Northern Australia needs sustained political commitment

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has made unprecedented financial and representative commitments to the Northern Territory, including the recent appointment of member of federal parliament Luke Gosling as special envoy for Northern Australia. This signals a strong intention to address the region’s unique challenges and opportunities.

Financial investment is not a panacea for the north: government funding must be strategically geared towards areas of genuine need. It is therefore crucial to establish sustained political commitment to the region, with shared priorities at the state, territory and federal government levels. This may be a formidable challenge, especially if  the three elections due to be held over the coming months bring changes in government.

The Albanese government’s commitment to the Northern Territory is exemplified in housing policy—a critical enabler for workforce expansion, skilled immigration and economic growth. In March, during his ninth visit to the Northern Territory as prime minister, Albanese committed $4 billion in joint territory and federal government funding to build 2700 homes in remote communities over 10 years.

The federal government also pledged a further $737 million for the Northern Territory’s public school system, with the aim of reaching 100 percent of the Schooling Resource Standard by 2029.

Successfully negotiating these funding packages is a significant achievement for Chief Minister Eva Lawler and her government, regardless of the outcome of the Northern Territory election on 24 August. Such strategic investments lay strong foundations for the territory’s future, addressing critical needs and promoting long-term growth. Irrespective of political alignment, the incoming government must build on Lawler’s successful negotiations and execute policies that will leverage these new investments.

However, funding alone is not enough. Investments in housing projects must be combined with a skilled workforce and a strong construction sector. Since Covid, Australia’s construction industry has experienced significant disruptions and surging business failures. More than 2000 construction companies have gone into liquidation since mid-2021, according to ASIC data. Rising material costs, supply chain issues and labour shortages have been the main reasons. The effect is compounded in regional areas with smaller workforces, as shortages pose a direct threat to the delivery of critical infrastructure, including housing. The next Northern Territory government will need bold new policies to complement funding and achieve tangible outcomes.

As Australia heads toward a federal election by May 2025, it is imperative that the government remains committed to current strategic investments and policies. Achieving tangible outcomes in the Northern Territory, and more broadly across northern Australia, demands bold new policies supported by strong federal government action and aligned investment. Whether these will be delivered in the upcoming Northern Australia White Paper Refresh is yet to be seen. This refresh will be a critical test of the government’s commitment to addressing the unique challenges and opportunities of the north, and it is vital for the sustained development of northern Australia, which is in the broader national interest.

As explored in my previous article, we are still far from reaching true representation for the region. Bipartisan support is needed for nuanced, tailored policies with a stronger emphasis on advocacy and representation for northern Australia. Representation must shift from an ad-hoc model to a permanent one, to ensure the north’s relevance is reflected in the federal agenda.

The recent appointment of Gosling as the Special Envoy for Defence, Veterans’ Affairs and Northern Australia signals the government’s recognition of the region’s importance. The role will help drive meaningful progress, but it also comes with substantial challenges. Gosling must balance the needs of northern Australia with those of defence and veterans’ affairs, which requires careful prioritisation and strategic thinking.

Nevertheless, Gosling is a well-considered choice, given his extensive background in, and deep connections to, northern Australia. He lives there, so he has first-hand knowledge of the region’s challenges and opportunities. His Bahasa Indonesian language skills and professional experience in Southeast Asia also mean he is well placed to represent the north in discussions with our closest international neighbours.

One of the most pressing challenges that Gosling faces is securing bipartisan support for the region’s initiatives. Federally, the Joint Select Committee on Northern Australia is an ideal mechanism for this. Gosling should advocate for the establishment of a standing committee to ensure sustained focus and accountability.

Collaboration with the first ministers of northern jurisdictions will also be essential in aligning state and federal efforts. The upcoming elections for the Northern Territory, Queensland and federal governments provide an opportunity for establishing meaningful collaboration. Incoming governments at each level must set new policy agendas for the north that can be shaped under Gosling’s leadership.

Working directly with Albanese and Minister for Northern Australia Madeleine King, Gosling is uniquely positioned to drive substantial impact. But his leadership will depend on his ability to navigate the complexities of both federal and regional politics, and to push for meaningful governance reforms that are long overdue.

All eyes will be on how Gosling steers his vital role. By leveraging his diplomatic skills, he could bridge political divides and enact real change in how northern Australia is governed. Bold and visionary leadership could transform long-standing aspirations into tangible outcomes. Peter Dutton and the Liberal National Party will also be closely watched, as their views and actions will be instrumental in shaping the bipartisan support necessary to build a bright future for northern Australia.

France’s underappreciated air power in the Indo-Pacific

France’s underappreciated air presence in the Indo-Pacific underscores its long-term commitment to regional partnerships, especially with Australia. It improves regional security and offers an opportunity for more cooperation with Australia.

Few people in the Indo-Pacific, even those who are concerned with strategic affairs, would know that the French Air and Space Force (Armee de l’Air et de l’Espace) has five bases in the region. (See the graphic.) The bases and the crews and aircraft on them operate surveillance missions and stand ready to help in disaster relief.

Priorities for the air and space force in French overseas territories, such as those in the Indian and Pacific oceans, include protection of French territories, intervention during crisis and support to international coalitions, according to the Military Programming Act for 2024 to 2030.

France has not just a persistent air presence in the Indo-Pacific but can reinforce it rapidly from Europe using its own bases and those of partners with which it trains in interoperability.

In the Indian Ocean, the air and space force’s westernmost base is in Djibouti: Air Base 188 (Base aerienne 188, or  BA 188). Then there are other bases in the United Arab Emirates (BA 104)  and Reunion Island (BA 181). The three facilities, especially the first two, establish a deterrent presence focused on the Middle East, and they support operational continuity from Europe to the Indian Ocean. They also facilitate joint exercises, such as Garuda, undertaken with India, which enhance interoperability.

In the Pacific Ocean, France’s air presence is anchored in New Caledonia (BA 186) and Tahiti (Detachement Air 190, or Air Detachment 190). These facilities can host Rafale fighters and A400M airlifters from Europe, which can be deployed to strengthen work with partners through exercises such as ARC21 with Japan and the United States.

The bases at Reunion, New Caledonia and Tahiti host surveillance and transport aircraft and helicopters. These bases ensure a permanent air presence with aircraft and helicopters dedicated to search and rescue, maritime surveillance and disaster relief operations. With its bases, aircraft, and personnel, France is well positioned to respond alongside its international partners and contribute to peace in the Indo-Pacific.

French air units assist civilians during humanitarian operations in the Pacific, with the best example being support following Cyclone Kevin, which hit Vanuatu in 2023. The air and space force, combined with maritime assets, sends rescue teams and equipment to the region from the African coast and across the Pacific. France also conducts Indo-Pacific humanitarian-assistance exercises, such as Croix du Sud (Southern Cross), Equateur and Marara.

