
Foreign spies are targeting defence employees working on Aukus, Asio boss reveals
The Asio director general, Mike Burgess, has revealed intelligence operatives have disrupted 24 major espionage and foreign interference operations in the past three years, uncovering spies stealing sensitive government data and a visiting academic who broke into a restricted technology laboratory to film.
Placing the cost of espionage activities against Australia at $12.5bn each year, Burgess will use a major speech in Adelaide on Friday to warn foreign spies have a 'very unhealthy interest' in the sharing of nuclear technology with the US and UK.
Burgess will warn public servants and private contractors with access to sensitive national security information are making it easy for spies to target their work, including by posting on professional networking sites such as LinkedIn.
As many as 7,000 people have profiles referencing their work in the defence sector, with close to 400 explicitly revealing they are working on the Aukus rollout. Thousands more cite submarines and nuclear technology.
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
'I get that people need to market themselves, but telling social media you hold a security clearance or work on a highly classified project is more than naïve; it's recklessly inviting the attention of a foreign intelligence service,' Burgess will say.
'Surely these individuals, of all people, should understand the threat and recognise the risk?'
Delivering the University of South Australia's Hawke lecture, Burgess will reveal foreign spies successfully recruited a security clearance holder who handed over official documents on free trade negotiations, and efforts by foreign companies connected to intelligence services to buy sensitive data or land near military sites.
Other disrupted activities include the case of a visiting academic with links to a foreign government who broke into a restricted laboratory and filmed its contents, and operatives targeting law firms, media outlets and industry bodies to disrupt their work.
An advanced copy of the speech revealed Burgess will namecheck China, Russia and Iran as countries targeting Australia through espionage, but warn many other nations are chasing individuals and entities here for classified or sensitive information and relationship building.
Asio has tracked foreign agents trying to steal intellectual property or recruit elected officials, public servants, military members and community leaders, including to reveal secrets, silence criticism or undertake sabotage.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
One intelligence service has used employment sites to target individuals, offering cash for reports on international politics. In one case, an Australian provided their employment information before receiving an email requesting information on Aukus and the Indo-Pacific.
'The firm said it was particularly interested in 'exclusive information' and requested the applicant share the names of his Aukus-related professional contacts,' Burgess will say.
'Fortunately the applicant became suspicious and reported the engagement to Asio. Our investigation revealed the consultancy was a cover company for a foreign intelligence service.'
The estimated cost of espionage includes known incidents, such as the state-sponsored theft of intellectual property, as well as the indirect costs of countering and responding.
Calculated by the Australian Institute of Criminology for Asio, it includes the theft of nearly $2bn in trade secrets and intellectual property from Australian companies and businesses last financial year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Morning Mail: killings hidden in coded diaries of WA settler, huge Gaza protest on Sydney Harbour Bridge, Piastri second in Hungary
Good morning. Our lead story today is a new investigation into coded diary entries from a Western Australian pastoralist. They describe a number of killings of Yamatji people in the 1850s, confirming knowledge passed down through Yamatji Naaguja families for generations. Descendants on both sides say it's time to break the cycle of shame and silence. We report from the massive crowd of pro-Palestine protesters who made their feelings about the Gaza crisis clear by marching across the Sydney Harbour Bridge yesterday. And the Hungarian F1 grand prix went down to the wire with Oscar Piastri beaten by just seven tenths of a second. 'This is a big moment' | At least 100,000 rain-soaked Sydney Harbour Bridge marchers, young and old, came in full force on Sunday to protest against Israel's conduct in Gaza and to speak out about the children starving there. Anne Davies writes that the turnout highlights a failure of judgment by the usually slick NSW premier, Chris Minns. Exclusive | In a submission to the party's election postmortem, the Young Liberals are urging the Coalition to distance itself from Sky News – and blame a 'Maga mirage' for Peter Dutton's election rout. Housing crisis | New data has laid bare how a lack of stable long-term housing means more Australian families are seeking crisis accommodation options to escape the grip of homelessness. 'Ecosystem engineers' | Almost 150 brush-tailed bettongs have been released at a sanctuary at Mount Gibson near Perth, in a move aiming to help the endangered species both survive and thrive. So long, Irene | Home and Away actor Lynne McGranger has won the Gold Logie award for most popular personality on Australian television as she ends her 32-year run playing Irene Roberts. Gaza crisis | Israeli forces have killed at least 27 Palestinians at a food site while the family of an Israeli hostage held in Gaza accuses Hamas of starving him. The British government will evacuate seriously ill and injured children from Gaza to the UK for treatment under a scheme to be announced within weeks. Russia-Ukraine war | A Ukrainian drone attack on an oil depot near the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi has ignited a raging fire, as the two sides traded strikes in one of the deadliest weeks in recent months. US politics | An irate Donald Trump has told Chuck Schumer to 'GO TO HELL!' after a Senate standoff over confirmations; White House officials rushed to defend Trump after a shaky economic week; and bizarre public appearances have again cast doubt on Trump's mental acuity, Adam Gabbatt writes. Royal