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Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Peter Lemkin - 23-10-2014 Gough Whitlam dies at age 98 Prime minister for just three years, he brought in sweeping changes that transformed Australia and inspired a generation of progressive politicians Gough Whitlam, who was prime minister for just three years but became a defining political figure of modern Australia, has died aged 98. Whitlam's family said in a statement on Tuesday: "Our father, Gough Whitlam, has died this morning at the age of 98." "A loving and generous father, he was a source of inspiration to us and our families and for millions of Australians. "There will be a private cremation and a public memorial service." The election of his government on 2 December 1972, with the famous "It's time" election campaign, ended 23 years of conservative rule and its dismissal by the governor general Sir John Kerr on 11 November 1975remains one of the most controversial events in Australian political history. But in just three years the Whitlam government instituted sweeping changes that transformed Australian society as the baby boomer generation came of age. In a rapid program of reform it called "the program", the Whitlam government created Australia's national health insurance scheme, Medibank; abolished university fees; introduced state aid to independent schools and needs-based school funding; returned traditional lands in the Northern Territory to the Gurindji people; drafted (although did not enact) the first commonwealth lands right act; established diplomatic relations with China, withdrew the remaining Australian troops from Vietnam; introduced no-fault divorce laws; passed the Racial Discrimination Act; blocked moves to allow oil drilling on the Great Barrier Reef; introduced environmental protection legislation; and removed God Save the Queen as the national anthem. The former Rudd government minister Lindsay Tanner has written: "Whitlam and his government changed the way we think about ourselves. The curse of sleepy mediocrity and colonial dependency, so mercilessly flayed in 1964 by Donald Horne in The Lucky Country, was cast aside." But the Whitlam government's economic record is more controversial. It came to power at the time of the first oil shock and failed to contain wages inflation. In 1975 it was embroiled in what became known as the "loans affair" when the minister for minerals and energy, Rex Connor, sought to borrow money for resource projects, outside normal treasurer processes, from Arab financiers using a middleman called Tirath Khemlani. No money was borrowed but the scandal deeply damaged the government. Whitlam won a double dissolution election in 1974, with a reduced majority. But from October to November 1975 the parliament was deadlocked, with the opposition using its numbers in the Senate to refuse to pass the budget. When Whitlam visited Kerr to call for a half Senate election, Kerr instead withdrew his commission as prime minister and replaced him with the Liberal leader Malcolm Fraser. Whitlam lost the election to Fraser after the national upheaval of the dismissal. He stood down as Labor leader and retired from politics in 1978. A towering figure at 1.94m, with a deep resonant voice and an eloquent turn of phrase, Whitlam inspired a generation of progressive politicians and was widely referred to by just his first name. His is remembered forsome of the most famous quotes in Australian politics, including while standing on the steps of the old parliament house after news of his dismissal. He said: "Well may we say God save the Queen' because nothing will save the governor general." He was a graduate of Knox Grammar and Canberra Grammar and joined the airforce after university, before studying law and being admitted to the bar. He married Margaret Dovey in 1942; they had four children. He won the western Sydney seat of Werriwa in 1952 and was elected leader of the Labor party in 1967, succeeding Arthur Calwell. After leaving politics he worked as Australia's ambassador to Unesco, accepted several visiting professorships and, along with Margaret, received life membership of the Labor party in 2007. Margaret died in 2012. Whitlam, by then using a wheelchair, had moved into an aged-care facility in 2010. He described her as "the love of my life". Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Peter Lemkin - 23-10-2014 [TABLE="width: 100%"] [TR] [TD="width: 84%"] The Forgotten Coup -- How America and Britain Crushed the Government of Their "Ally," AustraliaBy John Pilger [/TD] [TD="width: 16%"][/TD] [/TR] [/TABLE] Across the political and media elite in Australia, a silence has descended on the memory of the great, reforming prime minister Gough Whitlam, who has died. His achievements are recognized if grudgingly, his mistakes noted in false sorrow. But a critical reason for his extraordinary political demise will, they hope, be buried with him. Australia briefly became an independent state during the Whitlam years, 1972-75. An American commentator wrote that no country had "reversed its posture in international affairs so totally without going through a domestic revolution." Whitlam ended his nation's colonial servility. He abolished Royal patronage, moved Australia towards the Non-Aligned Movement, supported "zones of peace" and opposed nuclear weapons testing. Although not regarded as on the left of the Labor Party, Whitlam was a maverick social democrat of principle, pride and propriety. He believed that a foreign power should not control his country's resources and dictate its economic and foreign policies. He proposed to "buy back the farm." In drafting the first Aboriginal lands rights legislation, his government raised the ghost of the greatest land grab in human history, Britain's colonization of Australia, and the question of who owned the island-continent's vast natural wealth. Latin Americans will recognize the audacity and danger of this "breaking free" in a country whose establishment was welded to great, external power. Australians had served every British imperial adventure since the Boxer rebellion was crushed in China. In the 1960s, Australia pleaded to join the US in its invasion of Vietnam, then provided "black teams" to be run by the CIA. US diplomatic cables published last year by WikiLeaks disclose the names of leading figures in both main parties, including a future prime minister and foreign minister, as Washington's informants during the Whitlam years. Whitlam knew the risk he was taking. The day after his election, he ordered that his staff should not be "vetted or harassed" by the Australian security organization, ASIO -- then, as now, tied to Anglo-American intelligence. When his ministers publicly condemned the US bombing of Vietnam as "corrupt and barbaric," a CIA station officer in Saigon said: "We were told the Australians might as well be regarded as North Vietnamese collaborators." Whitlam demanded to know if and why the CIA was running a spy base at Pine Gap near Alice Springs, a giant vacuum cleaner which, as Edward Snowden revealed