Australia would benefit from developing a much stronger partnership with the French Air and Space Force. France does not consider itself a merely visiting partner to the Indo-Pacific. In fact, it seeks to become a more influential player, promoting stability through active engagement and a commitment to regional security. Moreover, it sees Australia as one of its main Indo-Pacific partners.

Australia already cooperates with France in Indo-Pacific surveillance, and France participates in such Australian exercises as the biennial Pitch Black. Deeper cooperation would benefit both countries and the region generally. Moreover, France’s air presence in the Indo-Pacific offers a unique opportunity for the Australian Defence Force to work locally with a NATO member other than the United States.

Also France is the only European Union member to maintain a permanent military air presence in the Indo-Pacific.

Its air presence plays an important role in the region. By keeping air power there and demonstrating a capacity for rapid reinforcement from Europe, France emphasises its long-term commitment to stability in the Indo-Pacific.

Beyond words: Australia must act to protect civilians in Gaza and Lebanon

As regional tensions escalate threats to civilians across the Middle East, our leaders need to take concrete steps to prevent further civilian harm.

Those steps should include an immediate embargo on arms and arms components destined for Israel, an affirmation of the existence of the Palestinian state, and expanding targeted sanctions to include Israeli leaders who are responsible and who call for continued unrestricted warfare in Gaza.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese affirmed last month, alongside his counterparts from Canada and New Zealand, that ‘the situation in Gaza is catastrophic. The human suffering is unacceptable. It cannot continue.’ Many Australians agree, watching in horror over the past 10 months as attacks in Gaza continue to intensify: so-called ‘safe zones’ are declared and then revoked amid a persistent looming threat of famine, and a record number of aid workers have been killed, including Australian Zomi Frankcom.

Across Australia, people continue to take to streets, harbours and university campuses to demand an end to civilian suffering. As regional tensions escalate, prompting urgent calls for Australians to leave Lebanon, people are asking, ‘How is this still happening? Are we really doing enough to make it stop?’

As protection practitioners, we know that statements condemning civilian harm are necessary, as illustrated in the outpouring of condemnation following the 7 October Hamas attack on Israel last year. Calling out civilian harm and reminding all parties to the war, including Israel, of their legal obligation to spare civilians during hostilities are critical elements of the political pressure that must continue to be exerted. Yet words are not enough. Australia’s efforts to use its leverage to mitigate the escalating violence that is now extending to Lebanon must include timely and concrete actions.

Our allies know that, and we need to follow suit. In the wake of the landmark ICJ advisory opinion that found Israel’s occupation and annexation of the Palestinian territories to be unlawful, many countries have already taken concrete steps to prevent further violations of international law. Beyond upholding our international legal obligations, concrete action is essential to exert the necessary pressure for a lasting ceasefire and to de-escalate tensions that are threatening civilians across the region.

Those steps follow earlier actions taken by a host of countries, including South Africa, which led a coalition of states to bring a case against Israel to the ICJ, and such EU states as Norway, Ireland, Spain and Slovenia, all of which have recognised Palestine as a state. The new British Labour government is reported to be reviewing arms export licences to Israel, following Canada and the Netherlands, which have stopped shipments of weapons.

Australia can and should take stronger action to protect civilians in Gaza, Lebanon and the wider region, putting practical action behind Albanese’s affirmation that ‘The protection of civilians is paramount and a requirement under international humanitarian law. Palestinian civilians cannot be made to pay the price of defeating Hamas. It must end.’ This has only become more urgent following the assassination last month of Ismael Haniyeh, the lead Hamas ceasefire negotiator, and the increasing fear of retaliatory actions that could spark a regional war, dramatically increasing threats to civilians across the region.

As a middle power, Australia has a critical role to play in upholding the rules-based order and the necessary protections for civilians provided in international humanitarian and human-rights law. We need to be clear in amplifying our democratic and human-rights-based values, which include respect for academic freedom and the right to peaceful protest. And, to be taken seriously, we need to act to protect those legal standards and values when situations like Gaza threaten their erosion. Granting continued impunity in the Israel–Gaza crisis increases threats for civilians everywhere.

There are clear steps that Australia must take. That means an immediate embargo on shipments of arms and arms components, including dual-use exports that can be used for civilian and military purposes. Recent Senate estimates revealed continuing exports from Australia to Israel related to military activities. Even since the assault on Gaza escalated in 2023, the Department of Defence has renewed or signed almost $100 million in contracts with Israeli-owned companies such as Elbit Systems.

In the Netherlands, a court recently ordered the Dutch government to block similar kinds of exports to Israel, highlighting the risks of breaching international law if they were to continue. Aligned with its policy that continues to affirm a two-state solution, the Australian government needs to align with EU allies and others in recognising that two states exist, affirming the existence of Palestine alongside Israel. Australia can build on sanctions announced by Foreign Minister Penny Wong last month by extending restrictions to Israeli leaders who continue to support unrestricted warfare in Gaza, as we have in other conflicts involving breaches of international law—for example, against Russia over its invasion of and ongoing attacks on Ukraine.

Through timely, concrete action, Australia can demonstrate its commitment to protecting civilians in Gaza and the wider region and its respect for the international legal obligations arising from the ICJ ruling. Such actions align with our important role as a middle power, reinforcing our legitimacy through a consistent approach with like-minded countries to defending the rules-based order and protection for all civilian populations.

America needs political age limits

Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the 2024 US presidential race remains one of the biggest stories of the year. Criticised for his June debate performance and showing clear signs of aging, the 81-year-old president finally acknowledged what the polls were showing and handed the reins to his vice president, Kamala Harris, who is 59. Suddenly, the 78-year-old Republican nominee, Donald Trump, has gone from being the slightly younger candidate to the much older one.

While the United States does not have age limits for elected politicians, perhaps it should. The US Foreign Service requires its officers to retire by age 65, and the US military imposes retirement on flag officers at age 64, though higher-ranked generals can have their retirement deferred until 68 by the president. These age limits guarantee that those who command America’s soldiers and weapons are also in full command of their faculties. Trusted to make sharp, clear-headed decisions in the face of physically and mentally demanding situations, they cannot falter as Biden did on the debate stage.

Surely these standards should be even higher for the men and women with the most power. Yet neither the president nor any of the officials who would step into that role (the vice president, the speaker of the House of Representatives, the president pro tempore of the Senate, and so forth) face any such requirements.

Around one-third of the elected officials who control the world’s largest economy and military—35 of the 100 US senators, and 91 of the 435 members of the House—are well past what is allowable for the country’s most senior military leadership; and the same goes for the US Supreme Court, where three of the nine justices, the ultimate arbiters of US law, are 70 or older. By contrast, only 28 Fortune 500 CEOs are 70 or older.

