Ryan.

 

Liberal sources had foreshadowed that Mr Morrison would probably visit Kooyong during the campaign given internal party polling shows Mr Frydenberg’s primary vote has fallen in the past three months from 47 per cent to 44 per cent.

 

The only problem was that Mr Morrison is not an electoral positive in the Liberal heartland seat where there is a growing resentment over the Coalition’s climate change policies.

 

Mr Morrison, who also attended a Good Friday church service in the ultra-marginal electorate of Chisholm, used his Christian faith to relate to the Jewish congregation.

 

“Our faith inspires us and we share it with our children,” he said.

 

“So our children and our communities never forget.

 

“Never, ever forget the incredible price that has been paid for our freedom and our liberty. And the wonderful life we’re allowed to live in this country.”

 

Liberal strategists said Mr Frydenberg was on track to win Kooyong on a thin margin but was reliant on his personal approval ratings to overcome the cashed-up “voices of” candidate.

 

Mr Frydenberg’s primary vote in the 2019 election was 49.4 per cent – five points higher than he is currently polling – with the Greens picking up 21 per cent and independent Oliver Yates at nearly 9 per cent.

 

The Treasurer’s primary vote in 2019 was down from 58 per cent in 2016, with the two-party preferred margin slipping to 6.4 per cent.

 

Before arriving at the synagogue, Mr Morrison dropped into a fundraising drive for Melbourne’s Royal Children’s Hospital, agreeing to pour $2m of federal funding towards the annual Good Friday Appeal.

 

On Friday morning, he attended the Syndal Baptist Church with Chisholm MP Gladys Liu.

 

The seat, held on a margin of 0.5 per cent, is being heavily targeted by Labor as polls show a swing away from the Coalition in Victoria. But Liberal strategists say Ms Liu’s strong local presence gives her a reasonable chance of holding onto the seat for another three years.

 

Mr Morrison was acknowledged during the church service and there was a prayer that Australia’s leaders act with God’s “wisdom, compassion, justice and mercy”.

 

“We pray, Lord, that you will do great things through our leaders,” said church member Fiona Brown.

 

Mr Morrison – who this week refused to commit to legislating a religious discrimination act if he was re-elected – did not invite cameras into the service, in contrast to an Easter Sunday service during the 2019 campaign.

 

But the cameras were there afterwards to see him mingle with parishioners – his first random interactions with voters since the beginning of the Prime Minister’s highly controlled campaign.

 

Mr Morrison said Easter was “above politics” as he refused to take questions about political ­issues.

 

He revealed he would be at his local church in Sydney on Sunday and made sure religious voters were aware that his faith was a central part of his life.

 

“Good Friday and Easter Sunday means everything to me. It’s my faith. It has informed me, encouraged me, guided me, over my entire life. It’s how I was raised in my family, in a church just like this one,” Mr Morrison said.

 

“Easter is about faith. It’s about hope. It’s about being able to look forward to the future with confidence and encouraged by your ­beliefs. It’s a very personal thing for me.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/election-2022-scott-morrison-seeks-second-coming-of-a-miracle-and-josh-fights-climate-challengers/news-story/ee18a8ad5147f614e97c8d90f9f8a70a

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 2:54 a.m. No.16086221   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6222

>>16047076

Easter miracle for a revived Scott Morrison

 

PAUL KELLY - APRIL 16, 2022

 

1/3

 

The election opening has been an unpredictable shock – multiple blunders over policy by the front-runner, Labor leader Anthony ­Albanese, that have resurrected government hopes and raised the crucial question: will Albanese learn and correct, or do his stumbles signal an election reversal?

 

The lesson is that campaigns proper are different. This is where Bill Shorten misjudged in 2019. It is where Albanese has misjudged at the start of the 2022 campaign. The almost irresistible conclusion is that Albanese has failed in a personal and political sense to prepare himself properly for leadership combat on policy issues and the ­inevitable media probing.

 

Labor has time to recover, and the first week cannot define a six-week campaign. Yet the potential flaw in Labor’s campaign is now more ominous: for too long it has invested too much in victory through public rejection of Scott Morrison’s persona. Suddenly, Labor looks more fragile around the questions What does change mean? and Is Albanese up to the job?

 

Albanese’s problem is that his blunders played into the central claim Morrison made against Labor in his opening statement – that this election is a choice between a strong economy and a Labor opposition that would “weaken it and risk it”, between “a government you know” and an ­opposition that still can’t tell you “who they are” and “what they stand for”.

 

The first week was about two ­issues: the economy and Albanese’s vulnerability on the economy, a double plus for the government. Senior ministers were stunned at the opening spectacle. Morrison, never short of self-belief, radiated confidence. But elections don’t necessarily end the way they begin.

 

Albanese’s defenders suggested he was merely subject to a “pop quiz” and that his inability to nominate the unemployment rate of 4 per cent had no significance. Forget those apologies. The issue was neither memory nor numbers. It was policy substance, the mindset of the alternative PM, and the absence of his focus on the most critical issues facing the country.

 

Indeed, there was a pattern to Albanese’s performance this week – his ineptitude and uncertainty over policy – the two standout examples being economic management and border protection.

 

The idea that Kevin Rudd, Bob Hawke or Paul Keating would have been exposed in this manner is inconceivable. And that’s the exact point. Albanese’s effort to recover was sad: presenting himself as an economic adviser to the Hawke government, technically correct but fatuous in any meaningful sense given he had no influence whatsoever except as an opponent of much of the Hawke-Keating reform agenda.

 

The further tempting assessment from the week is that Albanese has been so obsessed about his campaign against Morrison’s character than he failed to appreciate the flaws that might open around his own character, notably whether he is equipped to discharge the job of prime minister.

 

Perhaps it is salutary this question is put on the table at the outset. Certainty, it needs to be addressed and answered by Albanese during the campaign. A successful answer will see Labor retain its polling lead and Albanese affirmed as PM. But if there is a second miracle recovery by Morrison, against the odds, it will date from this week.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 2:55 a.m. No.16086222   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6223

>>16086221

 

2/3

 

The core issue concerns the office of prime minister in the Australian system. The office is an amalgam of chairman and chief executive. The PM must actually know how to run the economy, how to manage national security, how to preserve our sovereignty and how to guarantee core service delivery. Having capable ministers is not enough – a prime minister lacking policy substance and conviction stature is doomed.

 

Given the grave damage to his own persona, Morrison knows his only path to survival is to run a policy contest that exposes Albanese as being out of his depth and too risky as PM. Put bluntly, there is no other path to victory for Morrison. The tactic will be to grind down Albanese and force more mistakes.

 

Labor’s support is wide but not deep. It has not paid sufficient attention to the issue of policy grip around its own leader. Losing weight and getting new glasses is fine but not if you’re clueless about Australia’s unemployment level and the parameters of monetary policy in the race to create jobs and lift wages.

 

There was an insulting dimension to Albanese’s failure at his Monday media conference when he had no idea about either the unemployment rate or the 0.1 per cent Reserve Bank cash rate. These markers go to the economic health of the Australian people – Labor’s core concern.

 

The unemployment rate is mentioned daily – it was nominated by Morrison when he called the election. It was highlighted by Josh Frydenberg in his budget speech, pointing out that unemployment was the equal lowest for 48 years. The entire parliamentary term has been dominated by the global recession from the pandemic when unemployment threatened to reach as high as 15 per cent and welfare queues in 2020 became a brief reminder of the Great Depression.

 

How could a Labor leader’s mind be so decoupled from the unemployment rate? What else has been occupying his attention apart from jobs and more jobs? Labor’s justified attack on the government has focused on weak wages growth, but wages growth – as the Reserve Bank has been saying for ages – is a function of the unemployment rate and tightening in the labour market.

 

If you’re not focused on the unemployment rate then you’re not focused on the prospect for wage rises and increases in living standards. The pivotal economic debate in recent times is about the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (known as the NAIRU) – the unemployment level at which a tight labour ­market drives higher wages, now assumed by Treasury to be 4.25 per cent.

 

These are foundational aspects of the economic debate that should be familiar to any PM or Opposition Leader. Don’t think the cash rate is too obscure. This is tied to the debate about interest rates, about the home mortgage, and about the interest payments households must meet.

 

Albanese pledges to govern in the Hawke mould. That’s good. Obviously, he’s sincere. The issue, however, goes to his core policy beliefs given the magnitude of his ideological transition, unmatched by any other candidate in recent history running for high office.

 

During the 1980s, Albanese was a fierce ideological opponent of the Hawke-Keating government and its senior figures, at one point, saying: “The real dangers in the party are people like (Peter) Walsh, (John) Dawkins and company who appear to have an absolute contempt for working class people. Someone like (Paul) Keating can put himself up as a possible Labor PM but he is more comfortable mixing with millionaires and business executives than he is with working-class people.”

 

“I am who I am,” Albanese said in response to criticism. “I will be getting about being me … I have a plan for the future.” That’s good but the task for Albanese is to provide a convincing exposition of what “being me” involves.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 2:55 a.m. No.16086223   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086222

 

3/3

 

It is extraordinary that three days after his economic blunders Albanese made another blunder when asked how he would respond to efforts by people smugglers to test a Labor government, a likely event.

 

“We will turn boats back,” Albanese said. “Turning boats back means that you don’t need offshore detention.” There was no qualification. It was unambiguous. Albanese knew what he was saying. He had just announced a major change in ALP policy, contrary to the Rudd government stance of 2013, in conflict with the ALP platform and undermining border protection policy.

 

Informed during an interview on 2GB of what Albanese had said, a surprised Defence Minister, Peter Dutton responded: “That would be a remarkable departure from the Labor Party policy … maybe he’s made a mistake in a press conference again.”

 

Albanese was forced to hold a subsequent media event solely to correct what he had said. He confirmed with a one word answer that offshore detention would be kept. Obviously, he detests the notion. He now said it was Labor’s “preference” that it would not be necessary.

 

Albanese’s initial rejection of the policy is understandable. It is cruel, a humanitarian offence and a source of human misery but Australia will not tolerate boat arrivals self-selecting this country.

 

Albanese’s personal opposition to tough border protection has been long-standing. At the 2015 ALP National Conference, Albanese rejected boat turnbacks, saying “I couldn’t see myself” doing this. The question again goes to his conviction – his willingness as a PM to do what is necessary to halt any resurgence of boats, and this week’s remarks merely reopened that issue.

 

The lesson of the first week is that Albanese needs to fight on the economy – that means more Labor policy and better exposition.

 

The reality is the Morrison ­government offers no ambitious economic reform agenda, envisages high levels of government spending and is absent any serious plan to reviving flagging productivity levels. Its economic policy is built on recovery momentum from the pandemic.

 

The omens for Labor are mixed. It showed fiscal courage in announcing it won’t increase the JobSeeker allowance in its first budget, giving priority to budget realities. But big trouble looms with Albanese’s constant pledge to deliver more “secure” work – given the figures show casuals and independent contractors are not increasing and he needs to spell out his plans for the IR system in the cause of the secure work demanded by the unions.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/easter-miracle-for-a-revived-scott-morrison/news-story/2d17b12cb5e98aeb3dc2190fc3b7e284

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:03 a.m. No.16086235   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6236

>>16047076

>>16065880

Albanese was electorate officer, not ministerial adviser, to hard-left MP Tom Uren

 

SHARRI MARKSON - APRIL 16, 2022

 

1/2

 

Anthony Albanese worked as an electorate officer – not a Canberra-based ministerial adviser – during the time his boss, hard-left Labor figure Tom Uren was a minister in the Hawke government.

 

After failing to nominate the cash or unemployment rate this week, Mr Albanese sought to re-establish his economic credentials by claiming he was an “economics adviser” to the legendary, reformist Hawke government.

 

But records obtained by The Weekend Australian, including ministerial directories from the 1980s, Parliamentary Questions on Notice in 1985, Mr Albanese’s biography and accounts from multiple Labor figures working in the Hawke government all indicate Mr Albanese’s job for Uren when he was local government minister was as an electorate officer based in Sydney, not a ministerial ­adviser in Canberra.

 

Parliamentary Questions on Notice, dated May 31, 1985, list Mr Albanese as the most junior member on Mr Uren’s staff as “Electorate Officer 1”.

 

In his biography, Albanese: Telling it Straight, for which the Labor leader co-operated with ­author Karen Middleton, his job title in the year 1987 is referenced as an “electorate officer”.

 

“In what might be described as a substantial case of bad luck, he would find himself in a second ­accident five years later (in 1987) when he was travelling in the back of a Commonwealth hire car in Canberra, where he was then working as an electorate officer to Minister Tom Uren,” it states, ­referring to a car accident Mr ­Albanese was involved in after an earlier one in 1982.

 

While based in Sydney, Mr ­Albanese would travel to Canberra with Uren on occasion. The first time was as a “note-taker”. On this trip, Mr Albanese described himself as “an excited kid”.

 

Born in 1963, Mr Albanese was 22 when he started working for Mr Uren in 1985. At the time, Mr Albanese was considered a Socialist Left militant warrior and he ­engaged in factional Labor Party activities, primarily based in Uren’s electorate office in ­Granville, Sydney.

 

Middleton also wrote about how Uren took on “the young protege with his militant reputation”.

 

In Uren’s autobiography, Straight Left, he said that in the first two years Mr Albanese worked for him – from 1985 to 87, the period when he was a minister – they barely spoke.

 

“Anthony was an activist in Young Labor and was one of the main organisers of the Left in NSW,” Uren wrote.

 

“For the first year or two I never really badgered him. I would have talk (sic) with him occasionally, and just observe him, but I watched him a lot more than he realised.

 

“I was a minister and was fairly busy, whilst he had his own jobs.”

 

A Labor source who was a staff member in the Hawke government told The Weekend Australian that Mr Albanese “was not on Tom Uren’s ministerial staff. He was not an assistant private secretary or private secretary – these were ‘adviser’ positions at the time.

 

“A research officer is an electorate staff appointment,” the source said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:04 a.m. No.16086236   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086235

 

2/2

 

Former Labor leader Mark Latham, now leader of One ­Nation in NSW, said Mr Albanese’s “main activity wasn’t working as a policy adviser in Canberra, it was a young Labor organiser”.

 

“Albanese worked in his (Uren’s) electorate office, he was an electorate staffer,” he said.

 

“Albanese spent most of his time in Sydney organising Young Labor numbers in the inner city.”

 

During the 80s, Mr Latham worked for Gough Whitlam, the Labor Party head office and later for Bob Carr.

 

“I was making speeches on the other side of the debate from Albanese,” he said. “He was the standard bread-and-butter leftie opposing Keating’s reforms at every turn. The stereotypical leftie from central casting.”

 

A senior Labor figure, who declined to speak publicly, recalled Mr Albanese’s work at the time was heavily factional for the Left.

 

“Albo was one of the leaders in their hardline activities on policy and in stacking the branches and use of the union movement to ­attack the government that then became the modus operandi federally,” he said.

 

“Albanese was a very minor figure and worked out of the Granville office for a lot of the time, organising. I always thought he was an electorate officer.”

 

The Labor figure said that at the time Uren “was a very minor figure of no consequence in Canberra and that was reflected in his frustrations and ongoing attacks on the Hawke-Keating governments.”

 

During his time working for Uren, Mr Albanese engaged in factional Labor Party activities and also conducted research for the minister on economic policies.

 

The Labor Left regarded itself equally opposed to the Hawke government’s policies as the conservative opposition parties.

 

Uren was not in cabinet and was one of the strongest opponents to the Hawke-Keating economic reforms of the period. His policy views were regarded as entirely irrelevant and a cause for ­annoyance by the senior figures in the Hawke government, particularly treasurer Paul Keating.

 

Mr Keating was reportedly furious when Hawke ruled that he needed to win support from the full ministry, not just the cabinet, for tax reform in September 1985.

 

“He had to endure opposition from left-wing ministers Tom Uren and Arthur Gietzelt, amid a marathon debate,” author Troy Bramston wrote in the biography Paul Keating: The Big Picture Leader.

 

Mr Keating, Bramston wrote, “was turning away from redistributive economics, class warfare and an ‘us and them’ mentality”.

 

Mr Keating voiced his frustration with the Left faction’s views in an attack at state conference.

 

“The Balmain Lefties … were all in good restaurants quaffing wine till 3.30 in the afternoon. That’s what aways galled me,” Mr Keating said in his speech.

 

Mr Albanese did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/albanese-was-electorate-officer-not-ministerial-adviser-to-hardleft-mp-tom-uren/news-story/86301b36c8f982d665b6baeacfdf5efd

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:10 a.m. No.16086252   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16080036

Labor demand briefing as Home Affairs Minister says Albo gaffe is ‘diabolical’

 

Federal Labor has accused the government of “politicising intelligence information” after the Home Affairs Minister said Anthony Albanese’s bungle about border policy would be picked up by people smugglers.

 

Matthew Killoran - April 16, 2022

 

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese’s bungle on his own party’s border policy this week will be picked up by people smugglers in their marketing of their illegal trade, Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews warned.

 

The Home Affairs Minister, who oversees Operation Sovereign Borders, said there had been “increased chatter” from the people smugglers as the election approached even prior to the fumble.

 

But Labor’s Home Affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally accused the government of “politicising intelligence information” during an election campaign and said the Opposition would seek a briefing “as a matter of urgency”.

 

Mr Albanese this week said he would turn back asylum seeker boats but would not need offshore detention because the policy had been successful, before later being forced to clarify Labor still supported offshore detention.

 

Ms Andrews said the Opposition leader was “flip flopping” on policy and it would impact Australia’s border security.

 

“Those comments without a doubt would have been picked up overseas almost immediately,” she said.

 

“They will be able to use that to try and restart ventures here to Australia. It is really diabolical.

 

“We know when the election was announced there was an increase in chatter from the people smugglers. We know this for a fact.”

 

Ms Andrews said there had not been an influx of refugees from Afghanistan in the wake of the US’s withdrawal from the country, but there were still refugee cohorts in Indonesia.

 

“We monitor that situation very closely. We know there are a number of Afghans currently in Indonesia,” she said.

 

Senator Keneally said it was concerning that intelligence information appeared to be being politicised.

 

“If Karen Andrews does indeed have intelligence that suggests that there is a surge in people smuggling ventures to Australia on the Morrison Government’s watch, then she should immediately arrange for a briefing during this caretaker period to allow the alternative government to be properly briefed by intelligence agencies,” she said.

 

“This is classic behaviour from a desperate government.”

 

She said there was no difference between Liberal and Labor policies on Operation Sovereign Borders and both included offshore processing, regional resettlement, and boat turn-backs.

 

“Let’s be clear – if you attempt to come to Australia by boat, you will not make it,” Senator Keneally said.

 

“Mr Morrison should focus on the national interest, rather than trying to manufacture differences with the Opposition before an election.”

 

https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/national/federal-election/labor-demand-briefing-as-home-affairs-minister-says-albo-gaffe-is-diabolical/news-story/9c7639d69c0b3b9d237c53a5757068d4

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:21 a.m. No.16086276   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6278

>>16047076

>>16080058

Labor insiders say they weren’t surprised by Anthony Albanese’s shocking week on the election campaign trail

 

In extraordinary bloodletting, Labor insiders have revealed morale within the Labor Party has “fallen apart”.

 

James Campbell - April 16, 2022

 

1/2

 

Exclusive: Anthony Albanese is “infamous” for not properly reading his policy briefings, surrounds himself with too many inexperienced advisers and has been exposed as a political “chameleon” on the campaign trail, Labor insiders and some of his MPs claim.

 

In extraordinary bloodletting six days into a campaign he remains favourite to win, the Labor leader’s critics within his caucus are already privately gunning for him and have revealed morale within the party has “fallen apart” after a week which one MP labelled a “s**tshow”.

 

NewsCorp has spoken to a number of Labor frontbenchers, multiple backbenchers, staffers and operatives employed on Labor’s campaign who, speaking on the condition of anonymity, revealed they weren’t surprised by Mr Albanese’s shocking performance because of his failure to do basic preparation.

 

Those exasperated with Mr Albanese include some supporters as well as factional enemies.

 

But the Opposition Leader’s close confidantes within the party reject the charge, insisting the fundamentals of the campaign were sound and his most significant gaffe – not knowing the national unemployment rate or the Reserve Bank’s cash rate – wouldn’t matter on polling day because voters are already moving on.

 

“The so-called wiser heads are saying everyone will have forgotten this,” said one veteran campaign staffer who is working on Labor’s bid for power.

 

“I think they think it’s good it happened early in the campaign and we can get back on track.”

 

“The problem is it’s not just he had a bad day – he doesn’t read the briefings. It’s infamous. He just thinks he can blag his way through things,” he said.

 

One senior MP said the warning signs of trouble for Mr Albanese were there on Sunday, when the election was called.

 

“That’s the one day you can be sure the TV news is going to run your quotes, so you need a sharp grab that frames the contest the way you want it to be seen,” the MP said.

 

“Instead he went out there and just rambled. How could they not have prepared that speech?”

 

Mr Albanese’s first week included three other major controversies including his $135m plan for bulk billing GP clinics, which the Australian Medical Association slammed as being “barely coherent policy” and a blunder when the ALP leader appeared to suggest he would close down offshore detention centres, and a backflip on his plan hold a review into how much people on JobSeeker should receive.

 

A Labor MP said the dole backflip move had gone down “really badly” with the party’s core supporters.

 

“There’s Labor Party supporters and volunteers who are taking down posters: they’re saying they’re not going to campaign for us; they’re saying you don’t stand for anything,” he said.

 

“It was a shemozzle. The whole thing was completely unnecessary. People are really angry: ‘What? You can’t even review it?’

 

The MP, who was hoping for a campaign reset over Easter, described the first week as “a shtshow. The whole thing was concentrated on Albo and he f*ked up. Morale has just completely fallen apart. He’s just going to have to lift his game.”

 

Other insiders complained that after Monday’s horror show press conference where Mr Albanese failed to name the RBA cash rate and the unemployment numbers, the leadership had failed to provide talking points for Labor MPs to deal with the issue.

 

Party insiders were also stunned by the failure to get the AMA on-board with the GP clinic policy.

 

“There was a level of shock about the AMA – that was news to us,” one campaign insider said.