recently, allows the US to spy on everyone. "Try to screw us or bounce us," the prime minister warned the US ambassador, "[and Pine Gap] will become a matter of contention." Victor Marchetti, the CIA officer who had helped set up Pine Gap, later told me, "This threat to close Pine Gap caused apoplexy in the White House ... a kind of Chile [coup] was set in motion." Pine Gap's top-secret messages were de-coded by a CIA contractor, TRW. One of the de-coders was Christopher Boyce, a young man troubled by the "deception and betrayal of an ally." Boyce revealed that the CIA had infiltrated the Australian political and trade union elite and referred to the Governor-General of Australia, Sir John Kerr, as "our man Kerr." Kerr was not only the Queen's man, he had long-standing ties to Anglo-American intelligence. He was an enthusiastic member of the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom, described by Jonathan Kwitny of the Wall Street Journal in his book, "The Crimes of Patriots," as, "an elite, invitation-only group... exposed in Congress as being founded, funded and generally run by the CIA." The CIA "paid for Kerr's travel, built his prestige... Kerr continued to go to the CIA for money." When Whitlam was re-elected for a second term, in 1974, the White House sent Marshall Green to Canberra as ambassador. Green was an imperious, sinister figure who worked in the shadows of America's "deep state." Known as the "coupmaster," he had played a central role in the 1965 coup against President Sukarno in Indonesia -- which cost up to a million lives. One of his first speeches in Australia was to the Australian Institute of Directors -- described by an alarmed member of the audience as "an incitement to the country's business leaders to rise against the government." The Americans and British worked together. In 1975, Whitlam discovered that Britain's MI6 was operating against his government. "The Brits were actually de-coding secret messages coming into my foreign affairs office," he said later. One of his ministers, Clyde Cameron, told me, "We knew MI6 was bugging Cabinet meetings for the Americans." In the 1980s, senior CIA officers revealed that the "Whitlam problem" had been discussed "with urgency" by the CIA's director, William Colby, and the head of MI6, Sir Maurice Oldfield. A deputy director of the CIA said: "Kerr did what he was told to do." On 10 November, 1975, Whitlam was shown a top secret telex message sourced to Theodore Shackley, the notorious head of the CIA's East Asia Division, who had helped run the coup against Salvador Allende in Chile two years earlier. Shackley's message was read to Whitlam. It said that the prime minister of Australia was a security risk in his own country. The day before, Kerr had visited the headquarters of the Defence Signals Directorate, Australia's NSA where he was briefed on the "security crisis." On 11 November -- the day Whitlam was to inform Parliament about the secret CIA presence in Australia -- he was summoned by Kerr. Invoking archaic vice-regal "reserve powers," Kerr sacked the democratically elected prime minister. The "Whitlam problem" was solved, and Australian politics never recovered, nor the nation its true independence. www.johnpilger.com Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Anthony Thorne - 24-10-2014 Pilger has written about this before. Scanning the local papers and news media down here in Australia over the past few days, I saw absolutely nothing written about what Pilger has elaborated on above. No surprise I guess, but Pilger's sharp depiction of what we had, and what we lost, does make me a little sad. Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Magda Hassan - 24-10-2014 Beyond Conspiracy Theory: US presidential archives on the Australian press, national security and the Whitlam government Associate Professor Stephen Stockwell School of Arts Griffith University Refereed paper presented to the Jour nalism Education Conference, Griffith University, 29 November 2 December 2005 Abstract Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Investigative journalists walk a fine line between being lauded as guardians of democracy and derided as "conspiracy theori sts". Those investigating the events that led to the fall of the Whitlam government in 1975 are often accused of an obsession with conspiracy, but documents from the presiden tial archives from the Eisenhower to Ford administrations provide evidence of the complex inter-relationship between the Australian press, security services and Wh itlam's opponents. Recent archival work clearly establishes the ready complicity of the Australian press and a role for the US National Security Council in Whitlam's de mise. Excisions from key documents on national security grounds point to the need for further investigative work before we can move beyond conspiracy theory to tell the full story of 1975. Pag e 2 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Introduction The distance between investigative journalism and conspiracy theory is not as large as many journalists would hope. Both start in speculation. Both assume there is a back- story that is closer to reality than the offi cial story. Both seek to draw out facts and connections that reveal power and the abuse of power. A conspiracy theory is any explanation of a seemingly straightforward event that relies on hidden information and claims of secr et coordination and nefarious motives. Conspiracy theories generally serve a useful function in mass society, not as a realistic reflection of the world but as a kind of a pressure valve where citizens can vent their frustration that they have so little knowledge or control of the decisions that form their life chances. Mark Fenster (1999, p. 67) argues that "just because overarching conspiracy theo ries are wrong does not mean they are not on to something. Specifically, they ideologically address real structural inequities, and constitute a response to a withering civil society and the concentration of the ownership of the me ans of production, which together leave the political subject without the ability to be recognized or to signify in the public realm." To the disenfranchised, which is most people, the secret meetings of cabinets and boards behind closed doors seem like the perfect opportunities for powerful people in close cabals to "breathe together" which is th e literal meaning of the Latin root of "conspiracy". No wonder there is a market fo r the speculation about half-truths that is the stock-in-trade of the conspiracy theorist. Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code shows that market can be profitable indeed. By way of contrast, investigative journalism seeks to explain the real world by "uncovering information that has been kept from public view." (Stovall, 2005, p. 95) Journalism theorists disagree over whether in vestigative journalism requires original work by an individual journalist or active secrecy and evasion by powerful forces but they all tend to agree that the resulting stor ies should be in the public interest (Tanner 2002, pp. xx-xxiii). Thus investigative journalism is seen as a natural progression from the watchdog' or fourth estate functions of everyday journalism which holds democracy to account. Conspiracy theorist s would make a similar claim for their activities. What differentiates investigative journalism from conspiracy theory is the quality of the evidence and the challenge for investigative journalists is to ensure that their evidence is unassailable, that it is of a high forensic standard that could be tested rationally, rigorously and scientifically in a courts of law. This paper argues that investigative journalism is marked by th e strength of the proof it adduces. Of particular interest are those moments when the weight of evidence shifts a position from conspiracy theory to common knowledge. ASIO's interest in opponents of the Liberal Party in the 50s and 60s have moved from leftist paranoia to established fact (McKnigh,t 1994, pp. 285-6). In the United States, government involvement in coups around the world and close surveillance of o pponents at home changed from fantasy to Pag e 3 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory reality in the 70s (Hitchens, 2001; Mackenzi e, 1997). Queensland in the 1980s saw claims of police and political corruption move from conspiracy theory through investigative journalism to common wisdom (Dickie, 1988). In all these cases, the shift came about as the result of the gathering of documentary evidence that established a strong forensic case. The pre-eminent unresolved conspiracy theory that festers at the heart of the Australian body politic circulates around whether the decision made by governor-general John Kerr to dismiss the Whitlam Labor govern ment in 1975 was influenced by the Central Intelli gence Agency (CIA) with the complicit support of Australia's defence and security services an d the connivance of the Australian press. From the outset, references to CIA connections with Kerr's coup were cast as paranoiac conspiracy theory. Kerr himself said with regards to allegations of his CIA co nnections: "I have had no direct or indirect connection at any time... with any intelligence organizations including our own. Only the more gullible subscribers to the conspiracy theory of history could believe or want to believe such nonsense." (Kerr, 1978, p. 100) A number of commentators, including journalists Alan Reid (1976) and Paul Kelly (1983), agree with Kerr that full-blown conspiracy theories lack an evidentiary basis. Even Whitlam himself refuses to be drawn into support for a conspiracy theory but he does note that President Jimmy Carter's assistant secretary of state for East Asia, Warren Christopher made a detour to Australia in 1977 to tell him: "The US administration wo uld never again interfere in the domestic political process of Australia." (Whitlam, 1985, p. 53) Other authors, while avoiding charges of conspiracy, see a much more sinist er side to Kerr's activities (Lloyd & Clark, 1976) But the actuality of conspiracy is irrelevant because once any discussion of the security dimensions of the events of 1975 is cast as conspiracy theory then it can be dismissed, because "... a majority of Austra lians belong to the accident (or stuff-up) school of historical explanation." (Henderson 2004) But sweeping the CIA under the conspiracy theo ry rug is hardly a resolution to the matter. Thirty years on, it is timely to review the issues on the evidence and investigative journalism with its forensic st andards of proof offers the opportunity to see exactly what the evidence can or cannot substantiate. By going beyond mere reporting of the official story to see whethe r the official story is corroborated by the facts, by putting forward evidence that ca n be tested by others, by scrutinising the official record to see what was spin and wh at was substance, investigative journalists can use historical, even scientific, methods to hold governments accountable and take the public one step closer to the truth. US presidential archives from the period are gradually becoming more available and, despite the still secret gaps in the record, they provide materials that allow us to test the st rength of the cases that can be established for and against US involvement in Australia's gr eatest constitutional crisis. If all that can be done is to set out the complex inter-rela tionships of personalities, perspectives and power around these events, then investigat ive journalism will have done its job. Pag e 4 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory The Context The events of 1975 have to be read against the ongoing US-Austra lian relationship and the crucial role of the National S ecurity Council (NSC), the federal executive council responsible for planning, coordinating, and ev aluating the defense policies of the United States and also exercising direction over the CIA. Created by the 1947 National Security Act, the NSC is chaired by the president. Its regular attendees are the vice president, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, and the president's national security adviser. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is the statutory military advisor to the Council, and the Director of Central Intelligence is the intelligence advisor. (http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/) By National Security Decision Memorandum 40 on 17 February 1970, President Richard Nixon approved covert action operations carried out by the CIA (unless otherwise assigned by him) and approved by the 40 Committee chaired by the president's national security adviser. With regard to US-Australia relations, the 60s saw a shift from an alliance based on common traits and aspirations to Australia's emergence as a geo-political asset. In 1961, at the transition from Eisenhower to Kenne dy administrations, the NSC reported that "Australia, particularly presents an unusual a ffinity of attitudes with the United States (and it) is in a position to play an acti ve and important role in promoting free world interests in Southeast Asia, the Southwest Pa cific and the eastern half of the Indian Ocean." The NSC's military objectives included "plan for the availability of facilities... standardize military equipment on US mode ls and... continue to consider, and as appropriate cooperate with Australia in, projects for military purposes in selected scientific fields." (Lay, J.S., 1961, "Note by the Executive Secretary to the National Security Council on Long-range US Policy Interests in Australia and New Zealand", NSC 6109, Box 12 NSC Registry series, Ei senhower Presidential Archives.) This was the time of the space race and one ar ea where Australia could assist US science was by providing bases where communication s from spacecraft and satellites could be bought back to Earth. While the bases were ostensibly for scientific and space research purposes, the Australian and US government s created a mutual dependence on each other by establishing, on these bases, defence, communications and intelligence installations critical to US global strateg ic programs and operations. The