The usual argument for allowing aged statesmen to lead is that they have the most experience. But even if one views this as an asset, its value must be weighed against all the risks that come with age – from physical ailments such as strokes and fractures to cognitive decline. Older minds may be better at putting together disparate pieces of information and interpreting the big picture, but it is unclear whether this capacity endures well into one’s 70s and 80s.

Another argument is that America’s increasingly aged leadership merely reflects an aging electorate. With around percent of US voters in 2022 over 65, we could simply be witnessing democracy at work. But the data show no obvious relationship between the age of an elected official and the age of his or her voters. The oldest elected officials do not hail from the oldest states.

Consider Senator Dianne Feinstein, who held onto office for years despite her poor health before passing away at age 90, just months after she finally retired. Her state, California, has the 10th lowest share of voters aged 65 or older. Of the 10 US states with the smallest share of over-65 voters, seven have one or more senators older than 70.

A more likely reason for aging of American leaders is that the rules have become outdated as lifespans have lengthened. There are no age restrictions for Supreme Court justices, and the US Constitution only set minimum ages for presidents, senators, and representatives: 35, 30, and 25, respectively.

The absence of mandatory retirement ages for elected and appointed federal officials reflected a world in which most people did not live long enough to experience dementia and where few could hope to survive a heart attack or a severe bone fracture. Old age was not a problem on the minds of our 18th, 19th, and early 20th century predecessors. But life expectancy for those who reach age five has increased by more than 20 years since the Constitution was drafted, and functional deterioration comes with aging.

Elected officials clinging to office well into old age is not the result of democracy at work. On the contrary, according to Freedom House, elder statesmen are more likely to lead less democratic countries. In the US, many continue to hold power because incumbency confers an electoral advantage, particularly in the Senate. The recent experiences with Feinstein and Biden highlight the dearth of formal and informal mechanisms to push out a sitting leader.

Polling from last year indicates that 79 percent of Americans would favor a maximum age for elected officials in Washington, and 74 percdent would support one for Supreme Court justices. Half of Americans would prefer a president in his or her 50s, and, while older Americans prefer older presidents, only 5 percent of respondents aged 70 or older want a president their own age.

Legend has it that when the first US president, George Washington, was six years old, he chopped down a cherry tree and could not lie when confronted about it. It’s a charming fable, but Americans should focus on a more important fact about George Washington: he refused to seek a third term, which he would have won handily, because he knew that it was time to step aside.

The UN cybercrime convention: a victory for state sovereignty

On 8 August, UN member states agreed to what was once deemed implausible: a universal cybercrime convention. A Russia-led effort to challenge existing Euro-centric standards for law enforcement cooperation turned into an agreement that preserves human rights protections instead and focuses on actual cybercrimes.

But the new convention, which still awaits adoption by the UN General Assembly, may come at a price, as binding treaties and state sovereignty appear to surface as the guiding principles of global cyber governance.

In December 2019, when the idea for ‘a comprehensive international convention on countering the use of [information and communication technology] for criminal purposes’ was presented to the General Assembly, the international community was sharply divided. Russia, China and most Southeast Asian countries were among those that cast the 79 votes in favour, while 60 delegations (including Australia, most European states, Japan, Britain and United States) voted against.

Australia and likeminded partners have always argued there was already a legal mechanism in place: the Budapest Convention. Agreed under the purview of the Council of Europe in 2001, it facilitates cooperation between law enforcement agencies on cybercrime issues for joint investigations, sharing and recognition of digital evidence, jurisdictions and extraditions. The Budapest Convention also contains an agreed set of core cybercrimes and cyber-enabled crimes. It includes safeguards for human rights and other fundamental freedoms and a review mechanism and facilitates access to technical assistance.

This was now all going to be duplicated or, worse, hollowed out in the process of creating a UN convention. Indeed, throughout its negotiation process, attempts were made to broaden the remit of cybercrime. For example, China proposed criminalising the ‘dissemination of false information … that could result in serious social disorder’, while India advocated for criminalising offences related to ‘cyber terrorism’.

The problem with the Budapest Convention is that it’s in name and spirit a European convention. While non-members such as Australia, Brazil, Fiji, Nigeria, Philippines and Tonga are among the 76 states that are party to the treaty, it was too easy to dismiss as non-inclusive and non-representative. Russia, itself a former member of the Council of Europe, never signed it. Moscow cited a lack of respect for state sovereignty, because it would allow for cross-border law enforcement operations without the consent of that state. Other states, such as South Africa, followed this narrative.

But while the new UN cybercrime treaty isn’t perfect, it’s far from a slam-dunk victory for Russia and China. In fact, Russia, Iran, and Egypt continued to hold strong objections until the very last moment. Perhaps this is the strongest indicator of success in holding back attempts of further state repression in the digital realm.

In an early draft, Russia proposed various controversial points, such as an expanded list of crimes that would be criminalised and an erosion of democratic and human rights safeguards. While considered during negotiations, these offences did not make it into the final text.

Iran, with backing from Russia, called for seven rounds of voting to remove paragraphs that contained human rights safeguards. For instance, Iran sought the removal of an article allowing states to deny mutual legal assistance if they have reason to believe the investigation is discriminatory on the basis of a person’s sex, race, language, religion, nationality, ethnic origin or political opinion. The vote resulted in a resounding defeat: 102 against and only 23 in favour.

The strongest critique to the UN convention comes from civil society organisations and the tech industry. They believe that the convention is too broad in scope and could be misused for surveillance and repression by authoritarian states seeking prosecution of alleged criminals residing in foreign jurisdictions. Industry fears it could be compelled to hand over data against terms and conditions and the laws of their home jurisdictions. Others point out that the convention could allow states to prosecute whistleblowers and cybersecurity researchers.

Despite these shared concerns by industry and civil society, liberal-democratic governments conceded for the sake of global consensus.

The cybercrime convention will be presented to the UN General Assembly this year and, upon endorsement, will be opened to member countries for signature and eventual ratification. To come into force, it requires at least 40 signatories by 31 December 2026.

It remains to be seen whether that will be achieved in the time available. The US has made no such commitment, although it ‘welcomed the Committee’s adoption of the convention.’ Australia’s ambassador for cyber wrote that the convention first needs to be adopted (by a majority) in the UN General Assembly ‘before Australia will consider becoming a party to the Convention.’ Iran, in its final statement, said to ‘maintain reservations and objections on certain provisions and terms.’ Moscow only acknowledged the outcome, with Russia ‘as the inspirer and leader of the negotiations.’ Beijing has not issued a statement yet.

For decades, cyberspace was thought to be most effectively governed through collaborative multistakeholder interactions, in which governments, civil society, industry and the technical community would take responsibility for their share of the domain. The experience of the UN cybercrime convention, however, shows government-led proceedings take precedence and that cyber sovereignty is the rallying concept around which states find consensus.