 

Asked how this could happen, a senior MP was blunt: “Very easily when you put (Labor’s health spokesman) Mark Butler in charge of the policy.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:23 a.m. No.16086278   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086276

 

2/2

 

But the AMA wasn’t the only stakeholder not managed properly, with Labor’s sudden backflip over the use of migrant nurses to fulfil its aged care workforce pledge catching shadow cabinet members off-side.

 

The move left Labor’s aged cared spokeswoman Clare O’Neil red-faced as she had been telling stakeholders migration wasn’t a part of the plan.

 

That wasn’t the only backflip in a panic-driven first week.

 

Labor’s promise to spend an extra $14 billion on state schools over the next decade also went out the window.

 

That one didn’t get the publicity it would normally have because it came the same day as the JobSeeker backflip, which one Labor MP bluntly described as “dumping on the unemployed.”

 

“He used to say he wants to fight Tories now he wants to fight for Tories,” the MP said.

 

A number of Labor MPs said campaign’s problems stemmed from Mr Albanese relying too much on “an inner circle which means they don’t need to listen to anyone.”

 

“He’s surrounded by young advisers,” one complained, “why is that? He chooses them; they’re not imposed on him.”

 

The MP said part of the problem of the past week was Mr Albanese’s lack of definition in the public’s mind.

 

“He’s been there 26 years, why is he having to introduce himself?” the MP asked.”

 

“This is all to be expected because he’s run this chameleon approach to politics.”

 

The view that Monday’s brain fade is disastrous was rejected by a senior Labor official who described it as a bigger deal for insiders than it was for the punters.

 

“By the end of the week people were saying they were sick of it. They’d had enough, move on,” he said.

 

A senior Albanese supporter in caucus, agrees: “It’s not an issue out there, I’m really certain of that.

 

“I don’t think it’s a big deal. It’s a big deal to get our positions right on the big issues over the past few years, but this isn’t a big deal.”

 

One shadow minister said they were happy this was happening now and not on polling day.

 

“I’m just banking on spending four days off as a circuit breaker and working out what we need to do to win,” the frontbencher said.

 

“This is something that can actually be fixed. They will make mistakes. People’s contempt for Morrison is so great and it’s real.

 

“In 2019 no one stopped and did a course correct. This is completely rescueable.”

 

A senior campaign insider said the people around Mr Albanese appear to have been blindsided by the pace of the campaign: “the pressure of the campaign and the scrutiny is not comparable to parliamentary business. When you’re in a campaign everything gets exposed. Things you can get away with day to day you can’t get away in a campaign.”

 

The insider described the week as “a near-death experience” akin to a middle-aged man who has survived a heart attack: “Does he stop smoking and start doing some exercise or does he just carry on?

 

“We’re not that naive. People understand the need to get our sh*t together. How prepared are people to hear things they don’t want to hear? We’ll know that in the next few days.”

 

One veteran Labor MP said the idea of a reset was reminiscent of an earlier Labor campaign that went wrong: “It’s a bit like the Real Julia isn’t it?

 

Another laughed at the idea there will be a reset inside the campaign and things will change: “In practicalities it means crossing your toes and crossing your fingers and waiting for Morrison to do what he does best which is f*ckup.”

 

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/federal-election/labor-insiders-say-they-werent-surprised-by-anthony-albaneses-shocking-week-on-the-election-campaign-trail/news-story/0359550e859134d22e778d9e713a81ee

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:31 a.m. No.16086291   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

>>16058982

Labor MP Bowen tests positive to COVID

 

Tara Cosoleto - April 16, 2022

 

Labor frontbencher Chris Bowen has been sidelined from the federal election campaign trail after testing positive to COVID-19.

 

Mr Bowen confirmed the news via social media, saying he would spend the next seven days in isolation.

 

"I was looking forward to a few days campaigning in regional Queensland and Brisbane but it isn't to be," he tweeted on Saturday.

 

"Can't wait to get back on the trail with our magnificent candidates and make an Albanese government a reality."

 

It comes after Labor's home affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally and Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews contracted the virus earlier this week.

 

More than 41,000 new infections were reported on Saturday along with a further 35 deaths, although seven of these were historical fatalities announced by authorities in Western Australia.

 

This follows almost 47,000 cases and 34 deaths reported nationally on Friday.

 

Net hospital admissions were up two dozen patients across the country on Saturday with seven more patients in intensive care.

 

Meanwhile, Health Victoria is monitoring the new BA.4 or BA.5 Omicron variant after samples were confirmed in a catchment at Tullamarine, north of Melbourne.

 

The sub-variant has been recently detected in a small number of cases in South Africa, Botswana, Belgium, Denmark, the United Kingdom and Germany.

 

The World Health Organisation says there are currently no known significant epidemiological differences between the new Omicron strain and the more dominant BA.2 strain.

 

"There is no cause for alarm with the emergence of the new sub-variants," WHO regional director for Africa Dr Matshidiso Moeti said this week in a statement.

 

"We are not yet observing a major spike in cases, hospitalisations or deaths."

 

LATEST 24-HOUR COVID-19 DATA FROM ACROSS AUSTRALIA:

 

NSW: 13,601 cases, 18 deaths, 1491 in hospital, 72 in ICU

 

Victoria: 9559 cases, eight deaths, 403 in hospital, 21 in ICU

 

Northern Territory: 391 cases, no deaths, 28 in hospital, none in ICU

 

Tasmania: 1334 cases, no deaths, 48 in hospital, one in ICU

 

Queensland: 5878 cases, one death, 538 in hospital, 22 in ICU

 

South Australia: 3749 cases, one death, 223 in hospital, eight in ICU

 

Western Australia: 6314 cases, seven historical deaths, 205 in hospital, eight in ICU

 

ACT: 856 cases, no deaths, 60 in hospital, two in ICU

 

https://www.perthnow.com.au/news/coronavirus/new-covid-sub-variant-reaches-australia-c-6464233

 

https://twitter.com/Bowenchris/status/1515169894945669121

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:49 a.m. No.16086334   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6338 >>6388 >>2295

>>16047076

>>16053201

Scott Morrison visits Easter Show, chaotic scenes ensue

 

After a week of tightly controlled events, the Prime Minister ventured into the crowds of the Easter Show today. Chaos ensued.

 

Sam Clench - April 16, 2022

 

1/2

 

After a week of tightly controlled events, Prime Minister Scott Morrison finally indulged in a little chaos on Saturday afternoon as he and his family visited the Easter Show in Sydney.

 

Mr Morrison, his wife Jenny and their children spent about 40 minutes walking through the show’s agriculture pavilions, meeting animals and humans of varying cuteness. And they were constantly swamped by hundreds of interested onlookers.

 

As we wrote earlier today, the Morrison campaign had thus far been characterised by low-risk events – visits to manufacturing businesses, meetings with youth sport teams and the like – so the mayhem at Homebush stood out. For the first time since calling the election, Mr Morrison was exposing himself to potentially hostile voters.

 

On top of that, huge crowds in tight spaces are naturally a recipe for unpredictable moments, so the Prime Minister’s security detail was noticeably beefed up.

 

They need not have worried though, as the reaction to Mr Morrison’s presence was largely apolitical. There were no confrontations with angry voters. A couple of people shouted out messages of support – “Go ScoMo!” as the group passed. Otherwise, most passers-by were just excited to be in the presence of a famous person, and focused on trying to get close enough to take a photo of the Prime Minister.

 

This is a story best told through photos, so I’m going to shut up in a moment, but first, here is a selection of things we overheard amid the bedlam.

 

“Is it ScoMo? F*ckin’ hell, it is.”

 

“Look, I just want to take a photo, is that all right? Jesus.”

 

“Is it him? Really? Is it ScoMo, really? From the TV?”

 

“I can’t see. I can’t seeeeeee!”

 

“Oh. I don’t like him.”

 

“Watch its legs. Watch its legs!” (while trying to guide an alpaca through the crowd).

 

“It’s the paparazzi!”

 

“Yeahhhh, Scoeyyyyyyyyyyy!”

 

“Go Sharkies!”

 

“You want one?” (offering the PM a beer as he walked past. He politely declined).

 

The Morrisons were metres from their car, and though they had made it through the event completely unscathed, when one last sound of “ScoMo! ScoMo! Scott! Scott!” rang out.

 

After a brief moment of anxiety, the source of the sound came into view: it turned out to be the son of the Mayor of Cobargo, who wanted to give the Prime Minister a hat.

 

And with one last sigh of relief, the Prime Minister and his family hopped into their vehicle and drove away.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 3:51 a.m. No.16086338   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086334

 

2/2

 

Earlier on Saturday, Mr Morrison defied calls from within his own party to disendorse the Liberal candidate for Warringah, Katherine Deves, over her anti-transgender views.

 

Speaking to reporters at the airport in Melbourne, Mr Morrison was confronted with comments by NSW Treasurer Matt Kean, a prominent member of his party.

 

“This is not an intolerant society,” Mr Kean told news.com.au.

 

“These kinds of horrendous views are not okay, and I’m sure the voters of Warringah agree. Time for the Liberal Party to beat them to it and disendorse her.

 

“There is no place in a mainstream political party for bigotry.”

 

A number of Ms Deves’ past social media posts, since deleted, have emerged in recent days. In one post, she described transgender children as “surgically mutilated”. In another, she claimed “half of all males with trans identities are sex offenders”.

 

“Does she have to go?” a reporter asked Mr Morrison today.

 

He replied that it was “important for there to be fundamental respect for human dignity of each and every human being” in political debates.

 

“And I think as we look at these issues and the debates, which can be sensitive debates, they can be controversial debates. It‘s always important to show respect for the person sitting across the table from you.

 

“And so I think the comments that Katherine has made, obviously, were insensitive. And she‘s admitted that.”

 

He proceeded to accuse Labor candidates of saying “insensitive” things as well.

 

“What Katherine has been saying is there’s been ways that she’s prosecuted her case on what she’s very passionate about – this is a woman standing up for women and girls in sport. That’s her primary issue that she’s raised,” the Prime Minister said.

 

Ms Deves wants to ban trans women from competing in women’s sport, a stance Mr Morrison supports.

 

“There are ways that she’s expressed this in the past that she no longer feels comfortable with. And it’s important that she understands that and learns those lessons. Which she has.”

 

Mr Morrison said he did not agree with Mr Kean and would not join the “pile-on” on Ms Deves, echoing remarks by former prime minister Tony Abbott.

 

In a follow-up question, Mr Morrison was asked whether his reluctance to ditch Ms Deves was rooted in the fact she was one of his “captain’s picks”.

 

“I think I‘ve explained my position very clearly. My position is that there are things that Katherine has said in the past – just like the Labor member for Hunter has said some pretty unfortunate and disrespectful things in the past. I haven’t called for him to be disendorsed. I haven’t called for that with others who have said insensitive things,” he said.

 

“(Katherine is) a strong woman standing up for things that she‘s believes in about women and girls in sport, which I know is a very sensitive issue in so many communities, but it has to be done respectfully, out of respect for the human dignity of every individual and I’m sure there are lessons that she has learned.”

 

https://www.news.com.au/national/federal-election/scott-morrison-visits-easter-show-chaotic-scenes-ensue/news-story/e5c44511973af6b20f5c2f4c8860a1c1

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:11 a.m. No.16086388   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086334

Morrison campaigns at Royal Easter Show

 

Sky News Australia

 

Apr 16, 2022

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has taken his campaign to the Royal Easter Show in Sydney.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fd1-xDbrPjs

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:32 a.m. No.16086439   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Australia PM vows to seek anti-corruption watchdog

 

Samuel McKeith - APRIL 16, 2022

 

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Saturday he would seek to establish an anti-corruption watchdog if re-elected next month, hitting out at the opposition Labor’s plan.

 

Ahead of the May 21 general election, Morrison has come under pressure from Labor to set up a federal integrity commission, which he first promised in 2018.

 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese said Morrison has failed to establish a commission because of integrity problems in his conservative coalition.

 

“The reason why Scott Morrison doesn’t have a national anti-corruption commission is sitting on his front bench,” Albanese said, campaigning in far north Queensland.

 

In the campaign’s first week, Morrison has been accused of abandoning his promise to establish an anti-corruption agency, and failing to commit to set one up if he wins another term in parliament.

 

Labor claims an anti-corruption watchdog, similar to the Independent Commission Against Corruption in New South Wales, is needed nationally to restore faith in Australia’s political system by probing misuse of federal funds in grants programs.

 

In a campaign that has focussed on wages and inflation, polls this week showed Albanese’s centre-left Labor ahead of Morrison’s conservative Liberal-National Party coalition, even as they showed the prime minister extending his lead as the country’s preferred leader.

 

Speaking in Melbourne, Morrison said that if re-elected he would “seek to implement” a watchdog but he would not be drawn on timing or whether it would be a priority.

 

He said the government’s had a “very serious policy” of over 300 pages, while labelling Labor’s proposal a “two-page fluff sheet”.

 

Albanese said a Labor government would have an anti-corruption body “with teeth” in place by the end of the year. It would be independent of government and be able to hold public hearings, he said.

 

“It is one that will be real as opposed to their model that has been rejected by everyone,” he told reporters in Cairns.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-australia-election/australia-pm-vows-to-seek-anti-corruption-watchdog-idUSKCN2M801W

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:38 a.m. No.16086464   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6465

>>16047076

Could Australia’s answer to Corbyn become PM?

 

This election is Anthony Albanese’s to lose

 

Terry Barnes - 16 April 2022

 

1/2

 

While the main electoral attraction of the moment is the French presidential showdown between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen, it is not the only significant election underway in the western world.

 

On 21 May, Australia goes to the polls. The contest is between the nominally centre-right coalition of the Liberal and National parties led by prime minister Scott Morrison, and the Australian Labor party led by a long-term, socialist left-wing MP, Anthony Albanese.

 

On the face of it, Morrison should be re-elected on his record. In his three-year term, he has seen Australia through natural disasters, including the massive bushfires affecting the south-east of the country in 2019 and early 2020, and just now floods inundating large parts of New South Wales and Queensland. More particularly, Morrison presided over a national Covid response which – although it turned Australia into a hermit kingdom for the best part of two years – kept Covid infections exceptionally low compared to the UK and Europe. In his campaign pitch, Morrison points out that, if Australia had comparable Covid rates to its northern hemisphere counterparts, 40,000 more Australians would have died, as opposed to 6,500.

 

Furthermore, the Australian economy is surging. Australia went into a Covid recession for just one quarter, GDP has surged past 2019 levels, and unemployment is just 4 per cent, the lowest it’s been in half a century. Internationally, Morrison hasn’t been afraid to stand up to China’s geopolitical bullying, and lately has been a staunch friend of Ukraine.

 

In achieving these results, however, Morrison made serious mistakes.

 

He took his family on holiday to Hawaii when the 2019 bushfire crisis was at its hottest. ‘I don’t hold a hose mate,’ he told a bushfire-affected community. He managed a series of sex and bullying scandals affecting his government and the Australian parliament clumsily, notoriously citing his wife’s advice ‘as a woman.’

 

When Covid hit, the national constitution left the real power to deal with pandemics with lockdown-happy state premiers, who overreached with heavy-handed public health measures. They suppressed personal freedoms in a way that made Boris Johnson’s now-infamous lockdown rules look tame. Morrison, however, struggled to use the ‘bully pulpit’ of the prime ministership to impose truly national leadership and curb the states’ excesses. And what was directly in his power – such as approving, obtaining and distributing vaccines – was handled less than well. Politically, Morrison allowed himself to become the convenient scapegoat for everything that went wrong with Covid, even for things beyond his direct control.

 

Morrison’s Liberal-National government has also been in office for three terms (with three prime ministers), sideshows like the Novak Djokovic visa fiasco have caused international embarrassment, and Morrison’s Liberal party is at factional war with itself. Morrison himself is reviled by the left, and his mostly transactional politics have alienated many of his conservative base and driven them to splinter parties. Concerningly for his electoral prospects, the massive support for jobs and families his government funded in 2020 when the private sector economy was all but shut down has brought Morrison little electoral reward.

 

Thus, in the first week of the election campaign, all public opinion polls have Morrison’s governing centre-right coalition significantly behind Albanese’s Labor. This election is Albanese’s to lose.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:39 a.m. No.16086465   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086464

 

2/2

 

How to describe Albanese? He is a 25-year MP from the hard-left faction on the Labor party. In his youth, he was a special adviser to his mentor Tom Uren, a similarly far left-wing minister in the Bob Hawke and Paul Keating Labor governments, who used his ministerial office to undermine the soft-edged, but realist, economic Thatcherism of his own governments. A senior minister in the tumultuous revolving premierships of Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard, Albanese owed his allegiance to whichever of these bitter enemies was prime minister at the time, as long as they continued to lavish billions of other people’s money on grand infrastructure projects.

 

And Albanese, having finally become Labor leader on his second attempt, cast around for role models and settled on Jeremy Corbyn.

 

Indeed, Albanese and Corbyn became friends, and in 2019 Albanese didn’t hesitate to tweet a selfie with the then Labour leader, two brothers in socialist arms.

 

As leader, and going into this election, Albanese has sought to remake himself as a safe, centrist, social democrat. Having undermined and reviled reforms that have underpinned Australia’s economic prosperity and resilience for the last three decades, he now hails Hawke, Keating, and the Liberal reformist prime minister John Howard, as heroes. He has sharpened his image and found a good tailor, lost weight and sought to look the prime ministerial part. But he hasn’t disowned his radical socialist past.

 

Despite his first campaign week from hell, where a series of own goals – ranging from not knowing fundamental economic figures to overegging his CV, and with no coherent policy besides spending much more on health and social services – Albanese remains, for now, favourite to win in May. Many Australians are tired of constant crisis and either, often unfairly, blame Morrison for this, or, as with Churchill and Attlee in 1945, simply want a fresh leader and programme for a post-Covid world.

 

Thanks to Albanese’s self-inflicted major cock-ups this week, Morrison may yet pull off a second electoral miracle for his party. But it’s clear many Australians either aren’t put off by Albanese’s hard left roots and personal values, or simply don’t care. And an antipodean Corbynite’s election victory could only give heart to Corbyn’s ostracised Labour followers in Britain.

 

Terry Barnes is a Melbourne-based contributor for The Spectator and The Spectator Australia.

 

https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/could-australia-s-answer-to-corbyn-become-pm-

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:47 a.m. No.16086498   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6504

>>16053237

Marathon Ben Roberts-Smith trial reaches crucial watershed

 

Deborah Snow - April 16, 2022

 

1/3

 

There have been few civil courtroom contests in Australia to match the sheer scale and drama of the Ben Roberts-Smith defamation case as it has unfolded over the last three months.

 

Gripping headlines have sprung from allegations of skulduggery on and off the battlefield, raw emotion has spilt into the courtroom as the one-time war hero’s most intimate personal relationships have been pulled apart, there have been guest appearances (on opposing sides) by Assistant Defence Minister Andrew Hastie and former defence minister Dr Brendan Nelson, and rare insights into the minds and methods of SAS elite soldiers.

 

Add to that the proxy contest between two of the country’s largest media conglomerates – Seven West Media, whose chair, Kerry Stokes, is bankrolling Roberts-Smith’s lawsuit, and Nine, the owners of this masthead – and the label “marathon” doesn’t begin to do the saga justice.

 

The trial began in the middle of last year after two-and-a-half years of preliminary procedural skirmishing. But it was forced into temporary suspension as the pandemic raged. When hearings resumed at the start of February this year, there were confident predictions it would all be wrapped up within 10 weeks.

 

Instead, 11 weeks on, Nine has only just called the last of its witnesses while Roberts-Smith’s military allies will not begin testifying until Tuesday.

 

This week, then, marks an important watershed. Despite the wave of negative headlines for the Victoria Cross recipient (who instigated the action), it’s still too early to predict who will emerge the ultimate victor. But many of Nine’s witnesses have exceeded the expectations of its legal team.

 

The company’s mastheads, the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, are defending their stories on the grounds of truth, meaning there’s little room for shades of grey in the competing narratives.

 

Nine’s barrister, Nicholas Owens, SC, acknowledged as much when he advised presiding judge Anthony Besanko at the outset that: “Your honour will be asked to choose between two diametrically opposed stories incapable of being reconciled to one another.”

 

A unique feature of the case is its hybrid nature – what the president of the Australian Bar Association, Matt Collins, QC, calls a war crimes trial “masquerading as a defamation action”.

 

The gravest allegations the media outlets have levelled against Roberts-Smith are the six unlawful killings of prisoners which they say he committed or was complicit in over the course of several missions to Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012.

 

Nine has also alleged that the Victoria Cross recipient brutalised prisoners, bullied two junior soldiers, endeavoured to intimidate several other SAS troopers to get them to change or drop their evidence to the Brereton inquiry (which was conducting its own probe inside government into war crimes allegations) and that he sought to conceal evidence by burying USB sticks with classified photos on them in his backyard and setting fire to his laptop.

 

He has also been accused of striking his former lover, Person 17, after she fell drunkenly down a set of stairs at a Parliament House dinner. His estranged wife, Emma Roberts, swore he’d threatened her with the loss of their children if she didn’t back up his alleged lie that he was separated at the time of the affair.

 

Roberts-Smith has denied all wrongdoing. He says the stories have ruined his life and reputation. He insists the only people he ever killed in Afghanistan were lawfully slain during combat. His senior barristers, Arthur Moses, SC, and Bruce McClintock, SC, say the media outlets have been drip-fed rumours and gossip by bitter former comrades, jealous because of Roberts-Smith’s high profile, his Victoria Cross and other military awards. There has been evidence from some soldiers of “pro” and “anti” Roberts-Smith camps inside the regiment.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:48 a.m. No.16086504   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6506

>>16086498

 

2/3

 

Nine was never going to be completely sure of the strength of its case until the 19 current and former SAS troopers it had summoned delivered their testimony.

 

A number of these soldiers were not happy about being required to give evidence. They testified under certificates of immunity granted by presiding judge Anthony Besanko to protect them from self-incrimination.

 

But they have stood remarkably firm in the face of days of gruelling cross-examination by Moses (one later complained to a fellow witness that Roberts-Smith’s barrister had come at him “like a rabid dog”, the court heard). And it is striking that some of the most damning evidence has come from those who were most open about their discomfort at being in the courtroom.