North West Cape base established in 1963 was vital for US communications to its Indian Ocean Polaris submarine fleet (Ball 1980) but as more recent classes of subs had better communications and North West Cape was no longer required, the base has now reverted to Australian control. Of continui ng significance were the satellite intelligence facilities established at Pine Gap (1966) an d Nurrungar (1969) in central Australia. These facilities allowed the control and monitori ng of satellites to provide a range of communication services including early warning of Chinese and Russian missile launches and nuclear explosions and also th e transmission of orders and the gathering signals intelligence (SIGINT) including rad io communications and phone calls across Asia and the Middle East. Pag e 5 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory This system of bases was made possible by a number of treaties relating to Space Vehicle Tracking and Communications, the Status of United States Forces in Australia and the Establishment of a United States Naval Co mmunication Station at North West Cape signed in 1963 by the Australian Liberal Party government with Ambassador William Battle (Australian Treaty Series, 1963). "Bitter" Bill Battle commanded PT Boats in the Solomon Islands during the Second World War with John F. Kennedy ( http://www.ptboats.org/20-12-05-trivia-001.html ). Battle was a successful industrialist and lawyer, his father was Gover nor of Vi rginia and he was chairman of Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign in Virginia ( http://www.jfklink.com/speeches/jfk/aug60/ jfk240860_rally.html ). Kennedy appointed him as Ambassador to Australia in 1962 ( http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/po/com/10368.htm ). Battle was instrumental in establishing the regime of US bases in Aust ralia, their f ocus in both military and space affairs and with absolute freedom of access to Australia extended to all US military personnel. From this point, the bases mo ve to the centre of the US-Australian relationship. One of the first acts of Lynd on Baines Johnson's administration (1963-9) was to join with the telecommunications indu stry to each provide half the cost for two 18-piece independent satellite systems capable of "world wide traffic" even after a sustained attack (Memo to President, 13 March 1964, National Security Action Memo 252, Box 2, National Security Files, Johnson Pr esidential Archive). For the rest of the Johnson administration, the NSC was concerned to maintain the facilities to monitor the satellites as the tenure of bases was cha llenged in Libya (NSAM 291), Ethiopia, Kenya (NSAM 300), Brazil, Chile (NSAM 301), Pakistan (NSAM 348) and many other places around the world. President Richard Nixon initiated a review of US policies towards Australia and New Zealand by National Security Study Memo randum 127 on 27 May 1971. That study, in the second paragraph of its summary, under the heading US Interests and Objectives, says: "Our most direct stakes in Aust ralia and New Zealand are: maintenance of continuing access to their territory for pu rposes of locating defense and scientific installations of significance to our strategic capability and space program". Deeper in the report specific US interests and objectives with relation to Australia are enunciated as "installations contributing to our strategic deterrence capability...surveillance in the East Asia and Pacific/Indian Ocean areas...support base area in case of general hostilities with a major power..." and then a seven-line paragraph that is still excised from the document when the rest was declassified in 1996 (NSSM 127, 27 May 1971, Box 183, NSC Institutional Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). Further excisions are made in the background annex to the report with re gard to US facilities and installations in Australia which is passing strange as simil ar information had been made available in the Australian parliament as early as 1969 by Prime Minister John Gorton in response to the Opposition leader, Gough Whitlam ( Commonwealth Parliamentary Debates (H of R) 9 September 1969, pp. 1010-12). Pag e 6 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory The Whitlam Government's First Mistake On 2 December 1972, Gough Whitlam led th e Australian Labor Party into federal government for the first time in 23 years. He promised a more independent foreign policy stance than his conservative predeces sors and had already established relations with communist China while in opposition with a visit in July 1971, a visit that was legitimated when it was later revealed that the US President's envoy, Henry Kissinger had secretly been in China at the same time as Whitlam and Nixon himself visited China six months later (http://www.abc.ne t.au/ra/news/timelines/s1385451.htm). There is nothing in the archives to suggest that the United States was in any way involved in the 1972 election. In fact Kissinger told Whitlam: "Our instructions to our Embassy as regards the election last De cember were to keep hands off." (HAK Memorandum of Conversation, 30 July 1973 10-11am, Box 1027, NSC Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). The US attitude changed quickly after the election when Australian front benchers Jim Cairns, Clyde Cameron and Tom Uren criticised renewed bombing of Hanoi just before Christmas 1972. Whitlam exacerbated the situation by sending a letter to Nixon suggesting "that he will approach other Asian governments to make a joint appeal to Washington and Ha noi to resume negotiations" (Memo from Winston Lord, 20 December 1972, CO10 Australia, WHC Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). Kissinger's phone call to the US Embassy in Canberra barely contains the anger emanating from the White House: "If you could convey that we are not particularly amused being put by an ally on the same level as our enemy and to have an appeal equally addressed to us and North Vietnam, I must tell you it's not the way to start a relationship with us... So, I don't think we are going to reply to this message. I've just talked to the President about it... But we still hope to have the closest relationships with your government. But this is not an official communication... such an act taken publicly (releasing the letter) would really not have very good consequences... (Kissinger to Charge d'Affaires, US Embassy, Austra lia, 3.25pm, 20 December 1972, Box 17, HAK Telcons, Nixon Presidential Archive). This shift in the tenor of US-Australian rela tions had ramifications in the world of media that reverberated all the way through to 1975. On 4 January 1973, Nixon got a memo from his Communications Director, Herbert G. Klein to say that Sir Frank Packer, father of Kerry and then managing director and major share-holder of Australian Consolidated Press, had sent his New York representative "to express to you (Nixon) his (Packer's) personal support and that of his magazine s and his television network." Packer's message was that he understood Nixon's mo tivation in bombing Hanoi, that he