In the long run, this may pave the way for other government-to-government treaties on issues such as critical infrastructure protection, state-on-state cyber operations during peacetime and ethical principles of AI. While this would provide authoritarian states with opportunity to strengthen control over the internet and related technologies, for liberal democracies sovereignty becomes the strongest line of defence against cyber-enabled transnational repression and undue foreign interference.

Putting the NZ back into ANZUS: Why a fleeting reference means a lot

The New Zealand-US component of ANZUS was suspended in the 1980s because Wellington refused to admit American Navy vessels that were nuclear-powered, or that might be carrying nuclear weapons, into its ports. 

Buried in paragraph 21 of today’s joint statement between Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is a moment in history that many might miss—a rare reference to the continued importance of the ANZUS Treaty to the Australia-New Zealand alliance:  

‘In the event of a cyber-attack that threatened the territorial integrity, political independence or security of either of our nations, Australia and New Zealand would consult together under the ANZUS Treaty to determine appropriate options to address the threat. They also affirmed that a cyber-attack on either nation could constitute an armed attack under Article IV of the ANZUS Treaty. A decision on whether such a cyber-attack would constitute an armed attack would be made on a case-by-case basis through close consultations between Australia and New Zealand.’ 

ASPI experts unpack the significance. 

 

Justin Bassi, executive director 

This is significant for multiple reasons. First, confirmation that a cyber-attack on either nation could constitute an armed attack under the ANZUS Treaty provides useful clarity.  

But even more significant is the acknowledgment by Luxon of the ANZUS Treaty itself. After the breakdown of the ANZUS Treaty as a trilateral alliance in 1985 with the downgrading of the relationship between the United States and New Zealand, the Treaty has rarely been named by the New Zealand political class, despite being the source of its bilateral alliance with Australia.  

When Australia and the US celebrated ANZUS’s 70th Anniversary in 2021, neither the NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern nor her defence or foreign ministers referred to it at all.  

The reference to ANZUS continues Luxon’s foreign policy reset. He has been bolder than his predecessors, laying out a role for New Zealand within a global strategic outlook that is based on core partnerships. In a world of conflict, with wars in Europe and the Middle East and China creating tensions in the South China Sea and over Taiwan, New Zealand is messaging that it wants to be involved in the discussions on how to regain stability and deterrence, and that it has a role to play.  

This latest backing in of ANZUS comes off the Luxon government’s public support for the Five Eyes group—which was downplayed by the previous New Zealand government—and his attendance at the recent NATO Summit in Washington, where he said: ‘The intensifying military relationship we see between Russia and North Korea and China’s role in supporting the rebuilding of Russia’s industrial base demonstrates the indivisibility of issues between Europe and our part of the world.’ 

 

Bart Hogeveen, acting director of cyber, technology and security 

The recognition that a cyber-attack could constitute an armed attack against the territorial integrity of either state under the ANZUS treaty is a welcome step that brings the Australia-New Zealand alliance into alignment with other liberal alliances. 

AUSMIN, NATO and the US-Japan security treaty have all indicated that a cyber attack could constitute an armed attack that warrants a collective response. Today’s statement by Albanese and Luxon is arguably the strongest ANZUS reference to collective cyber defence, noting it was made at the leaders’ level and connects to Article 4, the main collective defence clause of ANZUS.  

It shows a growing acceptance by the New Zealand and Australian governments that the digital domain is also a domain of warfare. It builds on recent attributions by Canberra and Wellington, independently and collaboratively with other Five Eyes partners, of malicious cyber operations affecting national and economic security, and electoral processes.  

Cyber threat assessments from New Zealand’s signals intelligence and cybersecurity agencies have become more alarming in recent years. Recognising that such state-sponsored operations and campaigns may—at some point and in certain circumstances—amount to an armed attack serves as an important deterrent. It also paves the way for Canberra and Wellington to set boundaries to when, where and how international law applies to state conduct in cyberspace, including the laws of armed conflict. 

 

Euan Graham, senior analyst 

New Zealand has endorsed AUKUS’s contribution to regional security and stability, while also registering its interest in participating in Pillar II in future. The fact that there are no explicit caveats attached to Pillar I in the Joint Statement further suggests that the Luxon government will approach Australia’s acquisition of nuclear-powered submarines, under AUKUS, pragmatically and in a low-key manner in spite of Wellington’s prevailing anti-nuclear policies. 

The mutual embedding of senior ADF and NZDF officers into the joint commands of each other’s armed forces will make it easier for Australia and New Zealand to conduct military operations together, and is a sign of their willingness to integrate at a deeper level. 

The reference to ‘combined procurement’ in an ‘ANZAC’ context is also a welcome indication that interoperability remains important to New Zealand—a point underscored by New Zealand’s induction into service of the P-8A, as a high-end maritime surveillance and anti-submarine platform that can operate seamlessly alongside the ADF and US forces.  

It also leaves the door open for New Zealand to join Australia’s general-purpose frigate acquisition in future, although Wellington is not quite at that point yet. Australia would be likely to support this ‘ANZAC redux’ option, for reasons of interoperability, but also to generate an economy of scale that could bring down the costs of its own acquisition process.  

While the main significance of the joint statement is in the revival of ANZUS and its explicit invocation in the scenario of a cyber attack, New Zealand and Australia remain military partners in Southeast Asia, though the Five Power Defence Arrangements, as well as close partners in the Pacific. Hence the nod towards close defence co-operation will also be read into these regional commitments where the ADF and NZDF have existing commitments and close habits of cooperation. 

 

Malcolm Davis, senior analyst 

The important recognition of the challenge posed by cyber threats in the Luxon-Albanese joint statement is an opportunity for both Australia and New Zealand to work more closely together on another increasingly important domain—space. In reality, the two domains cannot be decoupled. 

Both countries will increasingly depend on constellations of satellites to support a full range of national activities, and to ensure national security and prosperity. Space is a contested and congested operational domain with satellites—and the ground stations that manage them—being ideal targets for an adversary to threaten with cyber attacks.  Such a ‘soft kill’ produces no space debris but denies access to vital space support. In this sense, the dependency of both countries on the space domain, and the threat posed by cyberwarfare, sees the boundaries of space and cyberspace increasingly blurred. 

Working together on space could provide a pathway for New Zealand to engage with AUKUS Pillar 2 in cyber—in which New Zealand Defence Minister Judith Collins has shown an interest. Space is also becoming relevant to Pillar 2, with the announcement that the Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) will be established under AUKUS. 

 

Alex Bristow, senior analyst 

When New Zealand refused to admit into its ports US Navy vessels that were nuclear-powered or might be carrying nuclear weapons, Washington’s view was that if its allies wanted protection—including shelter under the nuclear umbrella—they had to accept some of the risks associated with extended deterrence. Freeriding was not an option. With America First shaping US politics today, that view has only hardened. 