 

Such a man was Person 24, who gave evidence in mid-March. Person 24 choked up as he described how difficult he was finding it to have to give evidence against “that man in the corner”, as he described Roberts-Smith, who habitually sits in the same seat next to the window at the back of the court.

 

Person 24 went on to give a graphic description, under oath, of seeing Roberts-Smith carry out what he called an “exhibition execution” by machine-gunning an Afghan man in the back outside a village compound designated Whiskey 108 in April 2009.

 

Another trooper, Person 41, had rated Roberts-Smith a “good and brave soldier” yet gave remarkably similar evidence, describing how he’d also witnessed Roberts-Smith shoot the man in the back outside Whiskey 108.

 

This prisoner, Nine says, was one of two men found inside a hidden tunnel in the compound, who had been handcuffed and rendered harmless before Roberts-Smith ordered the killing of one, and killed the other himself.

 

Roberts-Smith told the court last year that there were no men in the tunnel. Five SAS witnesses have contradicted him on this point, saying they either saw the prisoners in or near the tunnel when the compound was first searched, or heard discussions about it on the troop radio network. The weight of evidence on this point will be hard for the other side to overcome.

 

Trooper Person 4 told the court he’d once loved Roberts-Smith like a brother. Yet Person 4 said he’d seen Roberts-Smith kick a villager off a cliff in the village of Darwan, Afghanistan, in October 2012, and shortly afterwards observed the man lying dead at the feet of Roberts-Smith and a second soldier, Person 11, after one of them unleashed rounds from an M4 rifle.

 

Person 4’s account closely matches that of three Afghan farmers who gave evidence from Kabul last year, just as the Taliban was closing in on the Afghan capital.

 

Roberts-Smith has entirely different versions of these events, insisting for instance that the slain men at Whiskey 108 were combatants, not prisoners, and that the Afghan killed at Darwan was a Taliban spotter.

 

He will be looking to his own military witnesses to rebut what Nine’s have said. The case could turn on which soldiers Besanko considers to be lying.

 

The certificates of immunity granted by the judge do not offer protection against perjury.

 

There have been wins and setbacks at various points for each side along the way. In a blow to Roberts-Smith, his estranged wife Emma was originally expected to give evidence for him but instead gave evidence for Nine.

 

There was a setback for Nine when the media outlets’ barrister, Owens, fought unsuccessfully to preserve privilege over confidential notes which investigative journalists Chris Masters and Nick McKenzie had taken in their dealings with some of the soldiers. Moses was able to deploy those notes extensively in cross-examination.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 4:50 a.m. No.16086506   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086504

 

3/3

 

Nor did Owens succeed in having two other soldiers – Person 66 and Person 56 – give evidence about alleged battlefield executions. Nine claims Roberts-Smith ordered Person 66 to execute a prisoner at Siah Chow in Afghanistan as part of the practice of “blooding” (that is, achieving a first kill) in October 2012, and that Person 56 was involved with Roberts-Smith in unlawfully killing a prisoner at another location, Fasil, just weeks later.

 

The judge excused both Person 66 and Person 56 from answering questions about these alleged killings on the grounds of self-incrimination.

 

Person 56 told the court this week he’d felt pressured to give evidence on the Darwan cliff-kicking incident because he feared Nine would otherwise press questions about his own alleged involvement in the incident at Fasil.

 

Nine’s legal team acknowledges their witnesses’ accounts of what happened on the battlefield in Afghanistan a decade or more ago don’t always align, but say this is not a weakness, because it shows there is no conspiracy between them.

 

By contrast, they say, there is evidence that Roberts-Smith and four of his soldier witnesses have colluded on some portions of their evidence by repeating the same false detail in what amounts to a “fraud” on the court – a point being fiercely contested by Roberts-Smith.

 

Regardless of where the civil trial ends up, nothing will stop the work of the Commonwealth Office of the Special Investigator (OSI), which is examining whether criminal charges should be laid against any soldier or former soldier over war crimes in Afghanistan.

 

The establishment of the OSI builds on the work of the Brereton inquiry, conducted under the auspices of the Inspector General of the Defence Force, which found there was credible evidence to implicate 25 current or former ADF personnel in unlawful killings. Every day there is at least one Commonwealth representative in the courtroom, keeping an eagle eye on proceedings.

 

Unlike any criminal action, though – which requires a “beyond reasonable doubt” standard of proof – a civil case applies a balance of probability test, though to a more rigorous standard where serious allegations are involved.

 

Many of the troopers feel their own leadership let them down by failing to act early on the warning signs that some soldiers inside the SAS had let a warrior culture run rampant.

 

As Person 31 complained in the courtroom recently, “weak leadership” left grievances and suspicions to fester, “Hence we’re now dealing with this in court.”

 

At the end of the trial, Roberts-Smith will emerge a wronged man, or else be forever branded a hypocrite, a liar, a bully and potentially a war criminal.

 

For the media outlets, the reputation and viability of their public-interest journalism is at stake.

 

Leaving aside damages, the losing side is likely to be saddled with both sides’ costs running into the tens of millions of dollars. And even once Besanko hands down his ruling, there is a strong likelihood that whoever loses will appeal, prolonging the case even further.

 

Hastie, a former SAS captain himself, has acknowledged the pain the court saga is inflicting on those who had served in Afghanistan, the great majority of whom did so honourably and at great peril to themselves.

 

“This is terrible for our country, it’s terrible for the SAS, it’s terrible for the army, it has touched a lot of lives” he told the court last month. “But until we deal with it, we can’t move forward”.

 

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/marathon-ben-roberts-smith-trial-reaches-crucial-watershed-20220413-p5ad86.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:02 a.m. No.16086545   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6549

>>16040849

EXCLUSIVE: 'She is shocked and perturbed by the decision': Child sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell's brother blasts judge's 'loaded' refusal to grant her a retrial after 'deeply tainted' conviction

 

NICK PISA - 16 April 2022

 

1/2

 

Convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell's brother says the family is 'shocked' and 'perturbed' by a judge's decision to reject a retrial request - saying it was 'loaded' against her.

 

The former socialite and close pal of Prince Andrew was found guilty last year but it later emerged jury member Scotty David had failed to disclose he had been sexually abused as a child.

 

Her family and legal team say this swayed the jury to find her guilty of being a recruiter of teenage girls for paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and she now could face 65 years in jail.

 

Defence lawyers had hoped they could secure a retrial for Maxwell, 60, after the juror revelations emerged but last week district judge Alison Nathan dismissed the request.

 

Speaking for the first time about it, Maxwell's brother Ian said: 'To say we were shocked is understated, clearly Ghislaine was also very perturbed by it, if I had to summarise it, the dice were loaded by the court.

 

'The verdict was unsafe by virtue of this juror and the decision is deeply tainted.

 

'This is going to go to appeal. It's just one of many points of appeal pretrial, in trial, post-trial and we are confident that Ghislaine will be successful on appeal.'

 

He also slammed the US judicial system saying that it was always going to be against his sister and said: 'The prosecution held an infamous press conference the day of her arrest, they pointed to a picture of Epstein and my sister, and the implication was that she was guilty which meant it was open season on Ghislaine and it's never let up.

 

'There is no possibility in English system prosecutor hold a press conference and say this woman is guilty before any trial has taken place. Ghislaine was depicted as some evil moll, its grotesque.'

 

'Numerous accusers who were not called in this trial, lawyers have been vociferous and none of it has been put to the test. It's just drip, drip, drip.'

 

Speaking to journalist Jay Beecher of his sister's case, Ian, 66, said: 'It's got sex, it's got death, these guys dying in prison, it's got royalty, it's got money, it's got famous people, young girls, everything you could dream of, all the elements are there.'

 

He also suggested the Me Too social movement against sexual abuse and harassment had also played it's part in Maxwell's guilty verdict last December in a New York court.

 

Ian explained: 'This has also had an enormous impact, all women must be believed, all victims must be believed

 

'But we know in this county, that so called victims turn out not to be victims, Carl Beech (invented claims of widespread establishment sex abuse) would be the finest example of that.

 

'These kinds of things go on and jury verdicts have been overturned time and time again and obviously we hope this is going to happen on this occasion as well.

 

'All this forms a powerful package of appeal points that for me show this trial was not fair, with on top of that the lying juror.'

 

Ian added: 'My sister has been banged up now, it will be two years in July, she is in horrendous incarceration, she is in isolation, she is on suicide watch, she continues to have torches shone in her eyes every 15 minutes to make sure she is still breathing.

 

'She is denied all kinds of rights and opportunities. It's a shocker, she was already frail mentally and physically at the start of the trial and I think this impacted for sure on whether she would give evidence in her own defence knowing what an aggressive affair that would have been.

 

'These kind of conditions in a first world country should not be acceptable, they are not acceptable in our country and they should not be acceptable in America but they appear to be.'

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:03 a.m. No.16086549   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16086545

 

2/2

 

He also questioned why given the amount of accusations she has made, Virginia Giuffre, who claimed she was trafficked by Maxwell and Epstein to have sex with Prince Andrew was not called to testify.

 

Ian said: 'I think they realised she would have had a very difficult time under cross examination and that she could have done more damage than helped the prosecution's cause.

 

'If you have a powerful witness, whom you believe is telling the truth and whose combination of the truth and the way they can tell that truth sincerely, hand on heart, look the jury in the eye and say this happened, you are going to use that person because it's going to be very effective.

 

'The fact they didn't use her tells us all we already know; they couldn't not stand her up under cross examination because of the tremendous multiple inconsistences in her prior accounts on almost every subject for years. That is why I believe they did not run with this particular witness.'

 

When asked how his sister was coping in jail Ian admitted they family was concerned for her welfare.

 

He said: 'We all have to be worried about that because she has now been banged up for two years.

 

'She's had this terrible rollercoaster of arrest, then lost three, four, five bail applications consistently turned down for reasons that are wrong because the court doesn't want to find itself on the wrong side of public opinion.

 

'So, she has really had a dose of it, the way treatment has been dished out in jail has been really shocking but I know that she remains resolute, she is determined to see this through, she believes in her innocence completely of the charges that she faces.

 

'She is getting on with preparing her appeal, the next thing coming is her sentencing and obviously we are not holding our breath that there is not going to be some incredibly savage sentence and I suspect nor is she, but we are absolutely determined that justice will prevail for Ghislaine.

 

'However unpopular it is and however counter to the prevailing narrative this is about the justice system doing what it should do and that the basis of why we have appeal courts and it may have to go the Supreme Court.

 

'Regardless of what this court has decided, on the basis of what it has decided we are confident that on that central point of the appeal, not to mention the other points that Ghislaine will be successful.

 

Maxwell is due to be sentenced in June.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10722119/Ghislaine-Maxwells-brother-Ian-says-perturbed-judges-refusal-grant-retrial.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:09 a.m. No.16086581   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16065928

>>16065951

Solomon govt refutes misinformation on deal with China, condemning those who attempt to undermine its stability

 

Global Times - Apr 15, 2022

 

The Solomon Islands government refuted disinformation on a "leaked security deal" with China, saying that misinformation from anonymous sources continue to distort facts and tarnish the good relations between it and China, making it the latest decalcification from the island state as it faces increasing pressure from Australia and the US.

 

"The request by the Chinese Embassy in Honiara to the Solomon Islands government to allow diplomatic Chinese security personnel to protect the embassy during the November 2021 riots was considered and held in abeyance by the Government," according to a release from the Solomon Islands Government Office of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Government Communication Unit on Wednesday.

 

The government made this clarification in relation to the so-called leaked documents circulating on social media that relayed correspondences between officials of the Chinese Embassy in Honiara and the Solomon Islands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade (MAFET) and the Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Services (MPNSCS).

 

Recently, some Australian media hyped stories about these "leaked documents," which showed that the Chinese Embassy "requested the importation of a number of weapons to help protect its facilities and requested to fly in a 10-man security detail" in the Solomon Islands.

 

On Tuesday, the government of the Solomon Islands warned against fake news and misinterpreted commentaries on social media.

 

The government clarified that it is a receiving State's obligation under Article 22 of the Vienna Convention to protect all sending State's resident diplomats, according to the Solomon Islands government's release on Wednesday.

 

It noted that the government confirmed that China's embassy security personnel have not entered the country, no arms have been shipped apart from a separate consignment of training replica arms stored by RSIPF and China's Police Liaison officers conducting training with Royal Solomon Islands Police Force. Following the hype of the so-called "leaked documents,'' the Solomon Islands has recently been overwhelmed by the sudden "enthusiasm" of the US and Australia. The Australian Minister for International Development and the Pacific, Zed Seselja, made a "rare" visit to the Solomon Islands on Tuesday.

 

Meanwhile, the commander of the US Marine Corps and US senators visiting Australia also took turns to warn the Solomon Islands against cooperation with China. Kurt Campbell, the US National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, will also travel to the Solomon Islands, according to media reports.

 

The target of this flurry of visits, which put unprecedented pressure on the Solomon Islands, is clear-cut - to thwart the security cooperation deal between China and the island nation and drive a wedge between the two countries. But the normal and mutually beneficial cooperation between two independent and sovereign countries won't be easily affected by coercion from Australia and the US, Chen Hong, president of the Chinese Association of Australian Studies and director of the Australian Studies Centre at East China Normal University, told the Global Times.

 

The combined coercion of the former colonial masters, led by the US, may put mounting pressure on the Pacific Island nation, analysts said.

 

"It is regrettable that misinformation from anonymous sources continue to distort facts and tarnish the good relations between Solomon Islands and the People's Republic of China," said a statement from the Solomon government.

 

It also noted that the Solomon Islands government will continue to work hard in protecting all people from violence and fear and condemn those that serve narrow interests and attempt to undermine the country's stability.

 

Analysts criticized that the hype over the so-called leaked memo exposed Canberra's panic. Neither Australia nor the US cares about the interests or sovereignty of the Solomon Islands and their blatant interference of the security deal shows they see the country as within their "spheres of influence."

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202204/1259414.shtml

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:18 a.m. No.16086610   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Australian Department of Defence Tweet

 

#AusArmy HQ's 1st Division welcomes its first @Japan_GSDF liaison officer, Lieutenant Colonel Shotaro Tada. This is the first time there has been an embedded liaison officer role in #YourADF, further developing the already great working relationship between (Australia) & (Japan) ground forces.

 

https://twitter.com/DeptDefence/status/1515072476337819654

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:25 a.m. No.16086624   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16068464

>>16068475

Foreign Minister Marise Payne Tweet

 

Pleased to welcome (United States) friends to Sydney this week & discuss shared interests, including our commitment to an open, inclusive & resilient #IndoPacific. (Australia) & (United States) are united in our response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine & strongly support efforts to investigate Russia’s war crimes.

 

https://twitter.com/MarisePayne/status/1515242021409419264

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:39 a.m. No.16086672   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16066080

Marine Corps F-35Bs will train Down Under with Australian stealth fighters this summer

 

SETH ROBSON, STARS AND STRIPES - APRIL 15, 2022

 

Marine Corps stealth fighters will fly south to train with their Australian counterparts in August and September, according to Marines in Japan and Australia.

 

F-35B Lightning IIs from Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan, will participate in Australia’s biennial Exercise Pitch Black, Marine Aircraft Group 12 spokesman Gunnery Sgt. Vitaliy Rusavskiy said in an email Thursday.

 

Rusavskiy didn’t provide the number of aircraft going to the drills or which unit they’re from, but he said the Marines are excited about training with the Australians.

 

MCAS Iwakuni is home to the first two F-35B units stationed overseas — Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 121 and Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 242.

 

The F-35B is the Marine Corps’ variation of the joint strike fighter and comes with short-takeoff and vertical-landing capabilities that allow it to operate from aircraft carriers and flat-deck amphibious assault ships like the USS America, homeported at Sasebo Naval Base, Japan.

 

Pitch Black involves the Royal Australian Air Force working with regional, coalition and allied nations. It will take place from Aug. 19 to Sept. 8, the Australian Defence Department said in an email Thursday to Stars and Stripes.

 

“Planning for Exercise Pitch Black 2022 is still underway and confirmation of specific capabilities is still being confirmed,” the department said.

 

In 2014, the Australian government agreed to buy 72 conventional takeoff and landing F-35As to replace a fleet of F/A-18A/B Classic Hornet fighters. As of March 1, the Australian Defence Force had accepted 48 F-35As, the department said.

 

Marine Rotational Force – Darwin will be involved in Pitch Black alongside the F-35Bs, Capt. Joseph DiPietro, a spokesman for the force, said by phone Tuesday.

 

A contingent of 2,200 U.S. Marines began arriving in March for a six-month rotation to Australia’s Northern Territory, their 11th deployment to Darwin since 2012.

 

The Marines will train with Australian troops and other friendly forces to respond to a crisis in the region, the service said in a March 14 statement.

 

Ten MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft deployed with the rotational force from Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 268, out of Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, will participate in Pitch Black, DiPietro said.

 

Marines from Air Control Group 38, part of the rotational force, will also take part in Pitch Black, he said.

 

Pitch Black will involve about 20 armed forces from around the world honing aviation capabilities together. The last exercise took place in 2018 due to the coronavirus pandemic, DiPietro said.

 

The Marine rotational force has been doing small unit training and getting ready to work with Australian counterparts so “an Australian servicemember can board an American platform or a U.S. servicemember can utilize an Australian weapons platform,” DiPietro said.

 

https://www.stripes.com/theaters/asia_pacific/2022-04-14/marine-corps-f-35-b-stealth-fighters-australia-exercise-pitch-black-5692889.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 16, 2022, 5:55 a.m. No.16086730   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16066080

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

16 April 2022

 

The fourth and final part of our Meet MRF-D 22 series focuses on our infantry battalion and supporting maneuver elements. Ready to fight any time, anywhere, the GCE provides flexibility and lethality to the MAGTF.

#mrfd

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/346988100797013

 

 

Meet MRF-D 22: the Ground Combat Element

 

Capt. Joseph DiPietro - 04.10.2022

 

DARWIN, AUSTRALIA. – The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D) ground combat element (GCE) comes to Australia prepared for operations in any clime or place.

 

Led by Third Battalion, Seventh Marines (3/7), and joined by units from Third Battalion, Eleventh Marines (3/11) and First Combat Engineer Battalion (CEB), the MRF-D 22 GCE provides the immediate combat power and lethality needed to respond to crises or contingencies.

 

“I am proud of the warfighting skill and teamwork our Marines and Sailors demonstrated working up to this point,” said Lieutenant Colonel Tyler Holt, the Commanding Officer for 3/7 and the GCE. “We look forward to building on our combined combat credibility with our Australian allies and other regional partners.”

 

3/7 activated in 1941 and immediately made an impact in combat. The battalion participated in battles on Guadalcanal, New Britain, Peleliu, and Okinawa during World War II, and continued successful and honorable service in Korea, Vietnam, and the Middle East. With their reinforcements from 3/11 and 1st CEB, the GCE is postured to conduct missions across the full range of military operations.

 

“Our Marines are at their peak performance following Exercise STEEL KNIGHT and our Marine Corps Combat Readiness Evaluation,” said Major John Critz, the Executive Officer for 3/7 and the GCE. “We are excited to move the ball forward with not only maneuver, but also communication and information alongside 1st Brigade and the Australian Defence Force (ADF).”

 

The most notable change in the GCE compared to past rotations is the work-up training leading to its deployment to Australia. In December, 3/7 served as part of the exercise force for the First Marine Division’s STEEL KNIGHT (SK22). During SK22, 3/7 and other units implemented modern naval warfighting techniques and procedures to better prepare for various combat operations in austere, littoral environments. The GCE will further implement these practices alongside ADF units to increase integrated deterrence capabilities in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific.

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/418220/meet-mrf-d-22-ground-combat-element

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 3:41 a.m. No.16091958   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1968

>>16047076

Anthony Albanese forced to backtrack after blunder

 

Anthony Albanese was forced into yet another awkward backtrack on Sunday morning after a disastrous start to his election campaign.

 

Alexis Carey - April 17, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese was forced into yet another awkward backtrack on Sunday morning after a disastrous start to his election campaign.

 

The Labor leader attended an Easter Sunday service at St Monica’s church in Cairns with his partner Jodie Haydon, and only took a handful of questions from journalists following the service.

 

But he had another stumble when asked by a reporter if he remained committed to Operation Sovereign Borders, and if so, if he supported the retention of temporary protection visas.

 

Mr Albanese’s response was a succinct – but entirely incorrect – “yes”.

 

In fact, Labor opposes the visas on the grounds that they leave those seeking asylum in limbo for years on end.

 

However, Mr Albanese later clarified that he had misheard the original question, and that “Labor’s policy is to support Operation Sovereign Borders”.

 

“We support offshore processing. We support resettlement in third countries. We don’t support temporary protection visas,” he clarified – the second time in just one week he has had to clarify Labor’s border protection policies.

 

The latest misstep came after days of gaffes, beginning on Monday on day one of the official election campaign, when Mr Albanese was unable to answer basic economic questions about the cash and employment rates.

 

On Wednesday, he sparked an uproar after walking out of a press conference after just eight minutes – after previously promising to answer every question – and on Thursday, his claim Labor “wouldn’t need” offshore detention centres because the party would be successful in deterring “illegal” migrants by “turning boats back” caused a furore, with Mr Albanese forced to later clarify that while that was his “preference”, ultimately Labor would keep offshore detention.

 

During this morning’s brief interaction with the press, Mr Albanese also came out swinging against the Prime Minister, accusing him of breaking the leaders’ holiday truce by announcing that Anne Ruston would serve as Health Minister if Scott Morrison was re-elected on May 21.

 

“I do note the Prime Minister had said that today wasn’t going to be a day of usual campaigning, and that he has chosen, the government has chosen, to make a very significant announcement today of the appointment of a new health minister should the government be re-elected,” Mr Albanese said this morning.

 

The Labor leader also claimed Ms Ruston – who has previously stated that Medicare spending was “not sustainable” – would take the “universal out of universal health care”.

 

“She has made it very clear that if we have a re-election of the Morison government, we will see more cuts to Medicare…over the next three years,” he said.