was "disturbed" by Whitlam's comments and that the majority of Australian's did not share Whitlam's views. Of greatest concern is Kl ein's claim that Packer's representative "...offered you (Nixon) any use you may like of his magazines and network." (Memo from Herbert G. Klein, 4 january 1973, CO10 Australia, WHC Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). Packer's voluntary acquiescence to the US shows how the Australian press Pag e 7 did not need to be part of a conspiracy to do the bidding of th e United States. The Packer empire were willing collaborators before the US even conceived of using them. As Klein said in his memo to Nixon: "I decl ined (offers of help) at this time." In the event, when John Kerr installed Liberal lead er Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister in 1975, one of Fraser's first calls was to Kerry Packer who immediately went to Canberra to give the caretaker prime minister "a gr eat deal of moral support" both then and during the rest of the electi on campaign (Barry, 1993, p. 212). Whitlam Meets Nixon The Whitlam government's rela tionship with the United States never really recovered from this poor start and the relationship was further exacerbated by Attorney-General, Lionel Murphy's raid on ASIO in March 1973. Murphy was seen in Washington as a communist sympathiser and it was felt his raid endangered secrets shared between ASIO and the CIA. However Nixon did agre e to a meeting with Whitlam in July 1973. Kissingers' brief to Nixon said the primary purpose of the meeting was "to restore the level of confidence between our two government s at the highest level that existed before the Whitlam government took office." (Kissinger, HA, "M eeting with the Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam" Memo randum 4172, CO10 Australia, WHC Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). Whitlam had earnt the meeting because he had muted criticism of Nixon's Asian policies, prai sed détente but primarily because "he has defended out defense installations in Australia against attack from his party's left wing." Kissinger's briefing also mentioned Wh itlam's problems with the Senate before finally discussing "US Defense Installations in Australia: No Substantial Change in Prospect" and noting that Whitlam modified his position "after being briefed on the functions of these facilities" and turned debate at the recent party conference away from vital installations and on to the "less import ant" Omega navigation system. The briefing says that Pine Gap and Nurrungar merely monitor adherence to arms limitations agreements and missile developments in Ch ina and Russia. The briefing also holds out promise of "cosmetic changes" to give the impression of Australian control at North West Cape. It is interesting to note that in th is, the official story for Whitlam, there is no mention of the bases' information ga thering or even command functions. In the lead up to Whitlam's meeting with Nixon, Kissinger met with the recently appointed US Ambassador to Australia, Ma rshall Green, a career diplomat who had been ambassador to Indonesia 1965-69 du ring the overthrow of the Sukarno government. He told Kissinger: "I would de fine US interests in Australia as: (1) preserving our defense installations; (2) ma intaining our investment and trade there..." (HAK Memorandum of Conversation, 28 July 1973, Prime Minister Whitlam's Coming Visit, Box 1027, NSC Files, Nixon Presidenti al Archive) When Kissinger met Whitlam just before their meeting with Nixon, Kissinger summarises the situation: "We do not see recent changes in Australia as a greate r assertion of Australian autonomy. Rather we look at it as a change in some of the mechan ics in our relations... We can't deny that we have had some strains recently but we co nsider these matters of the past." (HAK Pag e 8 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Memorandum of Conversation 30 July 1973 10-11am, Box 1027, Nixon Presidential Archive). Neither the bases nor investment and trade were brought up by either side. Whitlam expressed an interest in talking with Nixon about French nuclear testing in the Pacific but the most striking thing is his nervousness about meeting Nixon. He told Kissinger: "I'm not particularly inhibited, bu t I'm afraid I might freeze up with him." Because of legal issues emanating from the Watergate break-in, Nixon had stopped taping conversations before he met Whitlam and the printed archives show no evidence of any memorandum of their conversation. Ne vertheless, as relations between Australia and the US appear to have stabilized following the meeting, certainly at the leadership level, one might assume that both sides did agree to leave the past behind them. The Nixon-Ford Transition After the double dissolution election in May 1974, left-winger Jim Cairns was elected as Whitlam's deputy and this sent shock-waves through Washington as they realized that one of Australia's staunchest critics of US foreign policy was a heartbeat away from the Prime Ministership. The future of the base s was again in question and Nixon and Kissinger took time out from the manage ment of the Watergate debacle and the disengagement from Vietnam to issue Nati onal Security Study Memorandum 204 to the Departments of State and Defense and the CIA on 1 July 1974. NSSM 204 notes "recent changes in the Labor Government" and says "The study should examine the impact of these changes on basic US objectives toward Australia, particularly in the political-security area." Th e memo calls for more than theoretical analysis: "It should define and evaluate policy options for giving effect to the resulting objectives." In particular the memo called for study of issues around "keeping US defense installations in Australia... relocating essential existing US security functions outside Australia... locating additional US fun ctions in Australia and the policy options for trying to do so." (NSSM 204, 1 July 1974, Box 205, NSC Institutional Files, Nixon Presidential Archive). Other issues to be addressed by the report continue to be classified. The memo gave th e NSC Interdepartmental Group for East Asia only two weeks to prepare the report. The report remain s classified. Nixon resigned from office on 8 August 1974, so it is possible that one of his last acts in office was to establish new policy objectives with regard to Australia but th ere is no evidence in the archive that this was the case. The archival record is silent on how thes e new policy objectives were implemented, completely silent. With the advent of Gerald Ford's administration, no further national security studies or decisions about Australia are evident in the archives. Whitlam called for a meeting with Ford that was held on 5 October 1974 and briefings for that meeting emphasise Whitlam's acceptance of US ba ses. US Ambassador to Australia, Marshall Green reports "...there would be no move by an Australian government to terminate these facilities as long as Labor was head ed by Whitlam..." There was concern about Jim Cairns: "Once in the top position he (Cairns) would probably veer... towards a Pag e 9 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory foreign policy based on neutrality and the removal of American bases from Australian shores." (Green, M, Telexes 21/30 Septem ber 1974, Box 2, NSA-Presidential Country Files for East Asia and the Pacific, Ford Pr esidential Archive) Kissinger's briefing for Ford pointed out that Whitlam was mellowing with regard to the US bases as he understood their significance for arms limit ations but in the event the bases did not come up in their conversation which covere d LBJ, their war service, general discussion of Indonesia, Pierre Trudeau and their children (Memcon, President's Meeting with Australian Prime Minister Whitlam, 5 October 1974, Box 6, NSA Memcons, Ford Presidential Archive). Kissinger's briefing fo r this meeting does contain the promise to Ford: "I will forward to you shortly for yo ur decision an inter-agency policy options study on these installations and on US policy toward Australia generally." (HAK, Meeting with Australian Prime Minister Whitlam, 4 October 1974, Box 1, NSA- Presidential Country Files for East Asia an d the Pacific, Ford Presidential Archive) There is no evidence of this report so it is impossible to know whether if Kissinger was still working on the report ordered by Nixon or a development of it. The Conspiracy and the Coup Whether for personal, political or commercia l reasons, by late 1974 Rupert Murdoch was turning against the Whitlam Government (S tockwell, 1995). Murdoch had taken a close interest in the 1972 Labor campaign and "sat in as virtual editorial director of his group of papers. He coordinated policy, dictated news stories, gave advice to the Whitlam camp and generally worked a twelve-hour day making sure that advice was used to the best advantage in his own editorials." (Regan, 1976:97). In November 1974 the Governor- General, John Kerr paid Murdoch a visit at Cavan, his farm near Canberra. It was Kerr who explained to Murdoch the problems Whit lam might have with Supply if his hold on the Senate weakened and Kerr gave a broad reading to his reserve powers (Munster, 1985:106). It is interesting to note that the next two documents in the archives relating to Australia are telexes to the Governor General expressi ng condolences to the people of Darwin after they were hit by a cyclone and greetings for Australia Day. (Ford, GR Telexes 27 December 1974/10 January 1975, Box 7, WHCF Subjec t Files, Ford Presidential Archive). Direct communication between the US Pres ident and the Australian Governor-General is rare in the archives and these two telexes suggest that the United States was playing up to Kerr's view of himself as Head of State with broad powers. Later in January, Kissinger writes to Green querying how Whit lam will handle the bases issue at the ALP conference. Kissinger notes th at Whitlam knows the bases "p lay a vital role in détente and strategic arms limitations agreements" th ough further comments are excised. (HAK, Telex to Green, 25 January 1975, Box 2, NSA-Presid ential Country Files for East Asia and the Pacific, Ford Presidential Archive) Wh itlam kept discussion off the US bases by turning his attention to the economic and political challenges facing the party. Page 10 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Whitlam had a final meeting with Ford on 7 May 1975, just a week after the fall of Saigon and the end of the Vietnam War. Whitlam was conciliatory on Indochina, offering assistance with reconstruction an d refugees. He was concerned about the build up of US and Soviet naval forces in the Indian Ocean but on the bases he has no complaints, highlighting the part they had to pl ay in building peace: "It is a contribution we thought we could make to balance the fee ling of détente you and the soviets have developed. This could have been an issue in Australia but it has been entirely defused... They will trust my judgment." (Ingersoll, Telex to US Embassy, 21 May 1975, Box 4, NSA-Presidential Country Files for East Asia and the Pacific, Ford Presidential Archive) It is striking how little there is in the Pr esidential archives about Australia in the year 1975. Between Kissinger's January telex to Green re the ALP conference and a telex from Kissinger to the US Embassy in Australia congratulating Malcolm Fraser on his 13 December election victory there is just do cumentation with regard to the May Whitlam- Ford meeting and a memo in November dec lining to appoint an ambassador during the Australian election campaign. There was correspondence at a lower level with regard to a meeting between Ford and then opposition leader Fraser during 1975 that was not included into presidential files until 1976. The significance of this documentation is discussed below. Much has been written about the events of 1975 from pro- and anti-conspiracy points of view (see Pilger, 1990 and Kelly, 1995 respectively ). There is evidence from Christopher Boyce, a US transmissions clerk responsible for sending and receiving material to and from Pine Gap, that there was infiltration of unions and deception to the detriment of the Whitlam government and that a senior o fficer had referred to the Governor-General as "our man Kerr" (Martin, 1982). It also appears that freelance agents with connections to US naval intelligence unit Task Force 157 were active in creating and planting documents that were at the heart of the "loans affair", a futile effort to raise funds from the Middle East that led Deputy Prime Mini ster Jim Cairns and Minerals and Energy Minister Rex Connor misleading parliament and resigning from the Ministry (James, 1982, pp. 174-178). Connor's resignation precipit ated the blocking of supply by the Senate on 15 October 1975. Once supply was blocked Rupert Murdoch's media interests offered vigorous support for Whitlam's overthrow. Front-page articles from The Australian show the role it played in promoting the Liberal's strategy: 18 October "Governor-General will act soon, says Fraser", 20 October "Fraser says Kerr must sack Whitlam", 24 October "Fraser accuses PM and says he must go" and October 27 "Whi tlam acts like dictator - Fraser". At the time John Menadue was Permanent Secretary of the Prime Minister's Department and he has revealed that Murdoch knew the details of Fraser's plan for the dismissal down to Menadue's fate: he was to become Ambassador to Japan (SMH, 4 Nov 1995, p. 1). Murdoch claims he has no memory of these discussions with Menadue (Kelly, 1995, p. 244). After the fall of Nixon in August 1974 and Sa igon in April 1975, there was a high degree of instability in the United States and Australia and in relations between the two Page 11 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory governments. The second half of 1975 saw the end of Marshall Green's tenure as US ambassador to Australia on 31 July. There was no replacement until February 1976. ASIO chief Barbour was sacked in Septembe r. ASIS chief Robertson was sacked on 22 October. CIA chief William Colby was sacked on 2 November. On that very day, Whitlam went public with