Today’s announcement has not reset the nuclear clock. While there has been some restoration of US-New Zealand defence co-operation since the 1980s, including port visits to New Zealand by conventionally powered and armed US Navy ships, anti-nuclear sentiment remains embedded in New Zealand. Wellington’s nuclear ban will extend to the conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines that Australia will acquire through AUKUS, as Luxon’s predecessor Jacinda Ardern made clear after AUKUS was announced.  

While anti-nuclear sentiment was also significant in Australia in the 1980s, Canberra used nimble diplomacy to mitigate the blowback it felt from the fracturing of ANZUS. By signing the Treaty of Rarotonga in 1985, which established the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone, Canberra mollified Wellington and its wider Pacific partners. But Canberra also inserted caveats into the treaty that made visits by US nuclear forces exempt from the prohibition on stationing nuclear weapons within the SPNFZ—a policy that has allowed nuclear-capable US bombers to rotate through Australia for decades. 

Today’s announcement deals with cyber, but it refocuses minds on the continued importance of ANZUS for wider deterrence. At some point, that discussion must include the US and must cover extended nuclear deterrence. The conversation will become more complicated as the US develops a more conspicuous forward presence for its nuclear forces in the Indo-Pacific and expects more burden-sharing from allies to support this. 

 

Raji Rajagopalan, resident senior fellow, ASPI 

Luxon has attached special importance to India in the speech, stating that he is determined to broaden and deepen New Zealand’s relations with India. Clearly, there is interest on both sides in enhancing the relationship even though, traditionally, India and New Zealand have not been significant partners.  

This is changing with the increasing frequency of visits and contact between the two countries. India’s President Droupadi Murmu was in New Zealand earlier this month, while New Zealand’s Foreign Minister Winston Peters was in Delhi a few months back.  

There is talk of a free trade agreement even though, according to the Indian foreign ministry, it remains aspirational at this point. India is also establishing a new consulate in Auckland. There are now about 8,000 Indian students in New Zealand, and the two countries signed an air services agreement to facilitate direct flights. 

New Zealand has a high-technology base that could help India. For example, India used a chip manufactured by a New Zealand company in its Chandrayaan space mission.  

Underlying this desire for closer ties is concern about the growing instability in the region and the world, which Luxon highlighted in his Lowy speech. There are likely to be some disagreements on Russia and Ukraine, but this is common to India’s relations.

What is more pertinent is the concern about China in the Indo-Pacific. A recent survey in New Zealand showed that India has now overtaken Singapore as the third most important Asian country, while concern about China continues to grow.  

Prime Minister Luxon supported the expanding scaffolding security architecture in the region, including the Quad, which New Delhi will appreciate.

There is a potential for future co-operation between Quad countries and New Zealand in areas such as space technology, cyber warfare and intelligence. Another area of potential co-operation is the South Pacific because of the large Indian diaspora in the region. Indeed, the Indian President went to Fiji before arriving in New Zealand. 

A new US, Russia, China nuclear arms race spells danger

Unlike in the Cold War, the United States faces the prospect in the next decade of two peer nuclear adversaries, which will together have twice as many strategic nuclear weapons as it does. According to a senior American official visiting Australia last month, by 2034 China will have as many strategic nuclear weapons as the US does today. So, a decade from now America may be outnumbered by Russia and China combined having over 3,000 strategic nuclear warheads to America’s 1500.

Under the terms of the 2018 New START Treaty, Russia and America are each allowed 1550 strategic nuclear warheads and 700 deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine-launched ballistic missiles and heavy nuclear bombers. This treaty expires on 5 February 2026. But Russia last year ‘suspended’ its treaty commitments—though it claims it will abide by the numerical limit of 1550 deployed nuclear warheads.

The United States and Russia have successfully negotiated strategic nuclear arms reduction talks from the early 1970s until now. At the height of the Cold War, the US nuclear arsenal numbered more than 32,000 weapons and the Soviet arsenal more than 45,000. The two have also withdrawn about 14,000 tactical nuclear weapons from forward deployments in places such as Europe. But the question now arises whether that era of careful, considered—and verifiable—cuts to strategic nuclear capabilities is over.

The Russians and the Americans are no longer talking at the political level about these vital issues, although expert talks do continue. And several previous bilateral arms control treaties have been cancelled, including the Antiballistic Missile Treaty, the Theatre Nuclear Forces in Europe Treaty, the Open Skies Agreement, the Conventional Forces in Europe Agreement and others.

On 7 June, according to Pranay Vaddi—the special assistant to the president for arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation at the National Security Council—Russia, China and North Korea ‘are all expanding and diversifying their nuclear arsenals at a breakneck speed and showing no interest in arms control.’  Vaddi observed that the last decade has revealed serious cracks in the international pillars of reducing nuclear dangers, the salience of nuclear weapons, and limiting strategic arsenals of the largest nuclear powers.

When I was last in Moscow, in 2016, a senior military officer at the colonel general level stressed that tense bilateral relations were all leading to a nuclear miscalculation. Regular meetings and negotiations over intricate technical details were a thing of the past. Since then, bilateral relations between Russia and America have deteriorated further. President Vladimir Putin at least wants us to think he is seriously toying with the idea of using nuclear weapons. Who knows what goes on in his obsessive mind? But Putin needs to remember that at the height of the Cold War, the Pentagon’s calculations were that, in the event of a full-scale nuclear strike on Russia, America would kill about one quarter of Russia’s population, or 70 million people, in the first 48 hours.

China has absolutely refused to be involved with the Americans about nuclear arms control and verification. It claims that its strategic nuclear forces are so modest compared with those of the US that there is no point in any talk about negotiations. It is true that until recently China’s strategic nuclear stockpile has not been much more than that of either Britain or France (200 to 300 nuclear weapons each). However, according to the Pentagon, China now has about 500 nuclear weapons and will reach 1000 by 2030. In this context, I have been advised that the US is already adding to its nuclear military targets in China.

There can be no doubt that the type of limits that the US might be able to agree with Russia would be affected by the size and scale of China’s nuclear buildup and the United States’ deterrence needs in relation to Beijing.

My impression is, however, that as yet there is no plan in the US to equal the combined numbers of nuclear weapons of Russia and China. This would be a hugely expensive step and would likely take a couple of decades. Although warheads could be taken out of reserve stockpiles, finding extra delivery vehicles is quite a different proposition.

The national security adviser to the president has made it clear that America ‘does not need to increase its nuclear forces to match or outnumber the combined total of our competitors to successfully deter them.’

Even so, it would seem obvious that 1500 nuclear weapons will be insufficient if the US is to have the capacity to wage major nuclear war simultaneously on both China and Russia. Vaddi made it quite clear that the US ‘will need to continue to adjust our posture and capabilities to ensure our ability to deter and meet other objectives going forward.’ The special assistant also said the president had ‘recently issued updated nuclear weapons employment guidance, which takes into account the realities of a new nuclear era.’ This updated nuclear guidance emphasises ‘the need to account for the growth and diversity of the PRC’s nuclear arsenal—and the need to deter Russia, the PRC, and North Korea simultaneously.’  Moreover, absent a change in the growth trajectory of adversary arsenals—for which, read those of Russia and China—the US may reach a point in the coming years ‘where an increase from current deployed numbers is required.’