 

“The appointment of Anne Ruston sends a very bad message.”

 

Shadow Treasurer Jim Chalmers continued the attack, who told reporters that “this appointment today should send a shiver down the spine of every Australian who relies on affordable health care”.

 

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/national/federal-election/anthony-albanese-forced-to-backtrack-after-blunder/news-story/781240e531042e114a57ad99bb6626cf

 

https://twitter.com/sbasfordcanales/status/1515503369103675399

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 3:44 a.m. No.16091968   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2066

>>16047076

>>16091958

Anthony Albanese forced to clarify new comments about asylum seekers

 

Anthony Albanese has had to correct his position on Labor’s border policy again after giving conflicting answers on the campaign trail. See how it unfolded.

 

Clare Armstrong - April 17, 2022

 

A hard-of-hearing Anthony Albanese has again been forced to clarify Labor’s boats policy after he accidentally reversed the party’s stance on temporary protection visas.

 

Labor has long been against the Coalition’s refusal to grant permanent protection to refugees who arrived by boat before Operation Sovereign Borders began in 2013, but on Sunday Mr Albanese said the opposite.

 

After an Easter Sunday mass in Cairns in far north Queensland, the Labor leader was asked if he supported both the operation and “the retention of temporary protection visas (TPVs),” to which he replied: “yes”.

 

Less than 10 minutes later, Mr Albanese realised the error and reappeared before the travelling media pack to correct his gaffe.

 

“Earlier on I heard half the question, and didn’t hear all of it,” he said.

 

“Labor’s policy is to support Operation Sovereign Borders, we support offshore processing, we support resettlement to third countries, we don’t support temporary protection visas.”

 

It’s the second poorly-worded response Mr Albanese has delivered on border protection in less than a week, having had to clarify comments he made on Thursday which suggested Labor would not need offshore processing.

 

“Turning boats back means that you don’t need offshore detention,” Mr Albanese said during a visit to the Hunter in NSW.

 

A few hours later he fronted cameras again to pledge Labor’s ongoing support for offshore detention, noting it was less likely to be used if boat turnbacks were successful.

 

Mr Morrison said he was not going to speak to Mr Albanese’s “further confusion” on borders, but argued TPVs were an important element of the policy.

 

“There have always been three elements,” he said.

 

“Turning boats back under Operation Sovereign Borders and the command system we put around that … offshore processing, ensuring that people are not having the opportunity to be able to come and settle in Australia, and, thirdly, temporary protection visas that deny access to permanent residency.”

 

Mr Morrison said TPVs were a part of the “three strand cord,” which was “not easily broken”.

 

“I do know that the Labor Party have never believed in it, they have never supported it, they have never understood it and that’s why they can’t be trusted to keep it,” he said.

 

Asked to clarify Labor’s position on Operation Sovereign Borders in the wake of Mr Albanese’s comments about offshore processing, a campaign spokeswoman said the party supported it.

 

“Labor supports Operation Sovereign Borders – offshore processing, regional resettlement, and boat turn-backs where safe to do so, but for years Labor has warned that Mr Morrison has put border protection on ‘set and forget’ mode,” she said.

 

“Labor introduced offshore processing, when Anthony Albanese was Deputy Prime Minister and Labor will retain it.”

 

The spokeswoman said Labor’s position was to maintain the turnback operation, while “stopping the Liberals’ waste” of taxpayer dollars by converting temporary visas to permanent ones.

 

“As Labor has explained for years, millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money is being wasted forcing people who arrived under Liberal and Labor Governments before Operation Sovereign Borders to constantly reapply for temporary protection,” she said.

 

The spokeswoman said offshore detention was only required when turn-backs failed, and said Liberal attacks on Mr Albanese’s position on these issues were a “diversion from Scott Morrison’s cuts to border protection”.

 

“Let’s be clear – if you attempt to come to Australia by boat, you will not make it,” she said.

 

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/national/federal-election/anthony-albanese-forced-to-clarify-new-comments-about-asylum-seekers/news-story/9b0f723a65b4db0e36436416bf852e56

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 3:56 a.m. No.16091989   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

Election 2022: Australian Electoral Commission seeing worrying signs of misinformation, elections chief says

 

SARAH ISON - APRIL 17, 2022

 

Australian Electoral Commissioner Tom Rogers says the AEC is already seeing worrying trends of misinformation just a week into the election.

 

Mr Rogers told The Weekend Australian conspiracies such as the “vote to sack the government”, which was rampant in 2019, and false claims Dominion Voting Machines would be used to rig the election were of particular concern.

 

“We’re dealing already with misinformation and disinformation,” he said.

 

“We’re seeing trends, and some fairly illogical stuff already out there for example about dominion voting machines.”

 

Since then some people and even candidates of minor parties like the Great Australia Party have raised concern with dominion voting machines being used in Australia.

 

Former One Nation Senator and member of the Great Australia Party Rod Culleton posted last year that the AEC “proposes to acquire dominion voting systems machines”.

 

“The AEC is proposing the use of the same Dominion Voting Systems machines to count votes that are being used in America,” he posted on Twitter.

 

The AEC replied publicly to the claims and said there was no intention to use the machines, but Mr Rogers said the theories had risen since the election was called.

 

He said the other worrying piece of misinformation was that there was a way to “sack the government”, a theory which rose to prominence last year with videos explaining a “trick” to kick all MPs and Senators out.

 

“You draw a line through every name on the ballot paper, and you write at the bottom of it ‘no suitable candidate to follow my will’ and you put it in the ballot box,” the videos stated.

 

“That is a vote to sack all the governments, every representative and ever senator, it is a valid vote.”

 

Theory ‘absolutely bonkers’

 

Mr Rogers said while the theory was “absolutely bonkers” he expected it to run again this year.

 

“We took action at last election because it could come close to confusing voters,” he said.

 

“The sad thing is, as fast as it was removed, it’s like that old game of whack-a-mole and there’s a group of people who think, if something is removed, it has got a grain of truth to it.”

 

Mr Rogers confirmed the AEC had already contacted individuals with take down notices and threats of legal action.

 

He said that given “global events”, such as the questioning of the US election result, the AEC had developed its own “reputation management strategy” to assure people about the integrity of the election.

 

This included engagement on social media platforms, with the AEC Twitter account replying to dozens of tweets a day to correct false information or answer questions about signage, postal voting and more.

 

However the Commissioner said he was buoyed by the number of people who had enrolled to vote – 1.1 million more than last time – and said the number of people set to go to the polls was a “miracle” of democracy.

 

More than 25,000 people enrolled to vote in the hours following the election being called, with about 60,000 doing so the next day.

 

“We think we’ll certainly be at 97 per cent completeness (of people enrolled),” Mr Rogers said.

 

“Which is really a modern democratic miracle.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/election-2022-australian-electoral-commission-seeing-worrying-signs-of-misinformation-elections-chief-says/news-story/a3c3383d1c903afc69a62e01d34d543c

 

https://www.aec.gov.au/election/disinformation-register.htm

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:13 a.m. No.16092010   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2011 >>2063

>>16047076

Albanese pays price for gaffe as voters swing back to government

 

David Crowe - April 17, 2022

 

1/2

 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese has paid the price for a damaging opening week in the election campaign after voters cut their support for the opposition from 38 to 34 per cent while swinging back to Scott Morrison as preferred prime minister.

 

Primary support for the Coalition rose from 34 to 35 per cent, and Morrison made gains on his personal approval and performance on key issues including economic management and national security.

 

The first major survey of the campaign revealed a reversal of fortune for the two leaders, with Morrison leading Albanese as preferred prime minister by 38 to 30 per cent after the Labor leader held the advantage two weeks ago with a lead of 37 to 36 per cent.

 

But the survey, conducted by Resolve Strategic for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, also showed that 27 per cent of people eligible to vote at the May 21 election describe themselves as uncommitted, up from 21 per cent two weeks ago.

 

The findings in the Resolve Political Monitor signal the prospect of a hung Parliament, with support for Labor falling while support for the Coalition remains below the level of the last election at a time when voters have swung toward independent candidates who have 9 per cent of the national vote.

 

“Every trend has gone the Coalition’s way in this latest poll – vote, leadership, policy, performance – so the electorate is judging that the government won the first week of the campaign,” said Resolve director Jim Reed.

 

“The calling of the election has moved voters from judging the government’s term to a choice between the parties and particularly their leaders. It was incredibly damaging for Albanese to trip up on critical issues at precisely that point.”

 

Albanese admitted to making a mistake last Monday when he could not name the unemployment rate or the Reserve Bank cash rate, saying his approach as leader was to “own it” and suggesting Morrison did not take responsibility for his failures.

 

The Resolve Political Monitor confirms the cost to Labor after days of dispute about whether ordinary voters would put any weight on the mistake or would focus instead on key policy contests on health, education, childcare, security, the economy and a national integrity commission.

 

Asked about Morrison’s performance, 44 per cent of voters said he was doing a good job and 47 per cent said he was doing a poor job, resulting in a net performance rating of minus 3 points. This was a significant improvement on a net rating of minus 14 points two weeks ago.

 

Asked about Albanese, 35 per cent said he was doing a good job and 44 per cent said he was doing a poor job, producing a net rating of minus 9 points. This was a slump from his rating of minus 4 points two weeks ago.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:14 a.m. No.16092011   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16092010

 

2/2

 

While both leaders have negative ratings, Morrison has a better result in another reversal between the two leaders since the Resolve Political Monitor conducted in the week after the federal budget on March 29.

 

“Like the apocryphal tale of two hikers approached by a bear, Morrison only needs to outrun Albanese, not the bear,” Reed said.

 

“Voters don’t have to like the Prime Minister, they only need to dislike him less than the alternative.”

 

The Resolve Political Monitor surveyed 1404 eligible voters from Monday to Saturday over a period that included Morrison declining to commit to setting up a national integrity commission in the next term of Parliament while Albanese promised to pass laws to set up the watchdog this year.

 

The survey period also included a debate about transgender women, a Labor policy to spend $135 million on new health clinics, a pledge from Morrison to create 1.3 million jobs over five years and a Coalition policy to spend $219.5 million on the forestry sector.

 

The margin of error for the national results was 2.6 percentage points.

 

Because the Resolve Political Monitor asks voters to nominate their primary votes in the same way they would write “1” on the ballot papers for the lower house at the election, there is no undecided category in the results, a key difference with some other surveys. The survey puts the choices in a random order to each participant to avoid a “donkey vote” in the responses.

 

Support for the Greens was steady at 11 per cent and all other changes for minor parties and independents were within the margin of error.

 

Voters increased their support for Pauline Hanson’s One Nation from 2 to 4 per cent, although the change was less than 2 percentage points because the results are rounded to the nearest whole number. Support for Clive Palmer’s United Australia Party rose from 3 to 4 per cent.

 

While independent candidates are taking on Liberals with high-profile campaigns in key city seats, support for independents nationwide was unchanged at 9 per cent. Support for “other” candidates rose from 3 to 4 per cent.

 

The Resolve survey published on April 5 found that Morrison had fallen behind Albanese as preferred prime minister for the first time since the Resolve Political Monitor began last April. Albanese led on this measure by 37 to 36 per cent, with 28 per cent undecided.

 

The new survey shows Morrison leads by 38 to 30 per cent with an increase in undecided voters to 32 per cent.

 

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/albanese-pays-price-for-gaffe-as-voters-swing-back-to-government-20220417-p5ae0m.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:28 a.m. No.16092047   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047451

Australia says it would keep security ties with Solomons despite China pact

 

Samuel McKeith - APRIL 17, 2022

 

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia would continue to cooperate with Solomons Islands on matters of security even if the Pacific island nation signs a proposed security agreement with China that Australia opposes, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne said on Sunday.

 

Canberra is concerned the security deal, details of which have not been publicised, could foreshadow a Chinese military presence fewer than 2,000 km (1,200 miles) from Australia.

 

Despite a national election campaign putting the Australian government in caretaker mode, an Australian minister this week met with Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare in Honiara and asked him not to sign the proposed agreement.

 

Queried over whether Australia would continue security cooperation with the Solomons Islands if the deal went ahead Payne told ABC television: “Yes, that is absolutely my view and it is the view of Pacific partners”.

 

“But there is also a concern that there has been a lack of transparency in relation to this agreement,” Payne said.

 

She described as “very important” recent assurances from Sogavare that no Chinese military base would be established in the Solomons Islands if the deal with China went ahead.

 

Officials from China and Solomon Islands have initialled but not yet signed the security pact, which Australia, New Zealand, United States and some Pacific island neighbours have criticised as undermining regional stability.

 

The agreement has sparked concerns among U.S. allies Australia and New Zealand about Chinese influence in a region where they have for decades held strong sway.

 

Beijing this week said security ties between China and the Pacific nation were not aimed at any third party and did not contradict cooperation Solomons Islands has with other nations.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-asia-pacific/australia-says-it-would-keep-security-ties-with-solomons-despite-china-pact-idUSKCN2M900E

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:39 a.m. No.16092060   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16065990

Solomon Islands Government Statement

 

SOLOMON ISLANDS AND AUSTRALIA HOLD PRODUCTIVE SECURITY DISCUSSIONS

 

April 15, 2022

 

Solomon Islands and Australia held productive discussions on Wednesday 13 February in Honiara regarding the security concerns of the two countries including the wider pacific region.

 

The meeting between Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare and the visiting Australian Minister for International Development and the Pacific Hon. Zed Seselja culminated into deeper understanding of each other’s security concerns.

 

The two leaders spoke on security matters which Australia re-echoed its security concerns on the Solomon Islands – China Security Cooperation.

 

Prime Minister Sogavare re-emphasized that Australia remains a partner of choice and reassured Minister Seselja that all Security Agreements with development partners are relevant to Solomon Islands internal security threats.

 

Sogavare said Solomon Islands will continue to work with all partners in upholding the stability of the country while recognizing the concerns of the region and will not do anything to jeopardize it.

 

Meanwhile, the Government is planning to send Solomon Islands Foreign Minister to visit some regional countries to expound on the SI-PRC security cooperation with a view that a strong and stable Solomon Islands is healthy for the security of the region.

 

https://solomons.gov.sb/solomon-islands-and-australia-hold-productive-security-discussions/

Anonymous ID: a9c89b April 17, 2022, 4:47 a.m. No.16092069   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Counter-zionist subversion compilation:

https://archive.vn/12AIt

 

Some ready to go effort-posts for spreading around the chans:

https://archive.vn/QMKfU

 

Joe Biden reminds us:

"You Dont Have To Be Jewish To Be A Zionist"

https://youtu.be/1vDx-5b7T8M

 

Black show host dropping redpills about Jewish supremacism and zog:

https://gab.com/RealRedElephants/posts/108060840437612578

 

Jon Stewart (real name Jonathan Leibowitz) spent years pretending to be White while demonizing Whites, and now says that "we Jews and Blacks should get together and get whitey":

https://www.bitchute.com/video/fKh90SJIyS09/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:55 a.m. No.16092085   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2088

>>16047451

White House finally awakens to PRC capture of Solomon Islands

 

Cleo Paskal - April 16, 2022

 

1/3

 

Alexandria, VA.: Within days, Kurt Campbell, the US National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, and Daniel Kritenbrink, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, will visit Solomon Islands, a country of around 700,000 people, in the Southwestern Pacific. It will be one of the highest level American visits to Solomons, since 80 years ago, this August, US Marines landed on Guadalcanal.

 

This time, the Americans are hoping to dislodge an expansionist Asian power that embedded itself through political warfare, rather than through kinetic warfare. Though the kinetic threat is lurking in the background.

 

The intensity and urgency of the visit was shaped by the leaking of a draft security agreement between China and Solomon Islands that has the potential to give the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) yet another “base in everything but name”, as they have with Gwadar, and are trying to secure in Sri Lanka, Equatorial Guinea and elsewhere.

 

Add this to declared bases in Djibouti and the South Sea China—both locations China initially promised not to militarize—and it’s easy to see why there is concern across the Indo-Pacific about the agreement.

 

Additionally, with Chinese political warfare gains in Papua New Guinea and Timor-Leste, and growing but quiet positioning in Bougainville and New Caledonia, the PLA is essentially putting pieces in place to create its own version of a first island chain to hem in and isolate Quad/Aukus/Five Eyes member Australia.

 

For the US to succeed in its mission of giving Solomon Islands a path to the future that doesn’t involve it becoming another piece in the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) global game of Go, it helps to learn from what worked in the past, and to understand and avoid previous mistakes.

 

WHAT WORKS

 

During the brutal battles in Solomons during World War II, the knowledge, support and sacrifice of Solomon Islanders, who were ready to fight and die for their own sovereignty, was essential. That spirit is still there. Across the country key components of Solomon Islands society have come out against the deal.

 

To understand why, it helps to think of this not as a security deal between China and Solomon Islands, but between the Chinese Communist Party and the deeply unpopular and corrupt Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare. The provisions in the draft deal for China to provide assistance in “maintaining social order” are seen as Sogavare being able to call on the PLA to suppress anyone who stands in his—or his CCP patron’s—way.

 

A main target is the country’s most populous province, Malaita. When Sogavare unilaterally switched Solomons from Taiwan to China in 2019, the Government of Malaita and the Malaita High Council of Chiefs issued the Auki Communiqué. In part, it stated the Malaita Provincial Government “strongly resolves to put in place a Moratorium on Business Licenses to new investors connected directly or indirectly with the Chinese Communist Party.”

 

Celsus Irokwato Talifilu, adviser to Malaita Premier Daniel Suidani, recently described how he saw Chinese businesses operating in Solomons: “Our forests and people have been raped and pillaged by a logging monster that lives in China. While the legs and wings of the dragon are in Malaysia and the Philippines, we know where its home cave is. We’ve watched it bribe and corrupt countless leaders, and we know it will never stop.”

 

Malaita’s Premier Suidani, later proved how serious he was about not engaging with the CCP. He fell ill and required medical treatment outside the country. Being an honest politician, he didn’t have the funds required for treatment in Australia. Sogavare’s government stalled on providing him with support, saying it would be offered if he rescinded his objections to China’s activities in Malaita. He refused—effectively saying he’d rather die than take CCP money directly or indirectly.

 

In the end, through the humanitarian interventions of Prof M.D. Nalapat in India and President Tsai of Taiwan, Premier Suidani received the treatment he needed in Taiwan. When he returned to Solomons, Sogavare’s proxies in the province tried to engineer a vote of no confidence to take him out. Widespread ground level support for the premier thwarted the attempt. But Sogavare and the CCP haven’t given up on taking out the irritant.

 

And the people of Solomon know it.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:55 a.m. No.16092088   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2091 >>2096

>>16092085

 

2/3

 

Leader of the Opposition Matthew Wale wrote that “Malaita perceives this deal as targeted at it—the secrecy does nothing to remove those fears. Quite the contrary, the secrecy is perceived as an escalation by Prime Minister Sogavare in his struggle with Malaita. How this deal will be used on the Malaita situation has direct implications on all provinces in Solomon Islands and governance broadly.”

 

Other elected leaders have their own concerns, including the Premier of Western Province, Hon Christian Burley Mesepitu, who stated: “I am very concerned with how this new security agreement with China will affect our existing bilateral arrangements with Papua New Guinea in terms of policing and security on our western border. These arrangements directly affect my people in the Shortland Islands which is why my government is deeply concerned.”

 

He also said that Western Province would not allow its land and assets or people to be used in support of the security deal.

 

Also against the deal are powerful women’s groups. Solomons has strong matrilineal elements, including around land holdings, and it was women who were key to fending off China’s first attempt at a “soft base” in the country.

 

Shortly after the switch in 2019, a Chinese company tried to lease Tulagi, a strategically located island that was the British colonial headquarters leading up to World War II, and the site of the first Japanese attack on Solomons. The women landholders staved them off.

 

This time around, women’s groups are equally clear on their stand. Ruth Liloqula, a member of the Solomon Islands National Council of Women (SINCW) and executive officer of Transparency Solomon Islands (TSI), said: “We are concerned because when you look at the draft agreement, it mentioned ‘social order’. But the social order is our sovereignty. It should not be given to any other country to do it for us. Because if you do that, you are selling the sovereignty of this country by giving them the very function that belongs to the state.”

 

She added: “The security deal is not in the best interest of the country. So for the sake of the nation, Sogavare must cancel it. He and his government are abusing their powers in pursuing the security deal.”

 

Many, many others across the political spectrum and civil society have come out against the deal.

 

All this to say, as with 80 years ago, there is no lack of strong, brave Solomon Islanders willing to fight for their sovereignty.

 

AVOIDING PAST MISTAKES

 

So, why haven’t they been able to fight more effectively for their country? Why does the US have to send in the diplomatic version of the Marines?

 

For years, from a Western perspective, the “strategic” lead on Solomons was Australia. And in the past few weeks, Canberra has been going into overdrive trying to show it still is. It sent its “spy chiefs” on a very public mission to meet with Sogavare. It dispatched a government minister to meet with him even though it’s election season. And it’s announced funding that will run through Sogavare’s government.

 

Have you spotted the major flaw? It’s all based on doubling down on Sogavare. It entrenches his position domestically, and isolates and undermines those who are against the deal, including popularly elected leaders, women’s groups, church groups, and more.

 

It is a fundamental misreading of the dynamics. Sogavare is unpopular domestically, which is one reason why he is trying to postpone the 2023 elections. At the same time, China’s position in Solomons is now fully exposed.

 

Free and fair election could result in a new government that not only abrogates the security deal but switches back to Taiwan. That would be a serious loss of face for Xi Jinping, giving ammunition to his domestic enemies, and could lead to a politically weakened Sogavare being more exposed to prosecution.

 

Both Sogavare and Xi need the relationship to continue, and both would benefit from the perception of a breakdown of “social order” that triggers the security agreement and gives reason to postpone elections.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 4:56 a.m. No.16092091   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16092088

 

3/3

 

At the same time, it is not as if Sogavare has a warm spot for Australia. According to Wale: “Prime Minister Sogavare has long held grievances against Australia and longed for the day he would extract revenge. That day has arrived, and he has gladly thrust his sword into Australia’s back. China is only too happy to oblige Prime Minister Sogavare, there is a meeting of minds on this.”