the claim of a cl ose relationship between leader of the National Party, Doug Anthony and Richard Stallings, the American who had founded Pine Gap and whom Whitlam had just learnt was a CIA agent (McKnight, 1994, pp. 293- 4). If Stallings was CIA then Whitlam co ncluded that Pine Gap had much broader espionage uses than just monitoring nu clear and missile tests uses. Whitlam was astounded that the US had misled him and offended that he had been duped into misleading his party. The US was concerned that Whitlam was revealing the identities of CIA agents and warned ASIO that this co uld lead to a breakdown of their intelligence cooperation and information sharing arrange ments. On 9 November Kerr was briefed on the US threat to break off intelligence relations (Clark, 2000) and shortly thereafter, just before Whitlam was due to address the Parliament on Stallings, the CIA and Pine Gap, Kerr used the denial of supply as the trigger to dismiss the Whitlam government on 11 November 1975. Conclusion: Victory Has Many Fathers Recent work in the Gerald Ford presidential archives has uncovered clear evidence that the National Security Council, the body respon sible for exercising control over the CIA, was active with regard to Australia in 1975. Their activities are revealed not by a "smoking gun" document ordering the destabilis ation of an ally and the destruction of a properly elected government but rather in the bureaucratic argy bargy over how to celebrate their victory. The correspondence commences not in the nati onal security files but in the White House correspondence file with a memo to Pres idential Counsellor, Jack Marsh from his assistant Russ Rourke about a call from Bill Battle, US ambassador to Australia 1962-4 and the man who signed off on the regime of bases in Australia. Bill called to express an interest in joining "any US delegation th at might be sent to Australia with the ascendance of Malcolm Fraser." Rourke writes in "If you want me to look into this w/ NSC, please advise." Marsh responds in ha nd writing: "Explore with caution. Some political fall out possible with Battle whic h could be adverse M" (Rourke to Marsh, 18 December 1975, C010 Australia, Box 7, WHCF Subj ect Files, Ford Presidential Archive). Rourke writes again at the end of the month to report that there will be no "full-blown ceremony" and that the cabinet was sworn in at a "quiet" ceremony on 23 December. The NSC regrets (and one cannot but read a note of sarcasm into their response to Battle) the missed opportunity for the Fras er government to enjoy "the obvious affection that would have been lavished on it by the US..." Rourke undertakes to give Battle a status report. (Rourke to Mars h, 31 December 1975, C010 Australia, Box 7, WHCF Subject Files, Ford Presidential Archive) Page 12 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Attached at this point is a raft of co rrespondence from mid-1975 about an aborted attempt to arrange a meeting between presid ent Ford and then opposition leader Malcolm Fraser. On 23 May Jack Marsh had wr itten to National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft that Bill Battle was requesting a meeting between Fraser and Ford between 23 June and 4 July. The NSC was obviously not happy with this intervention and Deputy National Security Adviser WR Smyser required a "detailed breakdown" of Rourke's contacts with Battle. Rourke then notes: "I went to great lengths to advise Smyser that, under no circumstances, did we have any in tention of crossing into NSC's obvious jurisdiction..." (Rourke to Marsh, 28 May1975, C010 Australia, Box 7, WHCF Subject Files, Ford Presidential Archive) This is the clearest yet indication that the NSC considered that it had a jurisdiction with regard to Australia in 1975. This off-handed comment, and Rourke and Marsh's haste in ab dicating the area, indicate the breadth of the NSC's jurisdiction. From the above we could conclude with McKnight (1994, p. 294) that "the plausibility of CIA intervention in Australia from 1973 to 1975 is very high (but) no one has yet proved that the Central Intelligence Agency played a role in the crises of 1974 to 1975 which preceded the dismissal of the Whitlam govern ment." What can be said with regard to the 1975 Dismissal with some certainty is that US intelligence services, Australian media and the Liberal opposition had common intere sts in provoking the fall of the Whitlam government. There is no evidence of any meetings or connivance between all these parties to that end but the archival and analyti cal work reported in this paper makes it clear that: (1) The Packer empire had put their media interests at the service of the United States and Rupert Murdoch received a briefing from Ke rr before taking an active editorial line against Whitlam; (2) President Nixon ordered the NSC to do something more than produce policy options to hold current, and create new, US defense installations in Australia; and (3) White House staff considered that the NS C did have a jurisdiction in Australia in 1975 and that US security services were active in promoting the dismissal of the Whitlam government. Further investigation of presently excised portions of the Nixon and Ford archives will reveal more about the events of 1975 when they are declassifies. The author's applications for the review of classification of documents in these archives are presently being considered. Page 13 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Bibliography Australian Treaty Series (1963) No 6, 10, 16. Retrieved 15 August 2005, from http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/dfat/treaties/1963 Ball, Desmond (1980) A suitable p iece of real estate: AmericaniInstallations in Australia. Sydney: Hale & Iremonger. Barry, Paul (1994) The rise and rise of Kerry Packer. Sydney: Bantam/ABC Books. Clark, Andrew (2000, October 15) Kerr brie fed on CIA threat to Whitlam. Sunday Age . Dickie, Phil (1988) The road to Fitzgerald. St. Lucia, Q: University of Queensland Press. Fenster, Mark (1999) ConspiracytTheories: secrecy and power in American culture. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. Henderson, Gerard (2004, January 13) Conspiracy? We prefer a stuff-up. The Age. Retrieved 15 August 2005 from http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/01/12/1073877759867.html. Hitchens, C. (2001) The trial of Henry Kissinger. London: Verso. James, Nathan (1982) Dateline Australia: America's foreign Watergate. Foreign Policy, Winter, pp. 168-185. Kelly, Paul (1983) The dismissal : Australia's most sensational power struggle. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. Kelly, Paul (1995) November 1975 : The inside story of Aust ralia's greatest political crisis. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. Kerr, John (1978) Matters for judgment: an autobiography South Melbourne, Vic.: Macmillan. Lloyd, Clem and Clark, Andrew (1976) Kerr's King Hit. Stanmore, NSW: Cassell. Mackenzie, Angus (1997) Secrets: the CIA's war at home. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press. Martin, Ray (1982, May 23) A spy's story". 