In brief, Russia and China are forcing the US and US allies to prepare for a world where nuclear competition occurs without guarantees of numerical constraints.

There are several ways in which America might remodel its nuclear posture. At present, the US is developing a new ICBM type, the LGM-35 Sentinel, to replace the 450 old Minuteman ICBMs and serve from 2029 to 2075, although the program is running more than two years late. The initial costs of this project have rapidly risen from an initial budget of US$95.3 billion to more than US$125 billion in January 2024 and a revised defence contract estimate of US$141billion in July 2024. According to the secretary of the air force, the Sentinel program has now encountered ‘unknown unknowns’.

I understand that the nuclear weapons load of the Ohio class SSBN can be quickly made significantly bigger if the New START Treaty is not extended in February 2026. In addition, more of the hard-to-detect Northrop Grumman B-21 bombers can be built. However, Russia itself is also going through significant nuclear modernisation, including developing the Sarmat ICBM that will replace the Cold War SS-18 Satan, which carried a single 20-megaton warhead or 10 one-megaton independently targetable warheads. Russia is also developing a new ballistic-missile nuclear submarine (SSBN) as well as a very large nuclear-armed torpedo.

However, it is important here to understand that both China’s and Russia’s so-called survivable second-strike nuclear capability in their SSBNs are highly vulnerable to pre-emptive destruction by the United States’ decisive superiority in underwater warfare. China appears to know that its SSBNs are very vulnerable and is investing heavily in missiles on trucks to complicate US targeting.

Another route to expansion that the US may be contemplating is to use some of its huge holdings of reserve nuclear warheads, which total 4200. According to the 2009 report of the Commission on America’s Strategic Posture, the US retains a large stockpile of reserve weapons ‘as a hedge against surprise, whether of a geopolitical or a technical kind.’

The geopolitical surprise could mean, for example, a sudden change in leadership intent in Russia or China that could pose a threat to the United States, which might drive the US to reload reserve nuclear weapons on available delivery systems. To hedge against technical surprise—such as, perhaps, an opponent’s deployment of ballistic missile defence—the US currently retains two warhead types for each major delivery system. This approach to hedging requires holding a significant number of non-deployed nuclear warheads.

All this suggests that—if America’s strategic circumstances should dramatically worsen or if a highly challenging technological breakthrough had been achieved by one of its nuclear adversaries—Washington could quickly access around 4000 reserve strategic nuclear warheads. The commission noted that the US maintains ‘an unneeded degree of secrecy’ about the number of nuclear weapons in its arsenal, including not just deployed weapons but also weapons in the inactive stockpile and those awaiting dismantlement.

This is also where extended nuclear deterrence comes in. Washington will need to take careful notice of how countries such as Japan will react if it loses its capacity to reassure Tokyo that extended nuclear deterrence will still work. Japan faces potential nuclear threat not only from China and Russia but also from North Korea (whose relatively crude nuclear capability should not be underestimated). Extended deterrence is not, however, a foregone conclusion—not least for America’s allies.

This concept was relatively straightforward in the Cold War because it involved deterring only one nuclear superpower, the Soviet Union. Needless to say, it was never tested in practice as far as Australia was concerned even though we were an important Soviet target with regard to the joint US–Australian facilities at Pine Gap, Nurrungar and North-West Cape. The concept of extended nuclear deterrence remains a theory: it depends on the perceptions by the adversary of America’s nuclear intent to dissuade it from using nuclear force against the US or a US ally. Allies face ever-increasing nuclear and conventional threats from Russia, China and North Korea and may become increasingly worried about the credibility of US guarantees.

In the Cold War, the deterrence calculus was relatively simple. The president authorised guidance to hold a broad array of targets at risk and also authorised the nuclear operational plans for doing so. The deterrent effect was understood to derive from the nuclear damage that an adversary might calculate and its uncertainty as to whether it could bear the cost—or even predict it reliably. The US went to great lengths in the Cold War to ensure that its deterrent was perceived as credible and effective, including through strong declaratory policies that in the event would have made it very difficult for it to back away from its nuclear deterrent commitments.

It is important to understand that deterrence is in the eye of the beholder. Whether potential adversaries are deterred (and US allies are assured) is a function of their understanding of US capabilities and intentions. This implies that the US needs a spectrum of employment options for nuclear and precise conventional forces, along with the requirement for forces that are sufficiently lethal and certain of their result to put at risk an appropriate array of the adversary’s nuclear capabilities credibly.

Whereas during the Cold War the USSR understood all too well that the consequences of nuclear war with the US would have been devastating for Russia, it is not as clear as it needs to be that contemporary China has drawn the same conclusion—despite the fact that the sheer size and density of China’s population makes it especially vulnerable to all-out nuclear war.

This underscores the potential challenges of effective deterrence, as it brings with it more openings for ignorance, motivations, distorted communications and a lack of understanding. Essential to the future effective function of nuclear deterrence is that the US and its allies gain insights into the strategic thinking of the nations being deterred and, so, how best to communicate with them in a crisis.

While extended nuclear assurance and persuasion have been important factors in the US for a long time, there does not appear to be any widely accepted methodology for reaching a decision on how many weapons are needed for these purposes.

As an important first step, the US should consult more closely with its allies regarding their views of what is required for their assurance. This is an issue where Australia should have a much more extensive dialogue with its other key strategic partners in the Asia-Pacific region, especially Japan.

Australia must now pay urgent attention to this important new threat of the US deterring two peer nuclear powers, perhaps simultaneously. Canberra should reverse the decline of resources of the intelligence community devoted to foreign nuclear weapons capabilities, programs and intentions. This subject has not attracted high-level attention since the end of the Cold War more than 30 years ago.

The Australian defence organisation has no collective memory of how we dealt with this issue from the early 1970s until the collapse of the USSR in 1991. Our hosting of Pine Gap and Nurrungar during that time gave us highly privileged access to US thinking about nuclear war and nuclear deterrence. The Australian defence organisation needs to revisit this critical policy issue now.

AI disinformation: lessons from the UK’s election

The year of elections was also feared to be the year that deepfakes would be weaponised to manipulate election results or undermine trust in democracy.

The record-breaking 2024 figure of about 4 billion voters eligible to go to the polls across more than 60 countries coincided with the full-fledged arrival and widespread uptake of multimodal generative artificial intelligence (AI), which enables almost anyone to make fake images, videos and sound.

Have these fears been realised? Our centre has analysed the incidence of AI-generated disinformation around the UK election held on July 4 and found both reasons for some reassurance, but also grounds for concern over long-terms trends eroding democracy that these threats exacerbate.