 

Focusing on Sogavare is a mistake. Everyone I’ve quoted in here is a prominent Solomon Islander who has deep understanding of their country, knows the stakes involved and is ready to fight. None of the Australian delegations met with any of them.

 

And it seems as though they’ve been ignored for years.

 

Remember Premier Suidani, who went to Taiwan for medical care? On the way there, and back, he spent weeks in Australia in transit. No Australian official met with him—a popularly elected leader who put his life on the line to stand up to the CCP—to find out what was going on in the most populous province in Solomons.

 

Wale said he told the Australian High Commissioner in August that there was a Chinese security deal in the works.

 

Hon. Peter Kenilorea Jr., former Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said: “I keep repeating myself to certain high commissioners but I’m told ‘we don’t want to upset the apple cart,’ as it were. Also that they want to work with the government of the day. But the government of the day doesn’t have the people’s best interests at heart—they are serving another master.”

 

If Australians, or anyone, including the other Quad partners, had spoken with any of the people mentioned here, or the many other Solomon Islanders worried about the direction their country is taking, they would not only have found willing partners with shared values, but gained valuable insight into the situation on the ground. And improved their own security.

 

As Talifilu said: “Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the USA need to help the people of Solomon Islands, not the oligarchs. When we are secure, those countries are secure. If you accommodate a thief in your neighbourhood, expect to lose your security.”

 

US DELEGATION

 

It is a good sign that the US knows it needs to show up in person, and has announced it will be opening an Embassy in the country. Hopefully the US will, as they did 80 years ago, join forces with those in the country who share their vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific, and who are willing to fight for it.

 

The situation is being watched closely, including in other Pacific Island Countries. If locals concerned about China aren’t listened to properly now, some may see incentive in following the path of the Solomons, not because they want more China, but because they want more US.

 

As Tongan strategic analyst Tevita Motulalo put it: “It’s too bad the only way to get cooperation is to stake a claim for the adversary. Should Tonga have allowed the redevelopment of the Chinese (naval) port? Looks like the only incentivized approach is to play dirty. This security-state policy frameworks is based on scaring the sh*t out of Washington to take action, out of fear, but not out of appreciation of their own legacies. That’s the message given here to everyone: MORE Chinese in order for any US attention!”

 

Hopefully, that message will change, with a new approach built not on the failures of the past, but on the successes—building on the ties created fighting for freedom and forged in blood 80 years ago.

 

Cleo Paskal is The Sunday Guardian Special Correspondent as well as Non-Resident Senior Fellow for the Indo-Pacific at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

 

https://www.sundayguardianlive.com/world/white-house-finally-awakens-prc-capture-solomon-islands

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 5:07 a.m. No.16092130   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Chocolate concealment no match for AFP eggs-perts

 

17 April 2022

 

The AFP has responded to urgent calls for help from frustrated children who have been unable to find where the Easter Bunny left caches of chocolate eggs this season.

 

After our furry friend got a bit too creative when hiding Easter eggs, the AFP’s world-leading forensic team launched special Operation Easter Egg Hunt to crack the case.

 

Using specialist technology, capability and expertise, the AFP’s forensic team, who are often at the forefront of helping to hunt for clues, spared no effort in detecting thousands of Easter eggs across the country.

 

An MD3000 metal detector, which searches for evidence in the ground or on the ground, found many chocolate bunnies hidden under foliage. The team also found Easter eggs in roof cavities by using a video scope that allowed them to see areas that cannot be seen with the naked eye.

 

Intelligence received by the AFP convinced the forensic team to check for Easter eggs hidden in walls or behind paintings. The hand-held x-ray identified many chocolate treats, as did the techniques used by investigators.

 

While the team are experts in finger print analysis, their skills also translated to tracking paw prints.

 

AFP member Samantha Touma said while the Easter Bunny created an extremely challenging hunt, she knew the team could come through for Australian kids this Easter.

 

“Despite the Easter Bunny’s best efforts, the hidden Easter eggs used were no match for the AFP’s expertise and capability,” Samantha said.

 

“Operation Easter Egg Hunt was an eggs-cellent success and after a long day the case was closed, allowing some very excited children to finally eat some chocolate treats.”

 

Editor’s note: footage of Operation Easter Egg hunt is available via Hightail - https://spaces.hightail.com/space/LFyqQZIW23/files

 

https://www.afp.gov.au/news-media/media-releases/chocolate-concealment-no-match-afp-eggs-perts

 

>We had a good laugh.

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 5:33 a.m. No.16092209   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4784

>>16047451

China not a big concern: Greens Senator Jordon Steele-John

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 17, 2022

 

The Greens say China doesn’t pose a threat to Australia and the party has no problem with Solomon Islands’ decision to forge a ­security partnership with Beijing.

 

Greens’ peace and disarmament spokesman Jordon Steele-John said Australia’s concern over the Solomons-China agreement was “paternalistic and actually racist”, and that the future of ­Taiwan was not a direct concern for Australia or the US.

 

As Labor attempts to neutralise national security as an election issue by matching the Coalition’s defence commitments, the Greens have called for military spending to be slashed and the AUKUS agreement cancelled.

 

The party wants the nation’s nuclear submarine and hypersonic missile programs to be axed, Pine Gap closed and US marines out of Darwin.

 

“I don’t see China as a military threat to Australia,” he told The Australian.

 

Senator Steele-John said Labor and the Coalition were “happy to see Australia treated as an American aircraft carrier”, ratcheting up tensions with Beijing.

 

“The Greens absolutely oppose this. We must have an independent foreign and defence policy, which allows us to work with our neighbours to de-escalate,” he said.

 

The senator said Australia should also butt out of the affairs of Pacific states, arguing they should be free to “defend their territorial boundaries and build relationships” as they saw fit.

 

Australian and US officials fear the Solomon Islands-China ­security pact will allow Chinese naval patrols to operate from the country, and open the way for the establishment of a permanent Chinese base 2000km off Australia’s northeast coast.

 

Senator Steele-John said the West’s objection to the agreement stood in stark contrast to its support for Ukraine’s ability to forge its own security alliances.

 

“Solomon Islands is a sovereign country that is seeking to build relationships with its ­regional neighbours as best it can and it is making those decisions as a sovereign country should,” he said.

 

“We absolutely support the right of Solomon Islands to do that. The Greens see it as a double standard that is both paternalistic and actually racist. It is a racist, paternalistic double standard that needs to be called out.”

 

His comments come ahead of a trip to the Solomons by US President Joe Biden’s Indo-­Pacific security tsar Kurt Campbell to warn its Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare, that the proposed deal with China threatens his nation’s sovereignty.

 

Senator Steele-John said the Greens were “deeply concerned about authoritarianism” and “deeply concerned about human rights violations wherever they exist”.

 

While the Greens supported Taiwan’s right to independence, he said the West should not become militarily involved in defending the territory from forced “reunification” with China.

 

“What we have when we look at the South China Sea, when we look at the relationship between China and Taiwan, is actually a bunch of dynamics between ­nations which are best resolved by those nations themselves,” Senator Steele-John said. “They don’t actually need Australia and the US continually inserting ourselves into these conversations.”

 

Under the Greens’ “peace, disarmament and demilitarisation” policy, defence spending would be reduced from about 2 per cent of GDP to 1.5 per cent.

 

Less than a fortnight after Australia agreed to fast-track ­hypersonic missiles development with the US and Britain to match Chinese and Russian capabilities, Senator Steele-John said the weapons could lead to “the ­destruction of the world”.

 

He said the Greens would “lead the international community in the process of banning this technology, as we have with cluster bombs and mines”.

 

Under longstanding Greens policy, the ANZUS alliance would be renegotiated to “free us up to act independently in relation to our diplomatic relationships with other countries”.

 

He said Australia’s relationship with the US would have key “red lines”, including “the ­removal of all foreign bases and foreign troops from Australian soil”.

 

Senator Steele-John said climate change and the existence of nuclear weapons were “the two greatest threats to global peace and security”, and the Greens would continue to campaign heavily to address both threats.

 

Labor’s deputy leader, Richard Marles, said the planned Solomons-China agreement was a failure of Australian policy, ­arguing the government had been “asleep at the wheel” in maintaining key Pacific relationships.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/china-not-a-big-concern-greens/news-story/02ce29cd3e3397d7fbf2367d040ba16f

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 5:54 a.m. No.16092295   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2442

>>16047076

>>16086334

Albanese greeted with deafening boos at Bluesfest in Byron Bay

 

Anthony Albanese was greeted by deafening boos and jeers as he took to the stage at Bluesfest in Byron Bay on Sunday night.

 

Alexis Carey - April 17, 2022

 

Anthony Albanese was greeted by deafening boos and jeers as he took to the stage at Bluesfest in Byron Bay on Sunday night.

 

The Labor leader briefly faced the crowds ahead of a performance by rock icon Jimmy Barnes, but did not receive the rock star welcome he was no doubt hoping for.

 

Photos and video from the scene show a line of audience members giving Albo the thumbs down as he delivered his hasty speech.

 

Countless festivalgoers booed the ALP hopeful at first, although there were loud cheers as he briefly mentioned issues including Indigenous recognition and supporting the arts.

 

A festival worker later said she had been expecting a warmer reception, but that some of the most vocal critics booing the Opposition leader at the front of the crowd had been anti-vaxxers, with many cheers of support coming from audience members standing further back.

 

It also probably didn’t help that the emcee brought up the upcoming federal election before introducing Mr Albanese, a topic unlikely to be popular with a boozed-up crowd itching to see Barnsey in the flesh.

 

Earlier in the night, the Labor leader — who by then had traded in his trademark blue suit for festival-appropriate jeans and boots — received a far warmer reception during a walk through of the crows ahead of a performance by The Waifs.

 

Accompanied by partner Jodie Haydon and senior frontbencher Tony Burke at the iconic music festival in Byron Bay, Mr Albanese was met with chants of “Albo, Albo” as he greeted the audience.

 

The music-loving would-be PM — whose “DJ Albo” alter ego has made countless headlines over the years — was clearly in his element, beaming as soon as he arrived at the festival after a bruising first week of campaigning.

 

His appearance at Bluesfest coincided with an announcement that Labor would be taking the “first steps” to expand the reach of Double J on radio.

 

Currently, audiences across regional Australia can get Double J on digital TV, the ABC website or the ABC listen app, but can’t get Double J on the radio because there’s no Double J on FM radio and most towns don’t have DAB+ radio.

 

The ALP has confirmed it will commission the ABC to undertake a feasibility study into the expansion of Double J on radio as the next logical next step in helping great Aussie artists reach more ears.

 

“It’s no secret I’ve always been a huge music fan,” Mr Albanese said of the announcement.

 

“I want more people in regional Australia to experience the joy I have of listening to Double J, singing along to songs they love or maybe discovering something new.”

 

The Labor leader’s appearance at the Byron Bay festival comes as a new poll reflects some voter disappointment in his first week of campaigning.

 

According to the Fairfax/Resolve poll voter support for the Labor opposition dropped from 38 to 34 per cent with a rise in the number of undecided voters.

 

It follows Newspoll suggesting primary support for the ALP has dropped from 41 per cent to 37 per cent in recent weeks. However, Labor retains a 53-47 lead on a two-party preferred basis according to Newspoll.

 

https://www.news.com.au/national/federal-election/albanese-greeted-with-deafening-boos-at-bluesfest-in-byron-bay/news-story/85b3f71c88dcfe8952b0c7aeee190a91

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 17, 2022, 6:26 a.m. No.16092442   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16092295

Sarah Basford Canales Tweet

 

Albanese has gatecrashed Byron Bay’s Bluesfest where he’s expected to join the stages with Jimmy Barnes later tonight #auspol @canberratimes

 

https://twitter.com/sbasfordcanales/status/1515590888533098497

 

 

Tom Lowrey Tweet

 

A -mixed- response for Anthony Albanese on stage at Bluesfest tonight, introducing Jimmy Barnes.

@politicsabc

 

https://twitter.com/tomlowrey/status/1515637234979905537

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 18, 2022, 12:32 a.m. No.16097869   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Myanmar junta releases 1,600 prisoners for Buddhist new year, but no mention of detained Australian Sean Turnell

 

AFP/ABC - 17 April 2022

 

Families of detained Myanmar protesters have had their hopes dashed after political prisoners were not included in some 1,600 people released by the junta to mark the Buddhist new year.

 

The South-East Asian country has been in turmoil since Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government was ousted last year in a military coup, which sparked huge protests and a deadly crackdown.

 

State television announced on Sunday that 1,619 prisoners, including 42 foreigners, had been "pardoned" and will be released to mark the new year — an annual tradition that last year saw 23,000 prisoners freed.

 

A prisoner released from Yangon's Insein prison said that "political cases and protesters were not among those released", with authorities only freeing criminals.

 

Crowds in front of the prison slowly left on Sunday afternoon, with more than 100 people gathering with the hope of being reunited with loved ones.

 

There was no mention of the Australian economist Sean Turnell, a former Suu Kyi adviser who was arrested shortly after the coup.

 

He is on trial for allegedly breaching the official secrets act, which carries a maximum 14-year jail sentence.

 

Among the crowd was a woman waiting for her 19-year-old nephew, sentenced to three years imprisonment for incitement against the military.

 

"He was young, and he may have some feeling to fight," she said, declining to give her name.

 

"I wish all young children will be released including my nephew. They all were innocent."

 

Aye Myint's 19-year-old daughter was serving three years on a political charge, and she had hoped she would be released.

 

"Now, she has been more than one year in prison," Aye Myint said.

 

The country typically grants an annual amnesty to thousands of prisoners to mark the Buddhist New Year, usually a joyous holiday celebrated in many parts with water fights.

 

But this year, with the bloody military crackdown on dissent, the streets in many major cities have been silent as people protest junta rule.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-17/myanmar-junta-to-free-1-600-prisoners-buddhist-new-year-amnesty/100996220

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 18, 2022, 12:34 a.m. No.16097877   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Defence in ‘urgent need of new weapons’, says key Australian exporter

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 18, 2022

 

One of Australia’s biggest defence exporters says the next federal government needs to overhaul ­Defence’s $270bn procurement system to prioritise urgently needed weapons and equipment over ­“exquisite” capabilities that take decades to arrive.

 

EOS Defence global chief executive Grant Sanderson said Defence’s 40-year-old acquisition model was less focused on ­addressing immediate strategic threats than on “deploying something that is imperfect”.

 

EOS is a leader in space systems, remote weapons systems, and battlefield communications, earning 95 per cent of its revenue from exports.

 

Mr Sanderson said as a Canberra-based company, EOS was committed to the Australian market, but “inertia” in Defence’s procurement system made it “one of the most expensive and energy-sapping places in the world to do business”.

 

He highlighted the fact that Australia had no contracts to ­acquire armed drones, or counter-drone technology, which can ­deliver huge “asymmetric” advantages to smaller forces, as the conflict in Ukraine had shown.

 

“We’ve got into the habit of thinking that we can’t have military capability that doesn’t take decades,” Mr Sanderson said.

 

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has acknowledged the need to fast-track capability acquisitions, revealing earlier this month that $3.5bn in long-range strike missile purchases would be brought forward by up to five years.

 

But neither the Coalition nor Labor has pledged reforms to the Integrated Investment Program that governs Defence acquisitions.

 

Mr Sanderson said under the IIP, Defence was prioritising projects “which you would have to question the return” on, ahead of “capabilities that we don’t have”.

 

“I don’t think there is an army in the world right now that is not looking at loitering munitions, and suicide drones, and drone swarms, as something that they all need, he said. “Logically, it should be a priority for us as well.”

 

His comments follow the cancellation of the $1.3bn SkyGuar­dian armed drone program, and the dumping of the French Attack-class submarines at a cost of $5.5bn.

 

The nation’s $45bn Hunter-class frigates are unlikely to be ­operational until 2033, while the next government is also due to award a $25bn-plus contract for new infantry fighting vehicles that won’t be delivered until the 2030s.

 

Mr Sanderson compared Australia’s approach to Israel’s rapid procurement model, which ­focused on getting new capabilities into soldiers’ hands to deal with immediate threats even if they were not fully developed.

 

“Everywhere you go where they don’t have decades of time up their sleeves, they do it differently,” he said.

 

“The different models are there. We understand them. The biggest barrier to learning those lessons just seems to be the inertia of our process.”

 

On a visit to Australia last week, the Commandant of the US Marine Corps, General David Berger, said technology was moving so fast “it is difficult for our processes to keep up”.

 

General Berger, who is implementing sweeping reforms to the Marines to prepare for amphibious warfare in the Indo-Pacific, said he was working to overcome bureaucratic resistance to deliver new capabilities to Marines as rapidly as possible to ensure they were ready to meet future threats.

 

“I have got to get equipment in the hands of Marines as soon as possible,” he told the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

 

“You get tools in soldiers and marines and sailors hands early on, they don’t need a two-week class to learn how to use them.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/defence-in-urgent-need-of-new-weapons-says-key-australian-exporter/news-story/62e2a6dd5a4fe595435a1e3dd49e492f

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 18, 2022, 12:39 a.m. No.16097888   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16080215

US combat aircraft arrive in Top End

 

Aaron Bunch - April 18 2022

 

A squadron of US tilt-rotor combat aircraft depicted in dozens of Hollywood blockbuster action movies has landed in the Northern Territory.

 

Known as the Red Dragons, the 10 Bell-Boeing V-22 Ospreys have been assigned to support this year's Marine Rotational Force based in Darwin.

 

"The Red Dragons are excited to join 5th Marines as part of the MRF-D 2022 rotation," Lieutenant Colonel Vanessa Clark, Marine's aviation combat element commanding officer said on Monday.

 

"Honoured to be working hand in hand with the Australian Defence Force, the importance of the US-Australia team cannot be overstated."

 

The squadron will join thousands of Marines who started arriving in the Top End in March, to train with the Australian Defence Force during the upcoming dry season.

 

It's the 11th annual rotation of Marines to the territory, which could also be called on to carry out humanitarian assistance, evacuation and military operations in the region.

 

Darwin's location just south of more than a dozen Asian countries and some of the world's busiest shipping lanes makes it a strategic stepping-off point.

 

The seasonal force, which also includes 250 US Army for the first time, is expected to grow to 2200 servicemen and women over the next few months.

 

The force is part of the ongoing US posture initiative to promote stability in the Indo-Pacific region amid increasing tensions with China.

 

It sits alongside the Enhanced Air Co-operation program between the Royal Australian Air Force and the US Air Force, amid increasing military cooperation between the two nations.

 

The Hawaii-based Osprey squadron has previously supported operations during both gulf wars and the war on terrorism.

 

The US military has used the V-22 for more than 30 years in combat and humanitarian operations, according to Bell.

 

The fleet of more than 400 aircraft can take off and land vertically, combining the functionality of a helicopter with the long-range, high-speed cruise performance of a turboprop.

 

It is used for air assaults, personnel and cargo transport, casualty evacuation and humanitarian relief.

 

It has also appeared in 39 Hollywood blockbusters, including James Bond: Blood Stone, Godzilla vs. Kong, Edge of Tomorrow and three Transformer movies, according to Internet Movie Plane Database.

 

The Red Dragons arrived three weeks after the USAF's largest aircraft, the C-5 Super Galaxy, flew into RAAF Darwin.

 

The 75 metre-long cargo plane, capable of carrying more than 100 tonnes over 10,000km, is transporting equipment in and out of the NT from the Marine's base in Japan.

 

https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7703146/us-combat-aircraft-arrive-in-top-end/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 18, 2022, 12:56 a.m. No.16097927   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7930

>>16066080

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

18 April 2022

 

1/2

 

Happy Easter to family and friends of MRF-D!

 

What a week it was for us here in Darwin.

 

  1. The 38th Commandant of the Marine Corps, General David Berger, and the 19th Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps, Sergeant Major Troy Black, visited with Marines and Sailors of MRF-D and Soldiers with the Australian 1st Brigade.

 

  1. The MRF-D logistics team facilitated the offload and transportation of gear and equipment, increasing our readiness and posture in the Indo-Pacific.

 

  1. MRF-D leaders met with ADF Royal Navy leaders to create further integration opportunities with U.S. Marines and Australian naval assets.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 18, 2022, 12:57 a.m. No.16097930   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16097927

 

2/2

 

  1. Captain Megan Albright led the Aviation Combat Element in a nine-Osprey flyover of Darwin.

 

  1. A U.S. Congressional Delegation led by Senator Lindsey Graham visited with Marines and Sailors of MRF-D and met with service members from their states and home towns.

 

U.S. Marine Corps photos by Corporal Cedar Barnes, Corporal Cameron Hermanet, and Corporal Kayla Trevino.

 

All imagery and stories can be found at

https://www.dvidshub.net/unit/MRF-D

 

#mrfd

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/348450393984117

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2 a.m. No.16104690   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047076

No deal: Morrison and Albanese rule out minority government with independents

 

Anthony Galloway - April 19, 2022

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Labor leader Anthony Albanese have guaranteed they won’t do deals with independents to form government, opening the door for a chaotic political fallout if neither side wins the 76 seats needed to secure a majority.

 

The rejection from both leaders could mean Australians will be forced to another poll in the event of a hung parliament and crossbench MPs refuse to back supply for either side.

 

The Liberals are under threat from “teal independents” in a number of traditionally blue ribbon inner-city seats in Melbourne and Sydney, heightening the uncertainty over whether the Coalition or Labor can win enough seats to form a majority government.

 

Morrison on Tuesday rejected doing any deals with independent MPs to form government, a day after he refused to rule out the move.

 

“I won’t be doing any deals with independents,” Morrison said on Tuesday in Perth.

 

The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age revealed on Tuesday some of the independent candidates’ list of demands in the event of a hung parliament, which included greater climate action and a stronger corruption watchdog.

 

Morrison would have to commit to action on those two key issues in the hope of gaining support from the independent candidates, who also named the treatment of women and better healthcare as factors in deciding who should form government.

 

Albanese earlier made his own guarantee that he would not enter into negotiations with independents.

 

“There will be no deal with the independents and crossbenchers. I’m seeking to form a government in my own right,” he told Brisbane’s 4BC.

 

“I’m the only person running for prime minister who can form a government in their own right.”

