The AIM Network

Submarines And Leaks: An Unhealthy Combination…

Image from afr.com.au

Well, at least the leak was in the White Paper and not in the submarines themselves…

As I’ve pointed out before, I read an interesting book called “Spy The Lie” by three former intelligence officers which gave some pointers on how to tell when people are lying. While it’s tempting to tell you that it’s easy with politicians – their lips are moving – that would be a cheap shot, and I’m not the sort of person who goes in for sniping and making fun of politicians.

“Is that true, Mr Brisbane?”
(At this point, I have the choice of lying or doing one of the many things that people do when confronted with a difficult question. I pick the latter!)
“I have spent many years of my life working in education and if there’s one thing that’s taught me it’s that sniping and making snide comments is rarely ever helpful.”
(Lots of people would take that as a denial and leave it at that, however, if you’re interrogating someone you need to actually get them to answer the question.)
“So you’re saying that you’ve never made fun of a politician?”
(Tactic number one didn’t work, so tactic number two)
“Look I can’t really comment at the moment, but when the truth comes out, I think you’ll find that I’m completely vindicated.”
(In political or public relations situations, this one is very good, but if one is being interrogated by the police or security forces, I imagine that it’s a lot less successful)

Anyway, you get the idea. Even people who are prepared to lie tend to avoid it at first. So whenever the media talk about denials from various public figures, I’m always tempted to look at what they actually said. Without naming names here, I remember a person saying that whoever had done this was no friend of the xxx (the organisation to which the person belonged). While the media took that as a denial that he was the leaker, I regarded the statement as something akin to a confession.

So with the leaking of the Defence White Paper, I thought it might be instructive to look at what various people said. While it would be wrong to draw any definite conclusions, it’s always what’s not said – or not asked – that’s the interesting bit. I mean we all know that when a potential challenger says that he or she is not counting the numbers, they’re telling the truth; occasionally, a journalist may think to ask if they persuaded anyone else to count them but it’s a pointless question because we all know the answer: the leader has his or her full support, and if there are no further questions, the interviewee is going to be leaving. Actually, the interviewee is probably going to be leaving even if there are further questions.

Let’s examine what the suspects have actually stated.

First, let’s look at what Tony said:

“I don’t leak, I don’t background. If I’ve got something to say, I say it.”

Notes: Ok, direct denial. But I do notice that he issued a statement rather than waiting to be asked about it. That way nobody could ask him if he knew who did leak it.

Next Kevin Andrews:

Interestingly, a quick internet search – about twenty minutes – hasn’t given me more than a reporter’s opinion that his denial was vague.

Thirdly, Peta Credlin:

The only thing I could find was a couple of paragraphs in “The West Australian” where she told them she did not give journalist Greg Sheridan the documents and it then quoted her directly saying:

“No. I didn’t remove any defence documents from the PMO. None.”

Notes: Interestingly she didn’t say that she didn’t pass on any defence documents that someone else removed from the Prime Minister’s Office. Neither did she say that she didn’t pass them on to another journalist; the paper only reported that she didn’t hand them on to Abbott’s buddy, Greg Sheridan.

Finally, Christopher Pyne:

Well, he may not be in the frame but I figured that I had to include him so that we could repeat that wonderful headline from “The Australian”:

Tony Abbott not leaking on submarines, Christopher Pyne

But Pyne did go on to say that he wouldn’t assume that it was Tony. Unfortunately, he wasn’t asked if that meant that there was someone else who hated to Turnbull enough to release a classified document.

Now, if this was one of those British TV shows, where the police always gather all the suspects in the one place, before the detective goes through all the clues one by one and goes on to tell us why some were merely red herrings and that the only reason that Cyndy was lying was to cover up her affair and that even though she had a motive and no alibi, in fact, the murderer was Desmond who was jealous at being passed over for promotion by the victim and he cleverly made it look the murder had taken place at ten past nine instead of the actual time giving him a watertight alibi, then we’d at least get to find out who did it and it’d be the least likely suspect. In this case, that’d make Pyne the leaker, but I suspect that this one of the few times that he wasn’t responsible. (Oh, by few times, I’m talking about when compared to British TV shows… I’m not suggesting that Christopher would ever leak anything to a journalist, just in case that’s confusing. My sources tell me that – even after a few drinks – Pyne is the soul of discretion.)

Unfortunately, it’s not a TV show, so it’s highly unlikely that the culprit will be found and we’ll just have to speculate.

However, given this is a national security matter and the material was classified, couldn’t they use all this metadata that the companies are meant to be keeping?

 

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