In contrast to fears of a tsunami of AI fakes targeting political candidates, the UK saw only a handful of examples of such content going viral during the campaign period.

While there’s no evidence these examples swayed any large number of votes, we did see spikes in online harassment against the people targeted by the fakes. We also observed confusion among audiences over whether the content was authentic.

These early signals point to longer term trends that would damage the democratic system itself, such as online harassment creating a ‘chilling’ effect on the willingness of political candidates to participate in future elections, and an erosion of trust in the online information space as audiences become increasingly unsure about which content is AI-generated and therefore which sources can be trusted.

Similar findings on the impact of generative AI misuse in 18 other elections since January 2023 are reported in a recent CETaS briefing paper.

There has of course been a sensible case for heightened vigilance this year. From India to the UK, and from France to the US, the outcome of many of 2024’s elections have had, or will have, enormous geopolitical implications, thus giving malicious actors strong incentives to interfere.

The capability that generative AI gives users to create highly realistic content at scale using simple keyboard prompts has enhanced the disruptive powers of sophisticated state actors. But it has also dramatically lowered the barriers to access, such that even individual members of the public can pose risks to the integrity of democratic processes – including elections.

The latter threat has been underscored by comments from Australia’s Director-General of Security (Mike Burgess) last week, when he helped announce the lifting of the country’s terrorism threat level. The basis for the increase was in part, Burgess said, that people with violent intent were ‘motivated by a diversity of grievances and personal narratives’ and were ‘interacting in ways we have not seen before’.

As a result, the risk of mis- and disinformation influencing election outcomes is much more serious.

Looking at the UK general election however, generative AI turned out to play a lesser role than traditional automated threats. For instance, several investigations into election-related content on online platforms found hallmarks of bot accounts seeking to sow division over controversial campaign issues such as immigration.

Some had possible links to Russia, and pushed pro-Kremlin narratives about the war in Ukraine. While these bot activities did include a few instances of AI-generated election material being circulated, the majority used a well-established tactic known as ‘astroturfing’, in which many automated accounts are used to increase perceived popular support for a particular policy stance or political candidate by spamming thousands of fake comments on relevant social media posts.

Alongside these bot incidents, the UK was targeted by a fake news operation with strong connections to a Russian-affiliated disinformation network called Doppelganger. Known as ‘CopyCop’, the operation involved the spreading of fictitious articles about the war in Ukraine, to confuse the UK public and reduce support for military aid. As part of CopyCop, real news stories were pasted into AI chatbots and then re-written to align them to the network’s strategic aims.

However, many had prompts left in, which betrayed obvious signs of AI editing and therefore failed to attract much engagement. That said, some of these sources were picked up by Russian media influencers and spread across their channels to tens of thousands of users. Often, the real sources of the articles were concealed in a tactic called ‘information laundering’ in an effort to trick users into assuming it originated from a credible news outlet.

While these disinformation activities can be connected to hostile foreign states, most viral misleading AI content in the UK election came from members of the public. This content included deepfakes that implicated political candidates in controversial statements that they never made. Interestingly, many users behind the content claimed they were doing it for satirical or ‘trolling’ purposes. Others may have pushed the content to increase support for their political party or because they were disillusioned with conventional political campaigns. This range of motives across different users highlights the new sources of risk and the expanded threat landscape that stem from such wide access to generative AI systems.

Taken together, the most prominent disinformation problems during the UK election did not arise from novel AI technology, but from longstanding issues tied to social media platforms – including the role of influencer accounts and recommender algorithms.

As we look ahead to the US election in November, it is vital that these platforms co-ordinate with different sectors to invest in measures to protect users.

This includes red-teaming exercises, requiring clear labels on AI-generated political adverts, and engaging with fact-checking organisations to detect malicious content before it goes viral.

And with Australia facing its own federal election in the next nine months, continued scrutiny of the risks and the malicious perpetrators – and emerging measures to combat them – is also vitally in the country’s interests.

  • This article is part of a short series The Strategist is running in the lead up to ASPI’s Sydney Dialogue on September 2 and 3. The event will cover key topics in critical, emerging and cyber technologies, including disinformation, electoral interference, artificial intelligence, hybrid warfare, clean technologies and more.

Ice panda: not all is quiet on Australia’s southern front

Picture a globe turned upside down so you see Antarctica at the top of the world. The continent’s immense strategic value is striking. Global resource pressures, coupled with advances in technology, continue to generate a deep strategic interest in Antarctica, and that interest will only continue to escalate.

Antarctica is enticing, especially for powers seeking to future-proof their resources, participate in global governance and enhance their scientific prestige.

Antarctica ticks all those boxes for China. The Antarctic Treaty (AT) prohibits military activity and establishes Antarctica as a zone of international cooperation for scientific research. But the AT alone, without being an Australian foreign and security priority, is not holding Beijing’s ambitions at bay, including those against Australia’s interests.

Antarctica is too often forgotten or not included in the strategic debate. It should be included—to determine whether Beijing’s behaviour is merely assertive or crossing into aggressive, as it is elsewhere. The answer, and simultaneously the problem, is that, when it comes to Antarctica, Beijing is not technically breaking the agreed rules by which the continent is managed, but it is undermining them and, therefore, Australia’s interests.

Indeed, according to the rulebooks (the AT System) facilitating activity in Antarctica, China is not overtly in breach of AT agreements. Rather, Beijing can work the AT System effectively to undermine the status quo and, with it, a vital strategic interest for Australia. It’s doing that in multiple ways, including through its domestic industrial policy, which has fused its civil and military sectors and is, at the very least, against the spirit of the AT’s prohibition of military activity, if not wholly inconsistent with it. Just because Beijing is not yet undertaking military activity in Antarctica doesn’t mean it’s not using the access Australia and others are giving it for military purposes. Regardless of whether it’s inconsistent with the AT System or merely a breach of the system’s spirit, it’s no longer business as usual in Antarctica. Australia must act to prevent further changes to the status quo.

As a start, Australia needs to act like the Antarctica claimant we are and ensure that it’s better understood that China has no claim and is only on the continent because of our—and other claimants’—cooperation. With so many different domestic, regional and global priorities, it’s understandable that Antarctica isn’t considered a top priority, but the strategic Antarctic vacuum being left by Australia is being filled by Beijing, which continues to show that it can handle multiple strategic priorities at once. A reluctance to incorporate Antarctica into our strategic discourse means a lack of understanding of the continent’s geostrategic importance.

Australia and like-minded partners should develop a toolkit to adequately counter and mitigate China’s erosive efforts to rewrite Antarctica’s future. Capabilities are a critical component of any toolkit, as they ensure the ability to monitor Beijing’s Antarctic activity adequately. Investment in polar capabilities and the sustainment of physical presence through revitalised Antarctic research bases and a competitive scientific research agenda are priority areas of action.