family | As a biography of the Duke of York claims 'punches were thrown' in a heated argument, Prince Harry has denied he gave Prince Andrew 'a bloody nose' at a family gathering in 2013. Child rescued | A New Zealand woman was arrested after travelling on a bus with a two-year-old girl trapped in her luggage, after the bus driver became concerned about a bag moving during a stop. The coded diary entries of Major Logue, an early settler of the Geraldton region of Western Australia, flash up on the microfilm archives of the Battye Library in Perth. On 4 April 1852, he wrote in scrawling longhand that he and a group of other men had set out after breakfast in search of 'the natives who had taken the cattle', eventually finding and crawling up to a campsite. Then, in a modified version of the Freemason's code, he wrote: 'fired both barrels of my gun and wounded one fellow in the rump. Thomson and Dicky shot one dead.' The diary entries tell a bloody story of Australia's frontier, and one which colonial families in the Geraldton region have only just begun to come to terms with. Guardian Australia is exploring these stories in a new series called The Descendants. The Descendants episode 1: decoding a massacre Colonial pastoralist Major Logue is a figure of note in the city of Geraldton, Western Australia. But his diaries, written partly in code, reveal a dark and confronting chapter of Australia's past – a history that Yamatji people already know all too well. In this two-part special Full Story, Sarah Collard speaks to Lorena Allam about decoding the truth behind Logue's diaries – and how descendants of colonial violence are coming together to heal from the horrors of the past. Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen $ Brandon Jack's Pissants are a group of Australian rules players relegated to the fringe of an unnamed footy team. They cushion themselves against humiliation and ego death by getting wasted, obsessing about their dicks, and treating women like disposable props. So, is the former AFL player's debut novel a critique or a celebration of toxic masculinity? As Catriona Menzies-Pike writes, this is a book that cannot decide. Sign up to Morning Mail Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Motorsport | Lando Norris won a battle with his McLaren teammate, Australian driver Oscar Piastri, to take victory in a thrilling Hungarian F1 grand prix. AFL | The Brisbane Lions put a horror show behind them to thrive on the big stage, Jonathan Horn writes. Swimming | The US women set a world record in the medley relay at the swimming world championships, while Summer McIntosh won her fourth gold; and backstroke queen Kaylee McKeown pulled off another golden double. Cycling | Pauline Ferrand-Prévot wins the final stage and the yellow jersey in the Tour de France Femmes. Rugby union | Bundee Aki has revealed his wife gave birth to their daughter in the back of a car in New Zealand on the same day as the first Lions Test victory against Australia in Brisbane. Scientists have developed a world-first mRNA vaccine in NSW that protects cows against foot-and-mouth disease, the Sydney Morning Herald reports. Victoria's government is failing to enforce its own health guidelines for school canteens, the Age reports. An artificial reef is at the heart of plans to help revive fishing in South Australia after the toxic algae crisis, the Advertiser reports. NSW | A trial is set to begin for a western NSW health district accused of breaching duty of care under workplace health and safety laws. NT | The Garma festival wraps up today. WA | The Diggers and Dealers Mining Forum 2025 begins today in Kalgoorlie. If you would like to receive this Morning Mail update to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here, or finish your day with our Afternoon Update newsletter. You can follow the latest in US politics by signing up for This Week in Trumpland. And finally, here are the Guardian's crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
These brothers grew up revering their great-uncle Bill. Then the full story came out
Warning: This article contains historical records that use racist and offensive language, and descriptions of events that will be distressing to some readers. It also contains references to Indigenous Australians who have died Malcolm McKinnon remembers poking around under Great-Uncle Bill's big old house in Brisbane while the adults were having afternoon tea. Once he found a pile of rusty old chains. Some had big loops, one was a breastplate of some kind. He thought they looked strange. Malcolm's brother Ross, 62, also remembers seeing the chains under Bill's old Queenslander. 'They were too big to be handcuffs,' Ross says, 'but as kids we didn't think about it any more than that.' The boys grew up hearing about how Bill had been a famous police officer on the frontier in the Northern Territory. 'Bill was seen in the family as a bit of a legend,' Malcolm, now 69, says. 'He was involved in the Petrov affair, he was active during Cyclone Tracy, he was the last cop who rode a camel.' Much later, they realised there was another side to the story. The chains had been for capturing and imprisoning Aboriginal people. By the neck. A fuller picture of Constable Bill McKinnon's policing career has emerged – and it has been confronting, revelatory and life-changing for Malcolm, Ross and their youngest brother, Alistair. In 1934 McKinnon shot and killed an Aboriginal man named Yukun at Uluru. He told an inquiry it was accidental and he was exonerated but almost 80 years later it emerged – via the discovery of his diary – that he had indeed 'fired to hit' Yukun. He is not the only one to have concealed his actions from scrutiny. Guardian Australia has uncovered the diary of a Western Australian colonist called Major Logue who used a Masonic code to write about the killings of at least 19 Aboriginal people around Geraldton between 1851 and 1853. These exploits were written about by the colonists themselves, which makes it difficult for descendants and their extended families to dismiss them. Yet some still have concerns about publicising these records. Logue's diaries are being prepared for publication but the historian who has worked on them told Guardian Australia the coded entries are being deliberately left out, according to the preference of the direct descendant who holds the originals. Sign up: AU Breaking News email 'To protect the person who holds the diaries we felt it was … expedient, perhaps, to not have that in writing. Everyone knows they did it,' Nan Broad says. 