“The disturbing new national security law that no one is talking about”

The encryption fiasco isn't the only capitulation recently made in the name of 
Australia's national security.

By Michael Bradley  Dec 11, 2018
https://www.crikey.com.au/2018/12/11/national-security-army


    Time after time, since 2001, Australia has lengthened its roll call of 
repressive national security laws. And time after time, Bill Shorten has worn 
his party’s craven willingness to sign up to every piece of half-cooked law the 
Coalition throws out as a badge of honour.

    Over the past week, of course, it’s been all about encryption. Both major 
parties covered themselves in glory on the last day of Parliament by passing an 
extremely complex law neither of them have read, understand or give a crap 
about. But, ignored in the rush to Christmas has been another potentially even 
worse bit of bipartisan law-making.

    Slipped through Parliament on November 27 with not so much as a whimper 
from the media: the Defence Amendment (Call Out of the Australian Defence 
Force) Act 2018.

    Call in the troops

    This law is about the circumstances in which the federal government can 
take the drastic step of sending troops into the streets of an Australian city. 
(Bear in mind the fundamental difference between a police officer and a 
soldier: the latter is trained to kill, as their first resort).

    It’s also, importantly, not the first of its kind. We already had a 
call-out law, which was passed in a rush before the Sydney Olympics, that’s 
never been used. In the wash-up of the Lindt Café siege, Peter Dutton spotted 
the opportunity to ramp thing up.
Although the army could have been called in to assist, and was ready to do so, 
it wasn’t. The logical response would have been to explore better coordination 
between state and Commonwealth under the existing law; instead, we got urgent 
demands to change the law.

    What’s different with this new law, and why should we care? There are 
several critical changes:


  *   The trigger conditions which will allow the federal government to send in 
the army. Under the old law, soldiers would be deployed if the state or 
territory government was not, or was unlikely to be, able to do what was 
needed. Now, all that is required is that the military’s involvement will be 
likely to “enhance” the ability of the police to handle the situation. How 
could it not? So, there is now no effective threshold at all.


  *   The feds now have a “contingent” call-out order, which is a pre-emptive 
declaration of circumstances in which they can send in the army, 
notwithstanding that those circumstances haven’t actually happened at all. Call 
it the Minority Report power.


  *   The federal government can invoke a call-out whether or not the relevant 
state or territory agreement wants it. The troops, once called out, will have 
extremely wide search and seizure powers over people and property, way beyond 
those of the police. And, of course, all indemnified.


  *   Finally, Dutton has added himself to the authorising power, previously 
exercisable by only the Prime Minister, or the Attorney-General and Defence 
Minister acting together. Under the changes, the Defence Minister is sidelined, 
and it’s now a triumvirate call by the PM, AG and the Minister for Home Affairs.

    Interesting, when you think about it, given that the defence forces have 
nothing to do with the Home Affairs portfolio, and nor do the state and 
territory police forces. Properly, this should be none of Dutton’s business.

    Hypothesis: one day there is a running series of increasingly 
out-of-control riots in a beachside suburb, as large gangs of drunk men hunt 
for members of a minority group and bash the shit out of them. The state police 
are doing their best, but it is a difficult situation to control. People’s 
safety is potentially at risk. These are all the conditions necessary for the 
federal government to step in, unasked, and unleash the armour.

    Pause before you conclude that this is the society we want. This is not 
about repelling foreign invaders, and it’s not just about dealing with 
terrorism as we typically understand it. While the Attorney-General has said 
it’s “inconceivable” that the army would ever be sent in to the streets in 
response to a non-terrorist threat to civil order, that is 100% not what the 
law they just made says.

    Our only remaining protection, from being turned into the police state we 
seem to be heading towards is that our governments will continue their practice 
of making laws but not actually using them. Thin hope. - Michael Bradley

https://www.crikey.com.au/2018/12/11/national-security-army/

Cheers,
Stephen

"There's a reason you separate military and the police. One fights the enemies 
of the state, the other serves and protects the people. When the military 
becomes both, then the enemies of the state tend to become the people."
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