Diplomacy is a vital requirement of our Antarctic toolkit. Simply put, the continuance of the status quo in Antarctica is a shared interest for all parties. Without checks and balances, Beijing will continue to use the existing rules and a lack of interest from nations such as Australia to change it. Australia must work to remind Beijing (both privately in detail and in public to ensure the Australian public is aware of the issue and priority) of the Antarctic spirit and obligations of the AT. A delicate balancing strategy is needed to bolster the status quo facilitated by the treaty and to establish a robust ability to push back against growing Chinese power in Antarctica. While there’s unlikely to be (armed) conflict in Antarctica, make no mistake: Australia’s Antarctic interests and the Antarctic status quo are squarely under threat.

Both Australia and China have legitimate vested national interests in Antarctica. While Canberra has a sovereign territorial claim to protect and a close geostrategic flank to manage, Beijing’s designs aren’t difficult to grasp when it comes to Antarctica. Besides what China tells us it seeks to do with Antarctica, its long-term ambitions relate to the future development of Antarctic resources (living and non-living).

A new ASPI report provides actionable policy recommendations for the Australian government. Most pressing is the need for the prime minister and cabinet to undertake a net-assessment stocktake of existing Australia–China Antarctic funding and research by 2025. That stocktake should cover the number of Antarctic and Southern Ocean postgraduate scholarships or PhD research projects over the past decade that Australian taxpayers have funded. It should also underline where the intellectual property and expertise remains in Australia and consider the long-term implications of those research partnerships by cross-referencing Chinese partners with the US sanctioned entities list.

Only then will we truly grasp how much Australia is continuing to fund and support Beijing’s Antarctic strategic edge.

Australia must pick a ministerial lane for counter-terrorism responsibility

Which cabinet minister has responsibility for counter-terrorism in Australia? Our national security dictates that it shouldn’t be a difficult question given, to misquote Mark Twain, reports of terrorism’s demise have been revealed as exaggerated.

In the past week we’ve seen the terror threat level in Australia raised to ‘probable’ due to an increase in multiple violent ideologies, and the shocking but thankfully thwarted Islamic State plot in Vienna targeting a Taylor Swift concert.

Australia has had a successful counter-terrorism track record, thanks to highly capable intelligence and law enforcement officers, as well as effective strategy and administration. Operations and policy, as the success shows, go hand-in-hand.

But last week’s machinery of government change in which ASIO, and therefore control of CT operations, returned to the Attorney-General’s portfolio has added confusion rather than clarity—not because of the debate about whether ASIO should work to the security minister or the first law officer but because Home Affairs has kept CT policy and co-ordination, which means multiple ministers now have counter-terrorism responsibilities. This split across the government on who has authority for counter-terrorism is not what we need when ASIO assesses the security environment as more challenging than ever.

Since 2022, when terrorism was judged to be a reduced threat, incremental modifications to Australia’s CT framework have divided the legal, intelligence and investigative functions from the co-ordination and policy functions. The centralisation of CT efforts in the Home Affairs portfolio has been gradually unpicked but the functions haven’t fully gone back to the Attorney-General, leaving them spread over portfolios and leaving Australia with an unsatisfactory foundation for effective national security.

The problem is exemplified by the plight of the CT Co-ordinator position, which was originally established within the Prime Minister’s Department. This both recognised that the Attorney-General’s portfolio wasn’t the right place from which to co-ordinate Australia’s top security threat and invested the role with responsibility as the principal adviser on CT to the prime minister with direct access to the National Security Committee of Cabinet and influence over national CT policy and strategy.

The Co-ordinator role was moved to the Department of Home Affairs when it was created in 2017—along with the Australian Federal Police (AFP) and ASIO. This maintained separate lines of effort on CT policy and operations, but within the same portfolio and responsible to the same cabinet minister as the key agencies.

But in June 2022, the government moved the AFP from the Home Affairs portfolio back to the Attorney-General, for the first time splitting the peak law enforcement agency from the primary security agency, ASIO. Then, in July this year, ASIO returned to the Attorney-General’s portfolio.

Yet this latest shift has left the CT Co-ordinator and CT policy functions within Home Affairs, isolated from the key agencies and lacking direct insight into the immediate issues faced by the key operational agencies. The reality of the bureaucracy is that agencies within one portfolio will keep their minister informed of issues before they advise other portfolios.

It leaves a series of difficult but important questions about CT responsibilities, including on the mandate of the CT Co-ordinator. Do the CT agencies in the Attorney’s portfolio have any obligation to brief the Co-ordinator on CT operations in a crisis, or to support its broader co-ordination function? And where does responsibility sit for briefing the government on an emerging CT crisis if ASIO and the AFP are obliged to first brief the Attorney? How is the Home Affairs Minister briefed, not to mention who is responsible for briefing the PM? If there’s any confusion here it is sub-optimal for the co-ordination of such a key national security issue, whether in terms of co-ordinating agencies to prevent terrorism or, in those devastating situations, when having to respond to it.

Given we are being told counter-terrorism is once again the principal security threat to the nation, clear lines of responsibility under a single minister would bring streamlined decision-making and a more cohesive and strategic approach.

If Home Affairs continues to exist as the central security ministry, then it should fully embrace this role and re-integrate all related functions. Alternatively, if the Attorney-General’s portfolio is to resume primary responsibility, then the framework should revert to its former state, in which the Attorney-General’s office takes over all CT responsibilities. A half-way measure is not in the national interest.

If the split between policy and operations is here to stay, the CT co-ordinator should return to the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet as the central role with the imprimatur of the PM—seen neither as the Attorney’s nor the Home Affairs Minister’s. After all, ministers responsible for topics being co-ordinated by other ministers is rarely a recipe for openness and trust.

The lack of clarity we now see also highlights the pressing need for an update to Australia’s CT strategy. Former Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil vowed to revise and update the strategy, yet we still have no new framework—a concerning delay given the evolving nature of the terrorist threat and the accompanying risk that we are left unprepared for the next evolution. The fact that ASIO has been effective in preventing individual attacks does not diminish the urgency of updating the strategy.

It should acknowledge the persistent nature of the threat and outline a robust approach to mitigating risks over the long term. Policy agencies must be responsible for actively identifying trends and setting long term strategies. Otherwise, too much burden is placed on the intelligence community with all care and no responsibility taken by the policymakers. This is a recipe for eventual disaster and shows the need for a cross-government National Security Adviser—though that’s a story for another day.

As we continue to confront the challenges of terrorism, a cohesive and well co-ordinated approach will be vital for safeguarding Australia’s future. Confusion aids no one except our adversaries, so let’s not wait for the next review of a terrorism incident to recommend the need for clarity on which minister is responsible for counter-terrorism, a clear mandate for the CT Co-ordinator and an updated national strategy that reflects the evolved and current threat.