 

Asked if he would prefer Labor to win the election over the Coalition governing in a minority government, Morrison said: “Well, that is the choice that Australians have to make.”

 

“Do they want a Liberal National government that has taken Australia through one of the most difficult times this country has seen since the Second World War and the Great Depression who has a clear economic plan… or a Labor Opposition supported by the Greens whose views change from one day to the next?“

 

Morrison said a vote for the climate-focused independents in the next election was a “vote for uncertainty, and instability in incredibly uncertain times”.

 

“It’s the Forest Gump principle – you never know what you’re going to get,” he said.

 

Polling has suggested the contest is narrowing heading into the May 21 election, with the Resolve Strategic survey conducted for this masthead revealing a reversal of fortune for the two leaders. Morrison now leads Albanese as preferred prime minister by 38 to 30 per cent after the Labor leader held the advantage two weeks ago with a lead of 37 to 36 per cent.

 

Primary support for the Coalition also rose from 34 to 35 per cent.

 

During his two-day trip to Perth, Morrison has attempted to win over Western Australians on the economy, taxes and mining.

 

During a speech to the WA Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, Morrison tried to say there was a significant difference between Albanese and their popular Labor premier Mark McGowan.

 

“Federal Labor under Anthony Albanese is not the same as state Labor under Mark McGowan. They are very different things, they have very little in common,” he said.

 

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/no-deal-morrison-and-albanese-rule-out-minority-government-with-independents-20220419-p5aeij.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:07 a.m. No.16104696   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4698

>>16047076

Stay calm but think beyond the leader’s gaffes

 

TROY BRAMSTON - APRIL 19, 2022

 

1/2

 

As Anthony Albanese has joined his 6.15am daily phone hook-up with senior Labor shadow ministers, party officials and staff, it has been somewhat awkward as they review the media coverage, assess the state of the campaign and confirm their strategy, key lines and program for the day ahead.

 

Labor frontbenchers, backbenchers, candidates, staff and campaigners spoken to for this column have expressed deep concern and alarm about the Opposition Leader’s campaign per­form­ance. It has been disastrous and some fear it is going to get only worse as they scale back expectations for seats they can win.

 

There is no panic yet, but there is real worry over Albanese’s campaign preparation and readiness, the capacities of his personal staff and the experience of Labor’s campaign team in Sydney. Some Labor figures say they are not surprised while others have been shocked at the series of blunders.

 

The anxiety level in Labor was elevated on day zero, the day Scott Morrison announced the election date, when Albanese appeared at an afternoon press conference. He did not have a clear message or theme and rambled his way through an opening statement as if it was not rehearsed, and he did not have sharp responses to questions.

 

Labor has had “on your side”, “build back better” and now “a better future”. Not exactly consistent, coherent or cut-through.

 

The gaffes began on day one of the campaign: not being able to name the unemployment rate or Reserve Bank cash rate; repeated mistakes over asylum-seeker policy; saying Labor’s urgent care clinics were costed by the Parliamentary Budget Office, then clarifying they were not; promising to answer media questions, then cutting short press conferences. There was the claim Albanese had been an economic policy adviser to the Hawke government. He was an electorate officer to junior minister Tom Uren, who did not hold an economic portfolio. If Albanese did offer economic advice, it was ignored because he was a persistent critic of the economic reforms of the Hawke-Keating government.

 

The Coalition should be on the mat and down for the count. The past nine years have been marked by a revolving-door Liberal and Nationals party leadership, internal division, policy backflips and broken promises, and a chaotic parliament. The Prime Minister is unpopular. Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce is a national joke. But, with the economy booming, they just may pull off another miracle election victory.

 

Albanese’s stumbles have reinforced to many in Labor that his office and the party’s national secretariat have been running the wrong strategy for the past three years. Albanese is still not well known and his small-target policy approach means voters are struggling to find reasons to vote Labor. The opposition does not have a bold, animating, compelling agenda that speaks to its values and presents as a clear and convincing alternative to the government.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:08 a.m. No.16104698   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16104696

 

2/2

 

Some critics say Albanese’s office, led by former Labor national secretary Tim Gartrell, is to blame. Gartrell has long been out of the game, running Labor’s dreadful 2004 campaign with Mark Latham as leader and the victorious 2007 campaign with Kevin Rudd as leader. The latter was 15 years ago. Some Labor MPs fear 2022 is a repeat of 2004.

 

While the criticism is that Albanese’s office is staffed by an old mates network and inexperienced young advisers, the internal criticism of Labor’s campaign headquarters is equally savage.

 

Labor’s national secretary Paul Erickson, a prickly personality, has never run a national campaign. Those who worked on Labor’s 2019 campaign, with vital experience, have almost all moved on. The Coalition’s campaign team, based in Brisbane, is much more battle-tested, with most having worked on the previous campaign. Liberal federal director Andrew Hirst has done it all before and essentially is following the same playbook as 2019. So is Morrison’s chief of staff, John Kunkel, who has years of campaigning experience.

 

The key election battleground is NSW, not Queensland, where Labor hopes to win seats (Reid, Robertson, Lindsay) but many of its held seats are at risk (Macquarie, Eden-Monaro, Dobell, Gilmore, Greenway, Hunter, Parramatta, Shortland and Paterson). Labor has to defend 12 seats nationally with margins under 3 per cent.

 

Labor MPs worry that NSW state secretary Bob Nanva has never run a state or federal campaign and rarely talks to MPs or candidates and resources are scant. Marginal seat candidates are scrambling for staff and funds. A few weeks ago Labor figures held a fundraiser for NSW Labor leader Chris Minns rather than Albanese.

 

The sharp criticism of Albanese’s staff and campaign team may not all be fair. Responsibility ultimately rests with Albanese. The repeated gaffes have been unforced errors. Rudd, Paul Keating, Bob Hawke and Gough Whitlam were never so ill-prepared. The recriminations if Labor loses the election will be epic. Albanese has only one shot at becoming prime minister.

 

There is still time for Albanese to steady his performance and for Morrison to make his own errors. The election is not yet decided. However, Albanese, largely unknown and with no bold policies, has been framed by his gaffes, which reinforce the Coalition’s key message on the economy and that handing government to Labor is a risk.

 

All eyes are on the head-to-head debate on Wednesday, hosted by Sky News and The Courier-Mail. It is high stakes for Albanese, who tried to frame this election as a referendum on character and competence.

 

He should be careful what he wishes for.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/stay-calm-but-think-beyond-the-leaders-gaffes/news-story/ddb1e26957bf6c58ef8137794b623a90

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:35 a.m. No.16104749   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4753

>>15981839 (pb)

>>16047076

Hume Greens candidate Karen Stewart can't walk past climate change as major election battleground

 

Sophie Bennett - April 19 2022

 

1/2

 

With climate change proving to be one of the key battlegrounds in the electorate of Hume in the lead up to the federal election, enter Greens candidate Karen Stewart.

 

Residing in Camden and running her own accounting business, Ms Stewart wants to see more accountability in government.

 

"For the last few years, I don't feel that there's been good oversight or accountability," Ms Stewart said.

 

"That is certainly something that I get frustrated about, especially given I'm an accountant."

 

Ms Stewart is a mother of four who grew up in Dubbo before moving to Maroubra in Sydney for her studies.

 

She said her family had always been very political, and the Stewart name has certainly made headlines over the past couple of years.

 

In 2021 her family spoke out openly about her brother Tim Stewart's involvement with QAnon and his close proximity to prime minister Scott Morrison.

 

"Recently, we had to talk candidly about family members who'd been radicalized by the QAnon conspiracy theory," Ms Stewart said.

 

"That was an extremely difficult thing to do because you choose to honour the society and your own community above the family relationship that you would normally hold dear.

 

"But it was a very dangerous situation and I felt that the Prime Minister very much dismissed what we were saying."

 

Watching family members turn to conspiracy theories is what led Ms Stewart to align herself so deeply with the Greens' policy of providing free and quality education to all.

 

"We have to ask why there's a rise of anti science sentiment, especially against things like climate change, and say 'okay, could better education have stopped this?'," she said.

 

However, she was heartened by the efforts of Goulburn locals to respond to climate change so far.

 

"I think Goulburn looks like they're on the ball, certainly with taking taking environmental issues seriously," she said.

 

She praised the Goulburn community solar project as well as the installation of the TESLA supercharger station for electric vehicles.

 

"I think that was a really good win and shows that scientists are supported by industry, but not by this federal government," Ms Stewart said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:37 a.m. No.16104753   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16104749

 

2/2

 

She believed it was a shame that residents in the Hume electorate were taking action on climate change without committed government support.

 

"It's a broad electorate, we have the north part which is quite urbanised and then you have other parts which are very rural and regional," Ms Stewart said.

 

"So to cover all of those I think you can't ignore climate change because it affects so many people in different ways.

 

"We have the floods here in Camden, we've had bushfires a bit further south, and we're going to have a water crisis with agriculture as well."

 

Ms Stewart said she understood the impact of natural disasters having had to evacuate her home and office twice in a month.

 

"I can't walk past climate change," she said.

 

"Even raising my children, we had a day called sustainable Saturday where we would switch off the fuse box and and pass a day spending time together without electricity. It was something that reminded us that we do have a responsibility to the environment."

 

When asked about recent protests by health workers and nurses, Ms Steward told the Post that she believed the issues raised needed to be taken seriously.

 

"I think that the government ignores many protests, and as individuals, we all want to feel that we're heard and taken seriously," she said.

 

However, she did not provide any specifics about Greens' policy that would address the issues in the region.

 

Ms Stewart joins independent Penny Ackery and Labor candidate Greg Baines in running against current Hume MP Angus Taylor in a safe Liberal seat.

 

However, both Mr Baines and Ms Ackery have said they felt there was an appetite for change in the region heading towards the May 21 election.

 

Ms Stewart said it wasn't necessarily about winning for her but ensuring voters knew there were other options.

 

"I think is important, regardless of whether people are there to win or not, that people know yes, we hear you.

 

"We can still work with other other candidates and be part of the debate not just during an election campaign, but by being visible throughout the years between an election and by working as a community," Ms Stewart said.

 

https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7702550/hume-greens-candidate-cant-walk-past-climate-change/

 

 

QAnon follower Tim Stewart's an old friend of Scott Morrison. His family reported him to the national security hotline

 

Louise Milligan, Jeanavive McGregor and Lauren Day - 14 Jun 2021

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-06-14/qanon-follower-old-friend-scott-morrison-stewart-family-speaks/100125156

 

>Coordinated?

>All For A LARP?

>[ATTACKS WILL ONLY INTENSIFY]

>Ask yourself, WHY?

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:56 a.m. No.16104779   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16053237

Witness in Ben Roberts-Smith defamation case denies ‘blooding’ claims

 

STEPHEN RICE - APRIL 19, 2022

 

On the first day of Ben Roberts-Smith’s counter-attack against claims he committed war crimes, his former SAS patrol commander has emphatically denied ever killing an unarmed Afghan, or ordering anyone else to do so.

 

The soldier, known as Person 5, also gave evidence that a tunnel discovered in an Afghan compound was empty, countering claims by Nine newspapers that he had ordered the execution of an elderly man found hiding in it.

 

The newspapers claim Mr Roberts-Smith was present when Person 5 ordered another Australian soldier – Person 4 – to execute the man, so that Person 4 could be “blooded”.

 

Person 5, now retired from the military, is the first SAS witness to be called by the Victoria Cross winner in his defamation action against Nine newspapers.

 

The veteran soldier was part of a raid on a compound known as Whiskey 108 in Uruzgan province on Easter Sunday in 2009.

 

Person 5 gave evidence about the moment a tunnel was discovered beneath a suspicious-looking mound of hay in the compound. Several soldiers volunteered to enter the tunnel to search it but the task eventually fell to a soldier known as Person 35, chosen because his slight stature would make it easier to navigate the confined space.

 

Person 35 took off his body armour and armed only with a pistol entered the tunnel, re-emerging after a couple of minutes to announce the tunnel was clear, Person 5 testified.

 

Person 5 said he then went to a meeting a short distance away with other team commanders. After hearing gunshots he ran towards the sound, where he saw Mr Roberts-Smith and another soldier, Person 4 in the north west corner of the compound.

 

He shouted to Mr Roberts-Smith, who told him they had just engaged two Taliban.

 

“KIA (killed in action)?” Person 5 asked.

 

“Yes”, Mr Roberts-Smith replied.

 

Person 5 returned to the meeting and reported the two KIA, he testified. The meeting then resumed to discuss how to destroy the large cache of weapons and ammunition that had been discovered at the compound.

 

Person 4 has refused to answer questions about his action in Whiskey 108 on the grounds of self-incrimination.

 

Another soldier, Person 41, has alleged it was Mr Roberts-Smith who ordered the execution of the Afghan man.

 

In previous evidence for the newspapers, a soldier known as Person 24 told the court that just before the Whiskey 108 mission, he saw Person 5 at SAS headquarters in a jovial mood, “dancing a bit of a jig”.

 

“He said that we are going to ‘blood the rookie’,” Person 24 alleged.

 

However in evidence on Tuesday Person 5 denied he had ever used the term, and had not even heard of it until the newspaper’s allegation.

 

He denied ever saying he was going to ‘blood the rookie’ or that he had ever killed a PUC (person under control) or ordered anyone else to do so.

 

The hearing continues.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/witness-in-ben-robertssmith-defamation-case-denies-blooding-claims/news-story/93cdcdc2ea6eb91d797192cec39bc2a1

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 2:58 a.m. No.16104784   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16092209

Greens’ defence policy ‘insane’

 

JOE KELLY - APRIL 19, 2022

 

Australian Strategic Policy Institute executive director Peter Jennings says the Greens should be given classified briefings on Australia’s national security outlook if the minor party wins the balance of power so it can recalibrate its “insane” defence policy.

 

Mr Jennings said the Greens approach to national security would “effectively turn Australia into a non-aligned neutral (state) with a defence budget about the level of New Zealand’s”.

 

“And that would make us ripe for the picking in terms of China’s attempts to dominate the region and our island neighbours,” he said. “It’s crazy stuff but also dangerous in the sense that if the Greens were controlling the balance of power in parliament somewhat, they would have to be educated about this issue.”

 

He said the party should receive classified briefings because “something would have to be done to try and knock them off this fantasyland approach. Anyone who doesn’t see China as a threat has clearly not been reading the newspapers.”

 

A Labor campaign spokesman told The Australian the ALP respected “the right of the ­people and the government of the Solomons to make sovereign decisions about its security … However, Labor is none the less deeply concerned by the prospect of a new security agreement between the government of Solomon Islands and the People’s Republic of China.

 

“Such an agreement would have serious implications for Australia and our shared region.

 

“Australia should be the partner of choice for our Pacific partners to address shared challenges but the Morrison government’s failure to deliver real climate ­action has undermined this.” He also said “Labor supports AUKUS and recognises the Defence budget will need to grow”.

 

Labor has committed to Defence spending of at least 2 per cent of GDP.

 

Defence Minister Peter Dutton said Australia would need to improve its defence capabilities to meet the threat posed by Beijing.

 

“We’ve got the Greens out today – who if Mr Albanese is to be prime minister would be in government with the Greens – talking about closing down Pine Gap, stripping billions of dollars from the Australian Defence Force,” he said. “It’s dangerous at exactly the wrong time.

 

“As you’ve seen the Greens out today saying that they see no threat from China militarising ports in the Indo-Pacific – I mean we are going to need more surface fleet vessels. We are going to need more submarines. We are going to need more assets in the sky.

 

“There’s more investment that we’re making with industry partners … in drone technology, in autonomous vehicle technology.

 

“All of that is going to be part of the defence picture over the course of the next few years, the next couple of decades as well.”

 

Senator Steele-John told The Australian that Labor and the ­Coalition were “happy to see Australia treated as an American aircraft carrier”, ratcheting up tensions with Beijing. “The Greens absolutely oppose this. We must have an independent foreign and defence policy, which allows us to work with our neighbours to de-escalate,” he said.

 

The senator also said Australia should butt out of the affairs of Pacific states, arguing that they should be free to “defend their territorial boundaries and build relationships” as they saw fit.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/greens-defence-policy-insane/news-story/e8e01fbe99124ca43e0d588f9558f36b

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 3:02 a.m. No.16104788   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4792

>>16047451

US warns that China’s soldiers could be stationed in Solomons

 

Eryk Bagshaw - April 19, 2022

 

The United States has warned Solomon Islands that China’s soldiers could be stationed in the Pacific nation if it signs a security deal with Beijing.

 

In its first public intervention in the geopolitical rift that is dominating the region, Washington urged Solomons to remember that Australia led the multinational peacekeeping force that restored order after riots in Honiara in November and suggested China’s presence would destabilise an already volatile situation.

 

The Biden administration’s Indo-Pacific chief Kurt Campbell flies into Honiara this week to communicate America’s concerns, after protests from Australia and New Zealand to ditch the draft agreement were dismissed by the Solomons’ Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare as “nonsense”.

 

US State Department spokesman Ned Price on Tuesday said that assurances from Sogavare that there would be no Chinese naval bases had not convinced the US that the deal was in the region’s best interests.

 

“Despite the Solomon Islands government’s comments, the broad nature of the security agreement leaves open the door for the deployment of [People’s Republic of China] military forces to the Solomon Islands,” said Price.

 

“We believe that signing such an agreement could increase destabilisation within Solomon Islands and will set a concerning precedent for the wider Pacific Island region.”

 

The Solomons lies less than 2000 kilometres from Australia’s east coast and is on a key shipping route between Australia, New Zealand, Asia and the United States. The country has been beset by poverty, corruption and poor infrastructure, pushing its leaders closer to promises of Chinese investment. Beijing has requested it be allowed to protect those investments by force if necessary through a security agreement in exchange for economic cooperation.

 

Australian officials have been quietly frustrated by the lack of public diplomacy from Washington as they attempted to convince Sogavare to pull out of the deal while respecting Solomons sovereignty. That position came to a head last week when Pacific Minster Zed Seselja explicitly asked Sogavare not to sign the deal in a meeting in Honiara.

 

“Australia will continue supporting peace, prosperity, stability and our shared democratic values in Solomon Islands and across the region,” Seselja said last week.

 

China has been elevated alongside Australia as Solomons’ top strategic partner after the Pacific nation switched its diplomatic allegiance to Beijing from Taiwan three years ago.

 

Price said Campbell intended to “share perspectives, to share interests, to share concerns” while in Honiara but did not say when he would arrive.

 

Campbell, who along with National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan is in charge of China policy in the White House, will also visit Fiji and Papua New Guinea.

 

Australian officials have been specifically concerned about what precedent the Solomons deal could set for PNG, Australia’s closest neighbour and another key target of Chinese investment in the region. PNG Prime Minister James Marape in February signed an agreement with China’s President Xi Jinping at the Winter Olympics that opposed “other countries’ interference in their internal affairs under the pretext of democracy and human rights”.

 

Australia is spending $580 million on upgrading six ports across PNG - including turning one into a regional container hub for the Pacific - in an attempt to counter-bid China’s investment in mining and infrastructure. At the same time, PNG has agreed to supply more LNG to China, hitting some of Australia’s exports to Beijing.

 

Price said Fiji, PNG, and Solomon Islands were important partners to the United States.

 

“It’s precisely why the Secretary met with the Pacific Islands Forum earlier this year when we were in the region,” he said.

 

Price said Campbell would outline what the United States can bring to the region as Washington pushes ahead with plans to establish its first embassy in Honiara.

 

“We’ll leave it to them to contrast what we offer from what other countries, including rather large countries in the region, might offer,” he said.

 

https://www.theage.com.au/world/asia/us-warns-that-china-s-soldiers-could-be-stationed-in-solomons-20220419-p5aeib.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 3:06 a.m. No.16104792   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4804 >>1159 >>1165 >>1180 >>1196 >>1221 >>1259 >>1273 >>9108

>>16047451

>>16104788

China and Solomon Islands sign security pact, Beijing says it is 'not directed at any third party' amid Pacific influence fears

 

abc.net.au - 19 April 2022

 

China and Solomon Islands have signed a framework agreement on security cooperation — a deal Australia, New Zealand and the US fear could open the door to a Chinese naval base in the South Pacific.

 

China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin announced the agreement in Beijing, saying it would involve China cooperating with Honiara on maintaining social order, protecting people's safety, aid, combating natural disasters and helping safeguard national security.

 

Solomon Islands Foreign Affairs Minister Jeremiah Manele confirmed the signing of the pact to the ABC in a text message.

 

He said Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare would make a formal announcement in the coming days.

 

The announcement comes just days after Australia's Minister for the Pacific Zed Seselja travelled to Honiara and met the country's Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare in a last-ditch effort to dissuade him from going ahead with the China security deal.

 

Mr Wang said the cooperation would be transparent and would not target any third party.

 

"The purpose of China-Solomon security cooperation is to promote social stability and long-term peace and security in Solomon Islands, which is in line with the common interests of Solomon Islands and the South Pacific region," he told a briefing on Tuesday.

 

"China-Solomon Islands security cooperation is public, transparent, open and inclusive, not directed at any third party, and is parallel to and complementary to the existing bilateral and multilateral security cooperation mechanisms in Solomon Islands.

 

"China is willing to work with the countries concerned to give full play to their respective advantages and form international synergies."

 

Earlier on Tuesday, the Solomon Islands parliament was told China would send officials to the Pacific nation next month to sign cooperation agreements.

 

"The PRC foreign affairs is heading to Honiara in the middle of May to sign multilateral agreements and cooperations with the Solomon Islands government," Douglas Ete, chairman of the public accounts committee, said.

 

The US said on Monday that a high-level delegation, including White House Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell, would also travel to Honiara to discuss concerns over China, as well as the reopening of a US embassy.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-19/china-and-solomon-islands-sign-security-pact-says-chinese-foreig/101000530

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 19, 2022, 3:13 a.m. No.16104804   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047451

>>16104792

China says it signs security pact with Solomon Islands

 

Kirsty Needham and Martin Quin Pollard - April 19, 2022

 

SYDNEY/BEIJING, April 19 (Reuters) - China said on Tuesday it had signed a security pact with the Solomon Islands, a move set to heighten the concerns of the United States and allies Australia and New Zealand about growing Chinese influence in a region traditionally under their sway.