60 Minutes, Channel 9. Retieved 15 August from http://www.serendipi ty.li/cia/cia_oz/60min.htm McKnight, David (1994) Australia's spies and their secrets. St Leonards, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin. Page 14 Stephen Stockwell: Beyond Conspiracy Theory Page 15 Munster, George (1985) Rupert Murdoch: a paper prince. Ringwood: Viking. Pilger, John (1990) A secret country. London: Vintage. Regan, Simon (1976), Rupert Murdoch: a business biography. London: Angus and Robertson. Reid, Alan (1976) The Whitlam ventur e. Melbourne: Hill of Content. Stockwell, S. (1995) Rupert and the dismissal. Communications Update. No. 117. Stovall, J. 2005 Journalism: Who, What, When, Where, Why and How Boston: Pearson. Tanner, Stephen (ed.) (2002) Journalism : investigation and research. Frenchs Forest, N.S.W.: Longman. Whitlam, Gough (1985) The Whitlam Government 1972 1975 . Ringwood: Penguin http://www98.griffith.edu.au/dspace/bitstream/handle/10072/2432/32006_1.pdf?sequence=1 Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Magda Hassan - 24-10-2014 Anthony Thorne Wrote:Pilger has written about this before. Scanning the local papers and news media down here in Australia over the past few days, I saw absolutely nothing written about what Pilger has elaborated on above. No surprise I guess, but Pilger's sharp depiction of what we had, and what we lost, does make me a little sad. :hock:: ::face.palm:: I saw Craig Emerson, former senior ALP government minister, on TV this morning saying that it was Whitlam's poor economic policies that led to his downfall and loss at the subsequent election. Not a mention of this http://www.smh.com.au/national/murdoch-editors-told-to-kill-whitlam-in-1975-20140627-zson7.html or the whole the unrelenting media campaign against him for months. Not a mention of Pine Gap. Not a mention of Kerr's CIA connections and payments. Not a mention of subsequent hands off policy re Pine Gap. Not a mention of Snowden's revelations. I know Craig he is a nice guy and a very smart man but really? How blind deaf and dumb does one have to be to swallow that crap? Wont even go into Hawke's CIA links. Much kudos and discussion of the dear man and his legacy but all very superficial and restricted to an acceptable limited spectrum. Remember also that Whitlam was just a reformist and bourgeois social democrat. There was nothing revolutionary about him. He was not part of the left faction of the party who did not accept him. Just wanted more crumbs from the heavily laden table to fall to the people. He was still a red blooded capitalist. Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Peter Lemkin - 24-10-2014 Anthony Thorne Wrote:Pilger has written about this before. Scanning the local papers and news media down here in Australia over the past few days, I saw absolutely nothing written about what Pilger has elaborated on above. No surprise I guess, but Pilger's sharp depiction of what we had, and what we lost, does make me a little sad. I guess the saddest part is that is seems most in Oz don't know this important history.....and the controlled media are not about to present it to them. I'm sure it is NOT in history/political science books - even at the university level. To find this out, one has to have the inclination to look beyond the propaganda..... Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Magda Hassan - 24-10-2014 Peter Lemkin Wrote:Anthony Thorne Wrote:Pilger has written about this before. Scanning the local papers and news media down here in Australia over the past few days, I saw absolutely nothing written about what Pilger has elaborated on above. No surprise I guess, but Pilger's sharp depiction of what we had, and what we lost, does make me a little sad. Not just the MSM, which is bad enough but expected given their mocking bird role, but even his own party. They are either deluded by the Murdoch official narrative, or complicit in working against his policies and for US interests, or shit scared of emulating his government in any way perhaps for fear of anther US coup. The 2 Labor PMs who followed him, Hawke and Keating, went to great lengths to show they were nothing like him. Nothing like him at all. And they were nothing like him. They brought in neo-liberal economic policies and started the privatization and broke strikes and collaborated openly with the ruling classes. Things that never would have been accepted if the Tory party had tried to do them. PM Rudd, another reformer of a social democrat Keynesian stripe, was non conformist, visionary and driven like Whitlam and was deposed in a bitter party coup. Which may or may not have had US fingerprints over it. Certainly the main party players behind the party coup had far too close a relationship to the US embassy as disclosed in Wikileaks embassy cables. The current leader of the ALP and potential future PM is one of them. Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - David Guyatt - 24-10-2014 It rarely ceases to amaze me just how much the media avoid so called sensitive subjects, rewrite history and shape the news and political agenda to create group thought front and centre. I should be used to it, I know. It's like a house of cards ready to collapse - and all it will take is if the wind is allowed to get up enough force. Somehow it never does. But I also sometimes think what mental juggling any honest, intelligent journalist must do to retain a job by not actually doing their job? It must cause some of them heartache. Others simply close their minds and count their monthly wage cheques and are glad to be in employment. I've not researched it, but it strikes me that this is a speciality of the "five eyes" - with other NATO/SEATO members being less required because they did not participate in the intelligence product to the same extent. But I may just be imagining this. But even so, if you are a member of the five eyes, kiss your arse farewell when it comes to any sense of genuine democratic involvement and if leaders need to be removed from office, or even killed, then that is what happens. Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Magda Hassan - 24-10-2014 There are some individual journalists and blogger who run their own show who are very good and know which way is up. But the MSM media landscape here is pretty much a company town with Murdoch being the man. It has been nice having the Guardian arrive here but they too have their own limitations. TV media is atrocious. Whitlam Dies - Government Overthrown in Oz by British-USA Cabal - Magda Hassan - 16-10-2015 Asio chief defied Gough Whitlam's order to cut ties with the CIA in 1974Latest volume of Asio's official history sheds light on the lowest point of US-Australian relations in the turbulent years of the Whitlam governmentPaul Daley [URL="http://twitter.com/ppdaley"] @ppdaley [/URL] Thursday 15 October 2015 15.58 EDT Last modified on Thursday 15 October 2015 20.08 EDT [URL="http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/oct/16/asio-chief-defied-gough-whitlams-order-cut-ties-cia-1974?CMP=share_btn_tw#comments"] 381 [/URL] |