'But there's nothing in writing, and we prefer nothing to be in writing.' Theona Councillor, who says she and Naaguja Yamatji families represent the 'other side of the shield', believes truth has a way of making itself known. 'Truth will always uncover itself,' she says. 'It wants to come out. And that blood needs to be heard. That blood is calling out, the blood of my people. 'It happened 170 years ago but it feels like yesterday for me. And the way that people are hiding their records, it feels like yesterday for them too, by the sounds of it.' Truth is vital for healing, she says, to allow Naaguja Yamatji and settler descendants to come together for the first time as equals and confront their bloody history with honesty. Only then can the scales of denial begin to fall. 'Go back to the beginning, and be brave,' she says. 'We are not a nation of weaklings. We can handle the truth.' In 2018 Guardian Australia's series documenting the frontier violence of Australia's colonial past, The Killing Times, revealed a confronting picture of the scale of the massacres – and the involvement of government forces in an overwhelming number of them. As part of that series we brought together families grappling with their 'side' of that history, some of them meeting for the first time. The Descendants builds on that foundation. Families from over Australia are coming to terms in different ways with the real-life challenges of truth telling. For them, this work is real, personal and local. There are no guidelines. Uncovering the truth comes with the risk of family estrangement. It can lead to denial and indifference. It can also be a liberation. Some descendants of perpetrator families are challenging what they call 'colonial silence'. In Geraldton Bruce Baskerville, a historian and descendant of the Criddle family who took part in the Bootenal massacre of 1854, talks about accepting that he has an ancestor who was a 'cog in the machinery of imperial governance' – and that he has materially benefited from the dispossession of others. 'I know that I'm a beneficiary of all of that,' he says. 'My life, all the food I've ever eaten, that's been grown here, the education that I had, all of that's all been paid for, from that. That's how that wealth was created.' George Criddle, who has spent years working between colonist and Yamatji families to break the silence, says settler families have to 'unlearn' their understanding of history: 'There's a lot of entrenched ideas about who tells the story, and there's a lot of white families who believe they are the storytellers, and that their side of the truth is the right side.' Prof Mark McKenna, another historian, spent years investigating the shooting of Yukun for his book Return to Uluru. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Yukun endured further indignity after death. The 1935 board of inquiry exhumed his remains and took them to Adelaide. Prompted by McKenna's book, a forensic search was made for them but only Yukun's skull could be located, in the South Australian Museum, in 2019. He was laid to rest in a deep, narrow grave in 2022. A small cross marks the spot near the Mutitjulu waterhole. Ross, Alistair and Alistair's wife, Ruth, went to Uluru for the repatriation. They stood quietly to one side of the ceremony, unsure how they'd be received. But they were welcomed, literally embraced. It felt like a family funeral. 'It was a privilege to be there,' Ross says. The brothers have met in Melbourne on a blustery winter day to talk about their family legacy. Alistair says their parents would have been proud of them for representing the McKinnons. Their parents believed in the importance of public service, of doing right by others. 'It was incredibly enriching,' Alistair says. To other families who might be fearing facing up to the actions of their ancestors, he says: 'Embrace it. Do it.' 'The experience was so life-changing, and when we saw how much it meant to the families on the other side … we left welcomed, and it was so important to them, for us to be involved.' Ross says he's not convinced by the argument that men like his uncle Bill were 'of their time'. 'These people did not live by the standards of their time either,' he says. 'The actions at Uluru were not a one-off. They were known for being cruel. They knew what they were doing was wrong.' McKenna says facing the truth of colonisation means understanding it still having real effects on Aboriginal people today. 'It's not something that's in the distant colonial past. It's not something that is separated from us by time or by flesh or by country. It's present now, and I think that's still something that non-Indigenous Australians struggle to understand.' In the case of Yukun, it led to his remains finally being found and laid to rest. McKenna recalls looking at the 'shelves and shelves of boxes' of Indigenous human remains 'which literally tower over you' at the South Australian Museum. 'To see Yukun's remains [there] and then to watch them come back to country, and see hundreds of people gathered there at Mutitjulu – it's not history,' he says. 'It's understanding that First Nations people have to live with this today, the consequences of colonisation and the consequences of all of the racist policies that have been mounted against them over the years.' Councillor says Aboriginal people are waiting for others to put down their 'comfortable untruth' and reckon with what happened. 'Answer that blood properly,' she says. 'Give my ancestors that time, that place, that voice that needs to be. You can't just brush over a quick sorry and then it's finished. It's just the beginning of a reconciliation.' Indigenous Australians can call 13YARN on 13 92 76 for information and crisis support; or call Lifeline on 13 11 14, Mensline on 1300 789 978 or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636 Lorena Allam is a professor at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous research at the University of Technology Sydney


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Photos from 'In Women's Words' exhibition that showcases modern Iranian women artists
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.