 

The framework pact was recently signed by State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Manele, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told reporters at a regular briefing in Beijing.

 

He did not give details of where, or precisely when, the signing took place.

 

Canberra is concerned that the pact, details of which have not been made public, could be a step towards a Chinese military presence less than 2,000 km (1,200 miles) from Australia.

 

Earlier on Tuesday the Pacific islands nation was told that China would send officials to the Solomons next month to sign cooperation pacts.

 

Although the Chinese embassy and Solomon Islands officials had previously initialled a security pact that would allow Chinese police to protect infrastructure and social order, ministers had not yet signed it.

 

Last week, Zed Seselja, Australia's minister for international development and the Pacific, visited Honiara to ask Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare not to sign the framework pact.

 

On Monday, the White House said a high-level U.S. delegation including Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell would also travel to Honiara this week to discuss concerns about China, as well as the reopening of a U.S. embassy.

 

"Deliberate attempts to inflate tensions and mobilise rival camps are also doomed to fail," Wang, the Chinese spokesman, said on Tuesday, when asked about the U.S. officials' scheduled visit.

 

Honiara's parliament was told by Douglas Ete, chairman of the public accounts committee and lawmaker for East Honiara, that Chinese foreign ministry officials would arrive next month.

 

"The PRC foreign affairs is heading to Honiara in the middle of May to sign multilateral agreements and cooperations with the Solomon Islands government," he said, referring to China.

 

Ete said the visit meant the two nations would increase cooperation on trade, education and fisheries, but added that he rejected the idea of the Solomons signing a security pact with China to set up a military base.

 

Sogavare told parliament the proposed security agreement would not include a Chinese military base. His office said it could not confirm which Chinese officials would visit Honiara.

 

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/chinese-officials-travel-solomon-islands-sign-agreements-parliament-told-2022-04-19/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 1:37 a.m. No.16111159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1165

>>16047451

>>16104792

Transcript - Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin’s Regular Press Conference on April 19, 2022

 

Xinhua News Agency: It is reported that China and Solomon Islands have officially signed a framework agreement on bilateral security cooperation. Can you offer more information on that?

 

Wang Wenbin: As approved by the governments of China and Solomon Islands, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Minister of Foreign Affairs and External Trade Jeremiah Manele, on behalf of the governments of China and Solomon Islands respectively, officially signed the inter-governmental framework agreement on security cooperation between the two countries the other day. China has shared information on China-Solomon Islands security cooperation on many occasions and I would like to take this opportunity to stress a few points:

 

First, China-Solomon Islands security cooperation is in nature the normal exchange and cooperation between two sovereign and independent countries and an important part of China-Solomon Islands comprehensive cooperation.

 

Second, China-Solomon Islands security cooperation follows the principle of equality and mutual benefit, and is based on respecting the will and actual need of Solomon Islands. The two sides will conduct cooperation in such areas as maintenance of social order, protection of the safety of people’s lives and property, humanitarian assistance and natural disaster response, in an effort to help Solomon Islands strengthen capacity building in safeguarding its own security.

 

Third, China-Solomon Islands security cooperation aims at promoting social stability and long-term tranquility in Solomon Islands, which conforms to the common interests of Solomon Islands and the South Pacific region.

 

Fourth, China-Solomon Islands security cooperation is open, transparent and inclusive, and does not target any third party. It proceeds in parallel and complements Solomon Islands’ existing bilateral and multilateral security cooperation mechanisms. China stands ready to work with relevant countries to leverage respective strengths to form international synergy.

 

https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xwfw_665399/s2510_665401/2511_665403/202204/t20220419_10669768.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 1:40 a.m. No.16111165   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16104792

>>16111159

PICs have the right to independently choose their cooperation partners.

 

SpokespersonCHN发言人办公室

 

Apr 20, 2022

 

The foreign ministers of China and Solomon Islands officially signed the inter-governmental framework agreement on security cooperation between the two countries recently.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nc-qGIEbGG4

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 1:55 a.m. No.16111180   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1181

>>16047451

>>16104792

US’ high-level visit to Solomon Islands aims to nullify China security pact, uses region as hegemonic fulcrum

 

Xu Keyue, Shan Jie and Bai Yunyi - Apr 19, 2022

 

1/2

 

After Australia failed to sway the Solomon Islands to thwart the security agreement with China, senior US officials plan to travel to the country this week in an attempt to nullify the already signed security pact, which will be a rare high-level visit with pressure by the superpower.

 

White House Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell and the State Department's top official for Asia will travel to the Solomon Islands, the White House said on Monday, amid "concerns" that the Pacific island country is making a security pact with China, according to Reuters.

 

Observers pointed out that the "concerns" expressed by the US and Australia over the security pact showed that they use the South Pacific region as an "arena" for competition with China and try to contain China's peaceful development. They predict that the US and Australia may increase military cooperation and civilian investment in the Solomon Islands and other South Pacific countries to counter China's rising influence, but history shows that US promises are often hard to deliver and such cooperation rarely delivers real benefits to ordinary people.

 

Campbell's visit comes after Washington has warned the Solomon Islands several times over the security pact with China, and Australia made several threats under the name of "concern" and sent senior officials to the island nations.

 

Yang Honglian, senior researcher of the Pacific Islands Research Center at the Liaocheng University, based in Fiji, told the Global Times that in the US' and its follower Australia's Cold War mentality, South Pacific countries have always been, and must be, their "backyard."

 

They believe that controlling the island nations through military deployment can maintain their influence in the region, so they speculated China would also take the same step even if China does not have any military activity in the region. They have been hyping a "possibility" and "sense of urgency," trying to guide the local sentiment to be more wary of China, Yang said.

 

China's State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele officially signed a framework agreement on security cooperation between the two countries, the Chinese Foreign Ministry confirmed on Tuesday.

 

"The US Embassy in Solomon Islands has been closed for 29 years. The most recent visit to Fiji made by a US Secretary of State was 37 years ago. Several senior US officials now fancy a visit to some Pacific Island Countries (PICs) all of a sudden after all these years. Are they doing so out of care for PICs or do they have ulterior motives? " asked Wang Wenbin, spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, on Tuesday.

 

"Sensationalizing an atmosphere of tension and stoking bloc confrontation will get no support in the region. Attempts to meddle with and obstruct PICs' cooperation with China will be in vain," Wang noted. Rather than becoming someone's backyard or pawn in a geopolitical confrontation, Pacific island countries need diversified external cooperation and the free choice of their cooperation partners, Wang stressed.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 1:56 a.m. No.16111181   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16111180

 

2/2

 

The signing of the security agreement provoked a hysterical reaction from Washington after it witnessed the inability of Canberra to change the cooperation between China and the Solomon Islands, said Chen Hong, president of the Chinese Association of Australian Studies and director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University.

 

The US and its "agent" in the Asia-Pacific region - Australia - repeatedly put pressure on the Solomon Islands. "This is not only interference in the internal affairs of the Solomon Islands, but also a provocation to China's diplomacy," Chen told the Global Times on Tuesday.

 

The expert noted that Washington sees the South Pacific region as an important "fulcrum" against China as it has sought to further push forward its Indo-Pacific strategy through the region and to put pressure on China over the South China Sea and Taiwan. "But we see that the Solomon Islands has upheld its sovereignty, independence and right to make its own decisions, demonstrating political wisdom and determination. This is why the US now leaves Australia aside and intervened more directly in the region," Chen said.

 

"Australia wants the Solomon Islands to just follow what it says. But it's the US behind all this pushing," Frank Sade Bilaupaine, policy consultant at the Foreign Policy Advisory Secretariat at the Solomon Islands Government, told the Global Times in a previous interview.

 

He pointed out that the security cooperation between China and the Solomon Islands "came about because of the riots in Honiara for the past years and Chinese businesses were always the victim."

 

"So the Solomon Islands government views it as since we have diplomatic relations, maybe China can assist in building the capacity of the Solomon Islands police," he said.

 

As a normal exchange between two independent sovereign states, the security cooperation between China and the Solomon Islands is in the common interest of the Solomon Islands and the South Pacific region, a spokesperson of Chinese Foreign Ministry reiterated.

 

The cooperation is devoted to strengthening the Solomon Islands' capacity to maintain national security, including social order, protection of people's lives and property, humanitarian assistance, and natural disasters response, Wang said.

 

"China has always insisted its eyes are firmly fixed on mutual economic progress - a win-win situation - rather than military contest or a zero-sum game," said George Balau, a local scholar in the Solomon Islands who published an article in the Solomon Star newspaper recently. "In other words, China is asking that Australia and the US set aside their Cold War mentality to prevent unnecessary stand-offs based on assumptions of strategic malevolent calculations."

 

The cooperation is welcomed by the local Chinese community.

 

A Chinese businessman based in Honiara told the Global Times that the Chinese community greatly supports the cooperation on security. He said that the police in the country lack professional training and their equipment is outdated. "We hope their police force can improve after cooperating with China."

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202204/1259769.shtml

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:09 a.m. No.16111196   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1197 >>1259

>>16065990

>>16104792

Morrison defends Payne’s absence from Solomons as ‘strategic decision’

 

Eryk Bagshaw - April 20, 2022

 

Foreign Minister Marise Payne was at a private business dinner in Sydney on the night Pacific Minister Zed Seselja was sent to the Solomon Islands in a failed attempt to stop a landmark security deal with Beijing from being signed.

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said it was a strategic decision to dispatch the junior minister to the Pacific Island nation despite a draft agreement revealing plans that could give the Chinese navy access to a base less than 2000 kilometres off the Australian coast.

 

“The judgement was made not to engage at a Foreign Minister level … to ensure that Australia’s views were communicated very clearly and very respectfully,” Morrison said on Wednesday.

 

“One of the things you have got to be very, very cognisant of is there is a long history of, frankly, countries like Australia and even New Zealand and others coming around and treating Pacific Islands like they should be doing what the big countries should tell them to do.”

 

The deal puts national and regional security at the centre of the Australian federal election campaign. Labor leader Anthony Albanese on Wednesday said it was “one of the greatest policy failures that we’ve seen from this government”. Payne said she was “deeply disappointed” the deal had been signed.

 

The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age have confirmed that Payne was at a private business dinner at PwC Barangaroo on April 12, the night Seselja flew to Honiara. The dinner was not a fundraiser but was attended by business people who donate to the Liberal Party. Payne had earlier that day spoken with US lawmakers Bob Menendez and Lindsey Graham as part of a lobbying push to get the US to take a stronger stance against the Solomons deal.

 

On Tuesday night, when China’s Foreign Ministry announced the deal had been signed, Payne was attending a Liberal Women’s networking forum in South Australia after earlier campaigning in Boothby. During an election campaign, senior ministers have to manage fundraising, campaigning and governing while the government remains in caretaker mode. The Morrison government says it has had more than 100 exchanges with Solomons ministers and Pacific Islands’ forum members since the draft agreement was leaked in March, but that lobbying failed to sway the Solomons government.

 

Albanese said on Wednesday that he would go to Honiara if elected to meet defiant Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare to relay Australia’s concerns. Former foreign minister Julie Bishop said on Wednesday that Payne should be on her way to Honiara. “I believe our foreign minister should be on the next plane to Solomon Islands,” she told Channel 10.

 

The agreement will give Beijing its first major security stake in the Pacific and give it the power to protect its investments in the region.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce said the “pact with China was dual purpose, which means that China is able – if they follow this through – to set up a military base there”.

 

“That is a very bad day for Australia,” he said. “We don’t want our own little Cuba off our coast.”

 

‘Our eyes wide open’

 

Sogavare told parliament in Honiara on Wednesday the deal had been signed to protect critical national infrastructure in the poor and divided country. Chinese armed forces will now be allowed to protect Chinese investments by force if necessary. The deal is the first one of its kind for billions of dollars worth of Chinese investment abroad.

 

“We entered into an arrangement with China with our eyes wide open guided by our national interest,” Sogavare told parliament.

 

Sogavare said he would dispatch foreign minister Jeremiah Manele to countries in the region to allay their fears about a Chinese naval base in the Pacific.

 

The Australian government, which was initially blindsided by the details of the draft agreement, said it had made its concerns clear.

 

“Our consistently stated view, including from the perspective of Australia’s national interests, remains that the Pacific family is best placed to meet the security needs of the region,” Payne and Seselja said in a joint statement.

 

Labor attacks ‘blunder’

 

Albanese used his morning’s campaign press conference in Brisbane to condemn what he described as Australian government inaction.

 

“This deal between China and the Solomons was foreshadowed last August, the government was warned. Yet, only in recent days did the government bother to send a junior person across to the Solomons,” he said.

 

Albanese confirmed he would visit the Solomons if elected. Morrison’s first trip abroad as Prime Minister was to Honiara in 2019. “The problem is those relationships aren’t ones that can be done just during when there’s a crisis,” he said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:10 a.m. No.16111197   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16111196

 

2/2

 

Labor’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Penny Wong said the security agreement was the worst “Australian foreign policy blunder in the Pacific since the end of World War II”.

 

“This is our region, it goes directly to Australia’s national security and [Morrison] should have taken responsibility,” she said.

 

Morrison said the claim that Solomon Islands was somehow under the control of Australia was offensive.

 

“They are a sovereign nation,” he said last week. “I respect their independence, and they will make their own decisions about their own sovereignty.”

 

Solomons says it needs the extra security

 

Sogavare, who is serving as Solomons Prime Minister for the fourth time and survived a no-confidence motion in December, has refused to say when the final text of the deal would be publicly released.

 

His government has denied claims by Solomons Opposition Leader Matthew Wale that China paid MPs $30,000 each to vote against the no-confidence motion.

 

He said extra security was necessary after anti-government riots in 2019 and 2021. “The capital was looted, with properties and lives lost,” he said. “We intend to beef up and strengthen our police capability and capacity to deal with any future instability.”

 

He quoted China’s foreign policy stance as “friends to all, enemies to none”, saying the Solomons was committed to the principle of “non-interference in the domestic affairs of another member state” – a foreign policy mantra inserted by China into its treaties around the world.

 

“The signing of the security co-operation with China is done in the best interest of the country,” Sogavare said. “It both complements original and bilateral peacekeeping arrangements with respect to the original security partners that we collectively trust to maintain peace and stability of the region.”

 

Liberal MP Phillip Thompson, who served with the Australian 1st Battalion in the Pacific, accused Honiara of a cash grab.

 

“We’ve always been the big brother of the Pacific with all Pacific nations. We spent a lot of time in the Pacific, in Tonga, the Solomon Islands. We do a lot as soldiers do, and we help out the communities there,” he told the ABC on Wednesday.

 

“This is what I believe to be a clear kind of money grab from the Solomon Islands.”

 

The draft agreement released last month contained clauses that could allow China to request its navy ships be allowed to dock and refuel less than 2000 kilometres off the Australian coast.

 

A Chinese security presence in the region would drain Australian navy resources and threaten shipping lanes from the east coast of Australia to Asia in the event of a conflict.

 

US slams ‘serious risks’ to the Pacific

 

Sogavare has maintained he would not allow China to establish a navy base in the country, but those assurances have not been enough for the White House. US Indo-Pacific chief Kurt Campbell is due to arrive in Honiara in the next two days. The announcement that the deal has been signed now appears to have scuttled any last-minute push to overturn the agreement.

 

Campbell met on Wednesday in Hawaii with US Navy Admiral John Aquilino and senior officials from Australia, Japan and New Zealand, where officials slammed the pact for “its serious risks to a free and open Indo-Pacific”.

 

His visit was intended to be the final part of a month-long campaign from Australian, US and New Zealand intelligence and national security services to warn Honiara against the deal. Sogavare dismissed the claims as “nonsense”.

 

China’s foreign policy spokesman Wang Wenbin hit back at Campbell’s trip, saying: “We must point out that South Pacific island countries are not a backyard of any country, still less a pawn for geopolitical rivalry.”

 

“Pacific Island countries have the actual need for diversifying their external cooperation and the right to choose their cooperative partners,” he said. “Deliberately hyping up tensions and provoking confrontational blocs wins no support and attempts to obstruct cooperation with China is doomed to fail.”

 

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/albanese-says-he-would-go-to-solomons-as-defiant-pacific-leader-inks-china-deal-20220420-p5aep9.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:19 a.m. No.16111221   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16047451

>>16104792

The China-Solomon Islands security deal is a failure that goes back years

 

Anthony Galloway - April 20, 2022

 

Labor’s Penny Wong was correct when she accused the government of the “worst failure of Australian foreign policy in the Pacific” in almost 80 years, after the Solomon Islands signed a security pact with China.

 

An agreement that could pave the way for Beijing to establish a military presence in a country less than 2000 kilometres from Cairns is a national security failure on Scott Morrison’s watch.

 

A lot of criticism has been levelled at Morrison and Foreign Minister Marise Payne for their apparent inaction. Wong on Wednesday criticised the government for sending Minister for the Pacific Zed Seselja, who she labelled a “junior woodchuck”, to the country last week.

 

Morrison hit back at the criticism, saying sending a high-profile minister such as Payne would not have been appropriate and that “we were very aware of where that agreement was up to”.

 

If we read between the lines, Australia in recent weeks knew the security deal was going to be signed no matter what, and did not want to again look like it had failed despite efforts by Payne or even Morrison.

 

It was only last November when Australia helped keep Solomons Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare in power by sending ADF personnel to quell demonstrations and violent riots. That followed 15 years of Defence presence on the ground to help restore law and order and good governance during the RAMSI mission.

 

Some Australian officials are now asking themselves whether they should have bothered to prop up a corrupt government which has long disliked Canberra and had at the same time been cosying up to Beijing.

 

The Solomons’ decision to sign a pact with China is a failure of Australian soft power that goes back years, starting with Tony Abbott’s cynical and disastrous decision to rip billions of dollars out of foreign aid in 2014.

 

As Australia stepped back, Beijing went on an infrastructure blitz throughout the Pacific.

 

By the time Canberra realised the national security failure on our doorstep in around 2017, it was a case of too little, too late.

 

The multi-billion-dollar Pacific “Step Up”, which includes the $2 billion Australian Infrastructure Financing Facility for the Pacific (AIFFP), has shown dividends. Australia is providing a genuine alternative to funding large infrastructure projects in the region without saddling countries with debt.

 

But just as we were stepping back up in 2019, both the Solomon Islands and Kiribati switched their allegiance from Taiwan to Beijing.

 

Australia’s total diplomatic and development contribution is still significantly lower than similar countries. It sits at about 1.3 per cent of the federal budget, well behind comparable countries such as Canada (1.9 per cent) and the Netherlands (4.3 per cent).

 

The federal government spends 10 times more on defence than it does on foreign aid, compared to a defence-to-aid spending ratio of five-to-one in 2013-14.

 

Morrison deserves credit for his genuine engagement with the Pacific and his government’s commitments under the Step Up program, which includes a multi-billion-dollar undersea cable for the Solomon Islands.

 

But the government was all over the shop in its reaction to the pact. At a press conference on Wednesday, Morrison said it was a “false claim” to suggest the deal would result in a Chinese base being built in the Solomons.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce said just the opposite: “They’ve decided to have a pact with China – dual purpose – which means China is able, if they follow this through, to set up a military base there … That’s a very bad day for Australia. We don’t want our own little Cuba off our coast.”

 

We do need to be careful not to extrapolate too much from the security deal when assessing the rest of the region. Nearly all Pacific island nations are just as alarmed as Australia over the news.

 

Morrison on Wednesday suggested other Pacific island nations were facing the same level of coercion from China but had not yielded.

 

“Do you think there’s not the same pressure going on in Papua New Guinea that there is in the Solomon Islands? Of course there is. You don’t think the same pressure is … in Fiji or Samoa?”

 

Let’s hope Morrison is right, and the Solomons is an outlier.

 

https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/the-china-solomon-islands-security-deal-is-a-failure-that-goes-back-years-20220420-p5aeqr.html

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:42 a.m. No.16111259   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1262

>>16104792

>>16111196

Scott Morrison pushes back on claims the government bungled security relationship with Solomon Islands

 

Matthew Doran and Stephen Dziedzic - 20 April 2022

 

1/2

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has rejected accusations that the Coalition has bungled a key security relationship, after Solomon Islands shrugged off warnings from Australia and signed a new pact with China.

 

The controversial deal has been the subject of significant debate in recent weeks, amid fears it could allow China to establish a military presence in the South Pacific.

 

Labor has called the handling of the issue the greatest Australian foreign policy blunder in the Pacific since World War II, and questioned why the government sent Pacific Minister Zed Seselja instead of Foreign Minister Marise Payne to Honiara after a draft of the pact leaked.

 

Senator Seselja was sent to Solomon Islands last week in a last-ditch effort to convince the government in Honiara to walk away from the deal, a trip now shown to have been fruitless.

 

Shadow Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Mr Morrison had ignored warnings about the deal last year, and should have personally intervened to ensure it was never signed.

 

"Securing our region at this time is such an imperative for any government that this should have been something that Mr Morrison dealt with — but he went missing," Senator Wong said.

 

"I think what this still signifies is that Australia is no longer, for … Solomon Islands, the nation to whom they turn to meet their challenges in every instance.

 

"And, instead of taking responsibility and dealing with this as a leader should, in the interests of the nation, he sends a junior woodchuck at the last minute."

 

But Mr Morrison told reporters in Adelaide he made a deliberate decision to send Senator Seselja because it would be counter-productive to publicly heap pressure on Solomon Islands over the agreement.

 

"The Foreign Minister is a different level to the Minister of Pacific. One is in cabinet, one is not. You calibrate your diplomacy to deal with sensitive issues," he said.

 

"In the Pacific, one of the things you [have] got to be very, very cognisant of is there is a long history of frankly countries like Australia and even New Zealand and others coming around and treating Pacific Islands like they should be doing what the big countries tell them to do.

 

"I'm not going to act like former administrations that treated the Pacific like some extension of Australia. The Pacific Islands are very sensitive to that and I have always had an approach with the Pacific Islands which understands those sensitivities because there is a lot at stake."

 

The Prime Minister also said the whole region had been facing "intense" approaches from China, saying Beijing made "all sorts of promises" and "all sorts of investments" in the Pacific which could be "very persuasive".

