Australian Strategic Policy Institute

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Group.png Australian Strategic Policy Institute
(Think tankTwitter WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png 5
Aspi.png
AbbreviationASPI
Formation2001
HeadquartersCanberra, Australian Capital Territory
Type•  think-tank
•  lobby group
InterestsChina, Corporate media/Deep state control, propaganda
Sponsored byLockheed, Raytheon
Membership•  Hugh White
•  Peter Abigail
• Peter Jennings in 2002.jpg Peter Jennings
•  Ken Gillespie
• StephenConroy.jpg Stephen Conroy
•  James Brown (SIAA)
•  Brendan Nelson
• Jane Halton WHO.jpg Jane Halton
• Gai Brodtmann.jpg Gai Brodtmann
•  Lavina Lee
•  Jennifer Ma
•  Denis Dragovic
•  Stephen Brady
•  Robert Hill (Australian senator)
•  Anne Lyons
• Rajiv Shah official portrait.jpg Rajiv Shah
•  John Fenwick
•  Elsa Kania
•  David Feeney
•  Tim Barrett
•  Nick Kaldas
• Anne-Marie Brady.jpg Anne-Marie Brady
• Dan Ward.jpg Daniel Ward
•  Robert Clark
•  Andrew Davies
•  Anthony Bergin
•  Campbell Darby
•  David Uren
•  Lisa Sharland
•  Paul Barnes
•  William Paterson
• Vernon White - September 2016.jpg Vern White
•  John Fitzgerald
•  Rod Lyon
•  Graeme Dobell
•  Stephen Merchant
•  Ulas Yildirim
•  James Leibold
•  Peter Mattis
•  Dion Devow
•  Huon Curtis
•  Teagan Westendorf
•  Rachael Owen
•  Nathan Ruser
•  Daria Impiombato
•  Albert Zhang
•  Audrey Fritz
•  Baani Grewal
•  Fergus Hunter
•  Grant Ferguson
•  Tony McCormack
•  William Leben
•  David Millar
•  Timothy Daly
•  Lin Li
•  Tilla Hoja
•  Michael Shoebridge
•  Fergus Hanson
•  Mark R. Watson
•  Mike Norris
•  Karly Winkler
•  Danielle Cave
•  Gill Savage
•  John Coyne
•  David Engel
•  Jacob Wallis
•  Robert Glasser
•  Katja Theodorakis
•  Huong Le Thu
•  Marcus Hellyer
•  Malcolm Davis
•  Brendan Nicholson
•  Anastasia Kapetas
•  Samantha Hoffman
•  Jocelinn Kang
•  Miah Hammond-Errey
•  Fergus Ryan
•  Jamie Gaida
•  Bart Hogeveen
•  Fiona Torline
•  Jacinta Carroll
•  Isaac Kfir
•  Todd Hanks
•  Kelsey Munro
•  Alex Joske
•  Elise Thomas
•  Aakriti
•  Charlie Lyons Jones
•  Emily French
•  Emilia Currey
•  Louisa Bochner
•  Khwezi Nkwanyana
•  Hillary Mansour
•  Matthew Page
•  Jackson Schultz
•  Breanna Gabbert
•  Putri Handrianti
•  Olivia Nelson
•  Anush Raventhiraraja
•  Jerry Cashman
•  Steve Clark
•  Nathan Haslam
•  Madeleine Nyst
•  Erin Bassett
•  Hannah Green
•  Nikolaos Skondrianos
•  Larissa Joseph
•  Jack Norton
•  Ashleigh McNeill
•  Gabriel Zito
•  Vanessa Geidel
•  Grace Stanhope
•  Oliver Cheatle
•  Ben Stevens
Its function is to give a serious academic appearance to dubious stories in the campaign against China.

The Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) is a military and strategic policy think tank based in Canberra. Its main function is to give an academic, serious patina to dubiously sourced propaganda, for then for it to spread further in politics and corporate media. It is most noted for being one of the main "serious sources" for many of the claims regarding China and 'Chinese influence' dominating Western corporate media.

