04-03-2024
Bureau Report + Agencies
SYDNEY: A former Australian politician “sold out” the country to a foreign spy network, the nation’s intelligence chief has alleged in a speech.
Outlining the activities of the group dubbed the “A-Team”, Mike Burgess claimed the MP had offered it access to the then-prime minister’s family.
He did not name the person or the country they worked with but said the plot had unfolded “several years ago”.
The claim has rocked Canberra, with some calling for the MP to be unmasked.
While delivering his annual threat assessment in the capital on Wednesday, the Australian Security and Intelligence Organization (Asio) chief said the now disbanded A-Team was an “aggressive and experienced” foreign intelligence network which had identified Australia as a “priority target”.
“The spies pose as consultants, head-hunters, local government officials, academics and think tank researchers, claiming to be from fictional companies,” he said.
They targeted an array of people students, academics, politicians, businesspeople, law enforcement, public servants offering to pay thousands of dollars for reports on topics including trade, politics, foreign policy, and defence, Burgess said. Information on the Aukus defence pact which Australia signed with the UK and US was of particular interest, he added but the former Australian politician was the most notable individual the foreign ring had “successfully cultivated and recruited”, he claimed, while offering no specific details on the years they were active.
“This politician sold out their country, party and former colleagues to advance the interests of the foreign regime,” Burgess said.
“At one point, the former politician even proposed bringing a prime minister’s family member into the spies’ orbit.
“Fortunately, that plot did not go ahead but other schemes did.”
Alex Turnbull, the son of Malcolm Turnbull, who was in power between 2015 and 2018, on Thursday told news.com.au he had once fielded a “brazen” approach by suspected Chinese agents and could be the family member Burgess was referring to. Burgess said the former politician in question is no longer working with the group, adding that Australian intelligence officials had disbanded its operations and helped “unaware” participants extract themselves.
“Several individuals should be grateful the espionage and foreign interference laws are not retrospective,” Burgess said, referring to tougher laws which passed the country’s parliament in 2018.
His agency confronted the A-team directly late last year, and has now decided to blow their cover to warn Australians.
“Australians need to know that the threat is real. The threat is now and the threat is deeper and broader than you might think,” he said.