 

"That is the challenge that we're now dealing with and we have been dealing with it for many years. It is not a new issue and these threats still remain" he said.

 

"I speak to other Pacific leaders about it all the time and … you can't always be fully persuasive on these issues.

 

"What I assure them about is that Australia will be there for you as we always are, not because we want anything from you, but because we see the Pacific as our family."

 

Australia, New Zealand and the United States have all expressed concern about the precedent the situation could set for other small Pacific nations.

 

Australia's spy chiefs were also sent to Honiara to ventilate Australia's concerns about the pact.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:44 a.m. No.16111262   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16111259

 

2/2

 

Solomon Islands PM speaks in parliament

 

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare took to the floor of parliament this morning to defend the pact, declaring that his government went into the agreement with its "eyes wide open".

 

Mr Sogavare also suggested the agreement would help bolster the police force in Solomon Islands, which has already received riot gear and replica guns from Chinese police.

 

"We intend to beef up and strengthen our police capability to deal with any future instability by properly equipping the police to take full responsibility of the country's security responsibilities, in the hope we will never be required to invoke any of our bilateral security arrangements," he said.

 

When asked if he'd be willing to release the full text of the agreement he gave an ambiguous response, saying it was the "way to go" but also saying he had to consult with China before making a decision.

 

Beijing typically does not release the text of its bilateral security agreements with other countries.

 

In a statement, Adrienne Watson, a spokesperson for the US National Security Council, said the US convened a meeting with senior officials from Australia, Japan and New Zealand.

 

"The officials reaffirmed the four countries' enduring and shared commitment to the Pacific Islands," she said.

 

"The United States resolved to intensify its engagement in the region to meet 21st-century challenges.

 

"Officials from the four countries represented also shared concerns about a proposed security framework between the Solomon Islands and the People's Republic of China and its serious risks to a free and open Indo-Pacific."

 

'Pacific family' best placed for security

 

Foreign Minister Marise Payne rejected Senator Wong's assessment that inaction by the Morrison government had fuelled the situation.

 

"I think that's an unfair characterisation, and I don't think it recognises the sovereign decisions that governments, of course, make for themselves," she said.

 

"We are looking at very serious geo-strategic challenges in our region, and they are realities."

 

Senator Payne insisted that Australia still played a significant role in the South Pacific.

 

"We firmly believe that the Pacific family is best placed to meet the security needs of our region — and we've consistently said that and, more importantly, we've consistently demonstrated that," Senator Payne said.

 

However, she argued, the governments in Honiara and Beijing needed to provide more detail about exactly what the security deal would allow for.

 

"In relation to this agreement, we see a lack of transparency" she said.

 

"This has not been agreed in an open and transparent way, not been consulted, for example, across the region."

 

Top US official Kurt Campbell is slated to visit Solomon Islands later this week, as the United States warned of the "concerning precedent" the security deal set.

 

Senator Payne said she was pleased the trip was going ahead, but avoided speculation about whether the deal could be undone.

 

"That's a matter for the parties," she said.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-20/solomon-islands-china-pact-failure-foreign-policy-labor/101000878

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:54 a.m. No.16111273   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1274

>>16047451

>>16104792

Time for the US to Step Up in Solomon Islands

 

Washington must start to shape its own policy on the Solomons, otherwise Campbell’s trip is a fool’s errand.

 

Anne-Marie Brady - April 19, 2022

 

1/2

 

The U.S. National Security Council’s Indo-Pacific coordinator, Kurt Campbell, will visit Solomon Islands this week, in a last-ditch effort to prevent the Sogavare government’s new security agreement with China, which could lead to the People’s Liberation Army’s first base in the Pacific Islands. The agreement has been initialed, and is only waiting for the Solomon and Chinese foreign ministers to sign for it to take effect.

 

(Update: Shortly after this article was published, China made the announcement that the deal had been signed by both foreign ministers.)

 

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/chinese-officials-travel-solomon-islands-sign-agreements-parliament-told-2022-04-19/

 

In January 2022, Campbell told a panel discussion that the South Pacific was the region where he most expected to see some kind of strategic surprise, whether a base or a security agreement. Campbell wasn’t as prescient as you might think; both the Australian and New Zealand governments have been raising this fear for the last few years. In August 2021, Matthew Wale, leader of the opposition in the Solomon Islands, even warned Australia of specific plans underway.

 

Yet even this level of information was not heeded. That’s because U.S. policy on the Solomons and the wider Southwest Pacific region has a fatal flaw. Distracted by other global challenges, the U.S. government has outsourced its regional policymaking to Australia. And Australia’s approach, which concentrates power on the Solomons’ central government, has been a contributing factor in this looming geopolitical disaster. It’s time for the United States to shape its own policy on Solomon Islands, otherwise Campbell’s trip is a fool’s errand.

 

There are a number of new policy approaches Washington could try in dealing with the Solomon Islands. First of all, Campbell can call Sogavare’s bluff that the security agreement with China is aimed at diversifying the Solomons’ security relations, and offer a U.S.-Solomon Islands security agreement. Sogavare has said he is seeking security agreements with Fiji and Papua New Guinea (PNG), in addition to an existing one with Australia. Honiara is well on the way to becoming the Djibouti of the Pacific.

 

It’s for this very reason that Pacific leaders are quietly horrified by Sogavare’s agreement with China. They say they felt “blindsided” by his secret deal. It has dragged Solomon Islands and the Pacific into the China-U.S. military rivalry, in the same way it was once the site for crucial Japan-U.S. battles in World War II. Governments may change, but geography does not. The Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Palau, Tonga, and PNG have all publicly raised concerns with Sogavare, so far to no avail.

 

Under the new agreement, China can send military personnel, intelligence and information support, police, and other armed personnel to the Solomons. Yet Solomon Islands faces no external security threat that justifies this level of military and intelligence presence. Sogavare wants the PLA and Chinese police forces on hand to suppress his domestic rivals. The China-Solomons security agreement thus poses a great risk to Solomon Islands’ fragile, but vibrant democracy.

 

For this reason, Campbell should be sure to meet with opposition MPs during his stay in Honiara. This is quite usual for visiting dignitaries arriving in a democracy. Solomon Islands is soon to hold a national election. Sogavare is deeply unpopular, and the United States must make sure it is on good terms with all political forces in the Solomons.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 2:55 a.m. No.16111274   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16111273

 

2/2

 

The U.S. has been absent from Solomon Islands for a long time and needs to speed up setting up an embassy and sending an ambassador. It currently only has a tiny consular office, in a humble building on the Honiara waterfront. China, in contrast has an unusually large three-story building for its Honiara embassy, which will have plenty of room for the police, intelligence, and military personnel who are set to arrive soon. Sogavare will thus be able to maintain his fiction that China will not set up a base in the Solomons.

 

Campbell can use his trip to announce a number of long-overdue deliverables. He should offer immediate clearance of remaining Remnants of War (ERW) and Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) from the battle fields, particularly on Guadalcanal and the Russell Islands. He should offer U.S. maritime support to protect the Solomons from illegal fishing, much of which is done by Chinese fishing boats.

 

The U.S. has so far made a modest $25 million contribution in the Strengthening Competitiveness, Agriculture, Livelihoods and Environment (SCALE) Project, part of the Indo-Pacific $200 million Pacific Pledge. Campbell could use the model of the USAID SCALE program at Malaita to expand further infrastructure projects in Solomon Islands. There are shovel-ready projects waiting to go. Sogavare has been accused of holding back aid to the regions as a means to control his political rivals.

 

Solomon Islands desperately needs investment in infrastructure. It was the Chinese government’s promise that it would offer this assistance to the Solomons – locally rumored to be as much as $500 million – that helped swing the country’s sudden change of recognition to Beijing from Taipei in 2019. Unlike the U.S. and other Western donors, however, China’s infrastructure assistance is offered in the form of loans, which will add to Solomon Islands’ existing indebtedness.

 

So far none of these infrastructure projects have been started. Instead, China was awarded the contract to a Chinese state-owned enterprise to build a white elephant $74 million sports stadium, so the Solomons can host the 2023 Pacific Games. The jobs for this project have gone to Chinese nationals.

 

The United States needs to step up in the Solomons, and there is little time left to do so. Campbell has made it clear he understands the security threat to the region. Now is the time to use military-level funding and assistance to counter China’s aggressive moves.

 

Anne-Marie Brady is a Global Fellow at the Wilson Center and professor in politics at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, Aotearoa New Zealand. Follow her on Twitter @Anne-MarieBrady.

 

https://thediplomat.com/2022/04/time-for-the-us-to-step-up-in-solomon-islands/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 3:07 a.m. No.16111287   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1294

>>16047076

Change of government would present ‘great opportunity’ in fight to free Julian Assange, his father says

 

John Shipton, father of the WikiLeaks founder, says ‘of course things would change’ if Labor were elected in May

 

Caitlin Cassidy - 20 Apr 2022

 

The father of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has touted the possible election of a Labor government as a “great opportunity” for the movement to free the WikiLeaks founder from imprisonment.

 

Speaking at a Sydney Q&A screening of documentary Ithaka, which documents his efforts to free Assange, John Shipton said a groundswell of parliamentarian support was growing for his son’s plight and he was buoyed up by the prospect of an incoming Labor government.

 

“Of course things would change [if Labor were elected] … this is a great opportunity for us,” he said.

 

“A fresh parliament has a lot of room to move … I speak to many of them. They don’t want this hanging around their neck like an albatross.”

 

Shipton said he had had several lunches with Anthony Albanese, and had been assured the opposition leader would do “whatever he can” to free his son and “enough’s enough”.

 

The 76-year-old said when he began advocating for Assange in 2019, two parliamentarians supported him – independent MP Andrew Wilkie and Greens senator for Tasmania Peter Whish-Wilson.

 

“Now there are 29 and peripherally, there are other supporters,” he said.

 

“The deputy prime minister while in the US … said publicly … that Julian ought to be charged if he’s done anything in the UK … other than that, send him home.

 

“There’s a core in the Labor party, there’s a core in the National party, the Greens are all supporting [Julian] … it’s a popular concern and parliamentarians recognise that.”

 

In December, Liberal backbenchers Jason Falinski and Bridget Archer called for diplomatic action to secure Assange’s return to Australia after Barnaby Joyce said it was unfair the US wanted to extradite him to face prosecution over actions allegedly not committed inside the US.

 

There are currently 25 members of the Assange parliamentary group, including nine Greens, eight Labor, four independents or crossbench and four from the Coalition: Joyce, Bridget Arthur, Jason Falinski and Nationals MP George Christensen.

 

Appearing alongside Assange’s brother and producer of Ithaka, Gabriel Shipton, and director, Ben Lawrence, Shipton said the Australian government had “no leverage” on an international scale while Assange remained imprisoned.

 

“They want to be able to say to people when they travel overseas that they look after Australians, they repaired the problems of Julian Assange’s persecution,” he said.

 

“He’s morally destroyed, physically destroyed … the continuation of policy which might merely be acquiescence over the unfolding of time becomes complicit. It’s inescapable, and cruel, and demotes ourselves, but we can fix it.”

 

Filmed across the UK, Europe and the US, Ithaka follows the two-year struggle of John Shipton, a retired builder, and Assange’s wife, Stella Moris, to free Assange from US government efforts to try him in connection with WikiLeaks’ publication of hundreds of thousands of leaked documents about the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, as well as diplomatic cables.

 

Shipton began seriously advocating for Assange at 73 years of age, after expressing initial unease at interacting with the media. He has a well-documented, complicated relationship with his son, absent from Assange’s life after the age of three and reconnecting with him in his 20s.

 

Ithaka – the name of the film – comes from the title of Greek poet C.P. Cavafy’s epic poem which evokes the first step of a meaningful, lifelong journey.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/apr/20/change-of-government-would-present-great-opportunity-in-fight-to-free-julian-assange-his-father-says

 

https://documentaryaustralia.com.au/project/ithaka/

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 3:12 a.m. No.16111294   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16111287

UK judge to rule on Assange extradition

 

Sky News Australia

 

Apr 20, 2022

 

A UK judge will rule tonight on whether WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should be extradited to the United States.

 

Mr Assange faces the possibility of life behind bars if convicted.

 

The magistrate's decision is expected around 6:30pm, Australian Eastern time.

 

It will then go to the UK Home Secretary to make an ultimate ruling - Assange's legal team still has several avenues of appeal.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzbAz9OBD7Y

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 20, 2022, 3:34 a.m. No.16111343   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16066080

Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post

 

20 April 2022

 

It was an honor to host the Commandant and Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps here in Darwin, alongside our Australian allies.

 

#mrfd

#usmc

#ADF

 

https://www.facebook.com/MRFDarwin/posts/349701110525712

 

 

MRF-D and the Australian 1st Brigade Welcomes the Commandant of the Marine Corps

 

Capt. Joseph DiPietro - 04.15.2022

 

DARWIN, AUSTRALIA. – General David Berger, Commandant of the Marine Corps, visited with Marines and Sailors of the Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D), and Soldiers of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) on April 14.

 

During the visit, General Berger spoke of the trust built between United States Marines and Australian forces, who served alongside one another during times of peace, crisis, and conflict for over a century. He also reminded the Marines and Sailors with MRF-D of their great responsibility to continue to enhance U.S. and Australian interoperability, while standing ready to respond to crisis quickly, should the need arise.

 

General Berger visited Darwin following strategic engagements in the Australian capital of Canberra. The 38th Commandant met with senior Australian military leaders and participated in a round table with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. The events in Canberra reinforced the strength of the U.S.-Australian alliance and highlighted the commitment of both the United States and Australia to securing the Indo-Pacific through integrated deterrence.

 

“The interoperability we develop here is paramount to the security of this region,” said Sergeant Major Troy Black, the 19th Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps, while leading a town hall for MRF-D Marines and ADF Soldiers to interact with the Commandant.

 

During their visit, General Berger and Sergeant Major Black met with MRF-D Marines and Soldiers from 1st Brigade, discussing shared challenges and objectives.

 

“I want you to be innovative,” said General Berger during the discussion. “We need your creativity to stay ahead of our competition.”

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/418651/mrf-d-and-australian-1st-brigade-welcomes-commandant-marine-corps

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 21, 2022, 1:36 a.m. No.16119108   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9127

>>16047451

>>16104792

Solomon Islands MP defends military pact with China by comparing it to secretive Pine Gap facility in NT

 

Stephen Dziedzic and Andrew Greene - 21 April 2022

 

A key Solomon Islands politician has likened his country's secretive military pact with China to the mysterious Pine Gap installation jointly operated by the United States and Australia.

 

Danny Philip, a former Solomon Islands prime minister and confidante of current leader Manasseh Sogavare, staunchly defended the yet-to-be-published agreement with Beijing, arguing public approval for the document was not needed.

 

He also confirmed that the final text of the deal signed with China was "very close" to the wide-ranging leaked draft which stoked deep alarm in both Canberra and Washington.

 

This week's revelation that China and Solomon Islands had finally signed the pact has caused a political storm in Australia, with Labor accusing the Prime Minister of presiding over the biggest Australian foreign policy failure in the Pacific since World War II.

 

"The agreement was signed and drawn up very much for the eyes of the government, an executive decision," Mr Philip declared during an online seminar hosted on Thursday.

 

"In matters of national security there are some things which do not need to … have the whole country's legitimacy, in terms of national security," he told the event, hosted by the University of Hawaii.

 

Defending his government's lack of transparency on the Chinese deal, Mr Philip compared the arrangement to the highly secretive Pine Gap American satellite surveillance base hosted just outside Alice Springs in the Northern Territory.

 

"People in Australia know very little about Pine Gap in the middle of the desert, the military base of the United States.

 

"There are agreements that open up all major ports in Australia that are not being seen by all the citizens of that country."

 

The comments by a powerful government MP and former leader will solidify anxieties in the Australian government, which fears vague and broadly-worded language in the security agreement could pave the way for a Chinese military presence in Solomon Islands.

 

According to a draft of the deal leaked last month, Beijing would be able to send military forces to Solomon Islands to protect Chinese-built infrastructure, as well as "make ship visits, carry out logistical replenishment in and have stopover and transition in Solomon Islands".

 

Mr Philip also repeated the claim that Australian forces had refused to guard Chinese infrastructure during the riots which exploded in November last year in Honiara.

 

Australian officials have furiously denied that assertion in the past, pointing out that Australian police and ADF personnel had been sent to the Solomons as part of a broader regional security force under the command of the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force.

 

"A very senior diplomat from the Australian High Commission said very plainly to us that their presence here is not to protect any Chinese interests," Mr Philip said.

 

"As a government we know it was said to us in no certain terms that they are here not to protect Chinese investments [or] Chinese infrastructure.

 

"So that gives rise to other considerations in the mind of the Solomon Islands government to get the Chinese police to come in to train our own police."

 

When pressed whether the agreement was then chiefly to protect Chinese investments in the country more than protecting Solomon Islands citizens, Mr Philip said it was for "both".

 

"It is both for our own security as a country internally but also for the interests of Chinese investments and infrastructure."

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-21/china-solomon-islands-agreement-australia/101005022

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 21, 2022, 1:46 a.m. No.16119127   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9130

>>16047451

>>16119108

China's security pact with Solomon Islands signals a new era in the South Pacific for Australia and its allies

 

Bill Birtles - 21 April 2022

 

1/2

 

For a nation that still officially, at least, preaches non-interference, China's signing of a pact with a small faraway country to supposedly help maintain domestic stability in Solomon Islands is a very curious deal.

 

Beijing's public assurances that the agreement isn't aimed at any third country, along with Solomons' Prime Minister Mannasseh Sogavare's statement that it won't involve a Chinese military base, are little comfort to Australia, as the details remain secret.

 

China has never done a deal like this with a South Pacific country, but another secretive agreement last year to upgrade an airstrip in Kiribati hints at the strategic intent behind it.

 

Beijing has done two other security-focused deals in different parts of the world, one that resulted in China's first overseas military base, in Djibouti.

 

The benefits of playing off larger powers against each other for economic and domestic security gains are obvious for Honiara.

 

But the question "what's in it for Beijing?" is prompting deep anxiety as Beijing's rivalry with Australia's chief ally, the United States, intensifies.

 

The text of the draft agreement answered that question.

 

The 'invitation' clause in the deal

 

The draft deal, leaked in late March, would have set a legal framework for Chinese naval ships to dock and be replenished in Solomon Islands.

 

Chinese police and military personnel could be invited by Solomon Islands to protect security, including China's economic interests.

 

Has that language been watered down in the signed, final agreement to appease Australia's fears of a People's Liberation Army Navy presence 2,000 kilometres to the north-east?

 

We don't know.

 

Beijing, it appears, more so than Mr Sogavare's government, is keeping it secret.

 

"Non-interference is a general principle," said Shi Yinhong, an international relations analyst at Beijing's Renmin University.

 

"But it doesn't preclude China from doing anything if it's at the invitation of the local sovereign government."

 

Solomon Islands is a sovereign nation, but a small and relatively impoverished one that's just done a deal with a giant.

 

With just 700,000 people and an annual GDP of $US1.5 billion, the long-term fear is that the current or future governments of the country might, in the face of economic pressure, cede the power to offer "invitations" to China itself.

 

"I think China is very good at picking soft targets," said Kuo Yujen of Taiwan's National Sun Yat-sen University.

 

He believes the security pact is undoubtedly aimed at securing a "military-civilian harbour" for China, while the secretive deal last year to upgrade an airstrip in Kiribati, south of Hawaii, aims to put China in prime position to monitor America's Pacific naval activity.

 

"I believe in the very near future we will witness the Chinese PLA Navy having very frequent voyages all the way to the South Pacific, and then having logistics and access bases in the surrounding waters," he told the ABC.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 0bac59 April 21, 2022, 1:47 a.m. No.16119130   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16119127

 

2/2

 

China's unprecedented build-up around the globe

 

A common theme among security analysts is that we're going to have to get used to Chinese warships patrolling what was long viewed by Australians as "our patch".

 

China's military is building naval ships at unprecedented speed for peacetime.

 

It's all part of President Xi Jinping's "great rejuvenation" goal to restore China as a leading — if not the leading — power on Earth.

 

Already the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) has surpassed the US for the largest fleet in the world.

 

A US Congressional Research Service report last month estimated China now has 355 battle-force "platforms" including aircraft carriers, surface combat ships, submarines and mine-warfare ships.

 

The speed of ship-building goes well beyond the needs of China's immediate coastal areas and its various territorial disputes.

 

"The PLAN's overall battle force is expected to grow to 420 ships by 2025 and 460 ships by 2030," the report said, noting America's deployment of greater resources to the Pacific in response.

 

A military base established in the Horn of Africa in 2016, officially to help anti-piracy operations, broke Beijing's long-held aversion to bases on foreign soil.

 

"Non-interference" remained China's mantra, a contrast to America's foreign policy.

 

But it was now "non-interference by invitation".

 

Another deal with Cambodia in 2019 to give China's military access to a Gulf of Tonkin naval facility, despite official denials, further set the direction.

 

A rough few weeks for American efforts to counter China

 

US dominance has long relied on bases and military access agreements abroad, so it's little surprise that China now appears to be using a similar playbook.

 

The change has been accompanied by increasing official rhetoric about the need to protect China's economic and infrastructure interests abroad.

 

Chinese leader Xi Jinping's Cold War-style obsession with the United States is feeding into the timing of the Solomons deal.

 

With Xi's officials and state media now blaming the US for everything from Russia's war In Ukraine to the origins of the coronavirus, it appears Beijing announced the security pact this week to pre-empt a visit to Honiara by the Biden administration's Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell.

 

Just three weeks ago, Xi's military signed yet another secretive army agreement with Cambodia, despite American efforts to persuade Cambodia's government against it.

 

While America's military is locking in more closely with Australia through deals like AUKUS, it's been a rough few weeks for Washington's efforts to counter China's growing sway.

 

But the contest for power and influence between the two giants is still only warming up, and none of Australia's South Pacific neighbours can avoid being swept up in it.

 

The Solomons deal might be the wake-up call Australians need to understand how fast the region is changing.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-21/china-in-the-solomon-islands-as-it-expands-into-south-pacific/101001458