Another mission of the think tank is to lobby for increased weapons spending, by a fortuitous coincidence from the very weapons producers who sponsor its activities.[1]

In his 2016 documentary, “The Coming War on China.” John Pilger stated:

“ASPI has played a leading role – some would say, the leading role – in driving Australia’s mendacious and self-destructive and often absurd China-bashing campaign. The current Coalition government, perhaps the most right-wing and incompetent in Australia’s recent history, has relied upon the ASPI to disseminate Washington’s desperate strategic policies, into which much of the Australian political class, along with its intelligence and military structures, has been integrated.””
John Pilger (2016)  [2]

History

ASPI was first established in 2001 under Prime Minister John Howard. ASPI's inaugural director was Hugh White, who served as director from 2001 to 2004. White was succeeded by Major General (retired) Peter Abigail in 2005, and from 2012 Peter Jennings.

Funding

The Australian Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme, set up to monitor Chinese government influence in Australia, ironically captures some more recent sources of ASPI funding, including NATO, the US State Department and the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

Military-Industrial Congressional Complex sponsorship

Aspi sponsors.png

ASPI works on evaluating the military budget, a key part of its output. Former director Hugh White believed, when he was in charge until 2004, that this budget evaluation was incompatible with taking cash from the companies the military buys things from, but this anti-corruption safeguard has since been eliminated. In 2019 the institute received only 43% of its funding $9 million total budget from the Australian Government.[3]

The biggest non-state sponsors are military contractors such as Lockheed Martin, BAE, Northrop Grumman, Thales and Raytheon.[4]

The second important funding source is technology companies with ties to the military-industrial-surveillance complex, like Microsoft, Oracle Australia and Google, and Australian telecom Telstra.

ASPI also received nearly $450,000 from the US State Department. And there are contributions from other foreign governments, many being strategic competitors to China, including the Embassy of Japan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (that is, Taiwan). Other interesting sponsors are the spooky Institute for War and Peace Reporting and the even more spooky MITRE Corporation USA.

Getting money from prison labour

In early 2021, Defense for Children (DCI) took the ASPI to court in New South Wales. DCI’s lawsuit charges that ASPI may have been receiving funds from a number of weapons manufacturers and government agencies in the US and UK profiting from prison labor, including Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon and BAE Systems. According to Pepe Escobar, "sources that prefer to remain anonymous insist ASPI exercised serious pressure directly on DCI’s headquarters in Geneva to drop the case."[5]

China Propaganda Campaign

ASPI's influence comes partly from a deep engagement with the media. Executive director, Peter Jennings stated "One of our focuses has been to make a more prominent debate around national security issues, in the same way we discuss economic issues."[3]

The growing funding over the last few years has allowed the establishment of a range of new initiatives, including a growing focus on China through the formation of its International Cyber Policy Centre in 2013, which today employs most of its China-focused analysts. The centre's output is impressive: [3]

Its Picking Flowers, Making Honey report charted the Chinese military's collaboration with foreign universities including many in Australia. Its findings informed an virulently McCarthyist episode,"Red Flag"[6], of the state channel ABC's prime-time investigative magazine Four Corners.[3]

Another investigation, Mapping Xinjiang's 'Re-education' Camps', used satellite imagery to show the massive growth of camps used to detain Uighurs, and attracted wide coverage. [3]

And another, on China's technology giants, has been regularly consulted by the Western press to give an angle on state censorship and control as exercised on Chinese social networks.[3]

ASPI's Alex Joske was a bylined contributor to Channel Nine's coverage of alleged Chinese defector Wang Liqiang, whose revelations drew fervent attention in the recent Taiwanese election. Joske's role was conducted in the course of his employment as a casual researcher by influential The Age newspaper, but dove-tailed and intersected with his work at ASPI.<[3]

Issues like the ban on Huawei's involvement in Australia's telecommunications infrastructure originated within Australia's intelligence agencies, formed director White stated.[3]

A tweet by a member of ASPI is revealing of the one-sided reasoning behind the project. "QR-codes" on a market stall and a "knife chained down" is used as an indication of Uighur oppression.

Integrity Initiative

Full article: Stub class article Integrity Initiative/Cluster/Australia

A frequent participant in ASPI panels, Greg Sheridan, was mentioned in the Integrity Initiative leaks, where Chris Donnelly and Keith Sargent went to a "closed door meeting on Australia’s perception of the Chinese threat", a speech held by Greg Sheridan.

Building Integrity Initiative in Asia?

From February 2019 to March 2021, through a project supported by DFAT and the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the International Cyber Policy Centre is promoting international cyber norms and confidence building in the ASEAN region via in-country training workshops. In April 2019, the centre held the first workshop of its kind in Kuala Lumpur, bringing together 18 representatives from 10 countries.[7]

Controlling social media feeds

In 2020, Twitter announced that, on the ASPI’s recommendations, it had shut down more than 170,000 accounts that praised China’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, generally “antagoniz[ed]” the U.S., or amplified “deceptive narratives” about the Hong Kong protests (i.e., ones that did not agree with the State Department or the 44% of Hong Kongers who supported the movement).[8]

In 2021, Twitter revealed in a blog post that ASPI had helped identify thousands of accounts that “amplified Chinese Communist Party narratives” around China’s treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, accounts that now had been permanently deleted. Neither ASPI nor Twitter claimed that the deleted accounts were fake or operated by the Chinese state, strongly implying that merely agreeing with Beijing or questioning Western narratives was reason enough to be banned.[9]

Other

Another recent analysis, on Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's digital capabilities, was notable for its key author: now-Liberal MP and former Australian ambassador to Israel Dave Sharma.[3]

Mainstream Criticism

Former NSW premier Bob Carr has accused it of pumping out a “one-sided, pro-American view of the world”. Veteran foreign editor Tony Walker has slammed its "dystopian worldview" which "leaves little room for viewing China as a potential partner". "It lacks integrity and brings shame to Australia," says retired former DFAT chief and ex-Qantas CEO John Menadue. “I see it as very much the architect of the China threat theory in Australia”, adds ex-ambassador to China turned Beijing-based business consultant Geoff Raby. In the Australian Senate, Labor's Kim Carr criticized it heavily, thundering about "hawks intent on fighting a new cold war".[3]


 

Related Quotations

PageQuoteAuthorDate
AIJAC/Rambam Programs/2015“Our exchange on strategic issues soon demonstrated a whole range of areas where our military forces [ IDF and the Australian military ] could learn from one another. These ranged from defence industry co-operation (our army has purchased an Israeli battle management system) to counter-insurgency, urban intelligence gathering, coalition warfighting, countering improvised explosive devices, military education, the use of reservists, airpower developments (both countries are acquiring F-35 joint strike fighters), military procurement processes and maritime security (Israel is developing offshore gas fields). Issues related to counter-terrorism and social resilience were highlighted as common interests of both states.”Anthony Bergin2015
Peter Jennings (ASPI)“The only person who thinks there is no chance of militarily victory in Afghanistan is Joe Biden”Peter Jennings (ASPI)June 2021
Paul KeatingThe Albanese Government’s complicity in joining with Britain and the United States in a tripartite build of a nuclear submarine for Australia under the AUKUS arrangements represents the worst international decision by an Australian Labor government since...World War One...And that approach was to have the United States supply nuclear submarines for deep and joint operations against China...

And how did this come to be? The answer lies in Anthony Albanese’s reliance on two seriously unwise ministers. Penny Wong and Richard Marles....Labor’s valiant three fell immediately into line – they would join the neo-cons in the Office of National Intelligence, ASPI, the country’s principal US apologist, the security agencies and the hapless Defence department....

Indeed, two of our major dailies, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age, have for five years now, argued the notion of war against China. Or readiness for war.”
Paul Keating15 March 2023

 

Employee on Wikispooks

EmployeeJobAppointed
Justin BassiExecutive DirectorMay 2022

 

Known members

10 of the 159 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Justin BassiAustralian spook who "wears CIA cufflinks". Leader of Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
Kim BeazleyAustralian politician with spooky overtones
Anne-Marie BradyNew Cold Warrior New Zealand academic. Member of Australian Strategic Policy Institute and Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China
Gai BrodtmannAustralian Labor politician with close ties to the military-industrial complex.
Stephen ConroyIntroduced internet censorship as Australian Minister of Communications. Later on the board of Australian Strategic Policy Institute and lobbyist for the gambling industry.
Jane HaltonFormer leader of the murderous People Smuggling Taskforce, event 201 participant
Peter Jennings (ASPI)Executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) from May 2012 to May 2022
Stephen Loosley
Rajiv ShahUSDSO. As President of the Rockefeller Foundation, sat on the Lancet COVID-19 Commission
Vern WhiteCanadian senator and former chief of the Ottawa Police Service.

 

Sponsors

EventDescription
Lockheed"Nobody is doing a better job of arming the world than Lockheed-Martin"
RaytheonMilitary-industrial complex.


Rating

5star.png 17 January 2020 Terje  Propaganda mill against China
Picks up and washes dubiously sourced claims, thus giving them credibility
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References