Why has Greens leader Bob Brown stopped the Senate Inquiry Senator Fielding proposed into the serious damage to our diplomatic relations caused by the leak of the telephone conversation between the US President and Prime Minister Rudd?
Why is Brown protecting the PM?
It was bad enough that there was a leak. It was worse that it was wrong. It is absolutely appalling that the PM — a former diplomat — knew all along that it was wrong and did not immediately denounce it.
The story grossly inflated the importance of the PM and seriously demeaned the President. Even the prompting of the US Ambassador was not enough to prompt the PM to denounce the story. He only admitted it was untrue after an exasperated White House took the highly unusual course of briefing a Washington newspaper about it.
The leak was in a report by Matthew Franklin in The Australian on 24 October “PM Kevin Rudd’s role in international crisis summit” that Mr. Rudd had, all by himself, persuaded President Bush to call a meeting of the G20 to deal with the international financial crisis. The story just did not ring true.
Bush was reported as asking “What’s the G20?”, never mind that he had already decided to refer the crisis to them.
The reporter denied the Prime Minister was the source for the leak. Mr Rudd was entertaining guests at Kirribilli House when the pre-arranged call came through. Chris Mitchell, the editor-in-chief of The Australian, was among the guests.
This could be the first case of a journalist’s source being … his own editor. If so the journalist could hardly say he had to protect the confidentiality of his editor. This rule was devised to protect whistleblowers, not the media.
Whistleblowers risk their jobs, and the possibility of expensive litigation; editors don’t.
In the meantime The Australian is trying to distance itself from the real story — the damage which the leak did. They were of course absolutely right to publish the original story, although they could have invited a White House comment and publish that simultaneously. Now they must follow through with the resulting story which is bigger than the original one. And that made the front page.
Curiously, anything strongly critical of the role of the PM in this is not getting on to the opinion page. There were four letters published today, all attacking Turnbull. (One is from a “DJ Fraser” who seems to have a guaranteed place on the page.)
What happened to freedom to know? The Australian seems to be behaving like the very politicians it criticises. During the debate of a motion of no confidence moved by Malcolm Turnbull, the front bench looked very worried.
The Prime Minister studiously avoided denying he was the ultimate source of the story. His answer was an irrelevance — to point to a gaffe by John Howard about Barack Obama. Howard should not have said that, but it was made in public.
In the debate Rudd made the Foreign Minister, Stephen Smith takes the brunt of Turnbull’s powerful onslaught. A Senate inquiry would have been exactly the right place to find out who caused this serious damage to our international relations. We are entitled to know this.
Franklin could hardly have pleaded a confidential source, if as everyone thinks, it was Mitchell. And it could have been that Mitchell overheard the conversation. He would hardly have invented such a silly story.
This is a matter of legitimate public interest. It is about our international relations.
So why did Brown squib the inquiry? Why is Brown protecting the Prime Minister? Has there been some deal?
And why is the national newspaper not applying to itself what it rightly lectures politicians about — the right of the public to know?
Bloody hell, Flint is like a bad smell but worse. Surely this subject has been given all the publicity it deserves and more. It is nothing but a Liberal beat up, a political bash. They think there is some milage to be made by attempting to show the PM is a liar. Its pathetic and its more pathetic that Crikey are giving the likes of a useless spent windbag like Flint the space ,that it has been shown time and time again the great majority of subscribers do not want to waste their time on. I presume this fool is not being paid for his articles, if he is I will be looking very closely at my next subscription. I am not interested in my money going to that excuse for a columnist. Pension him off for sanity sake.
“Whosoever did leak it damaged Australia’s ability to do business with other world leaders.”
Seriously, JamesK, this confected outrage following the leaking of an alleged gaffe pales in comparison to the genuine outrage following John Howard’s labelling of Barak Obama as a terrorist sympathiser last year. Those comments elicited a venomous response at the time, and had the Liberals won the election, the Australian/American alliance would be in a far more treacherous state today.
W is leaving office as popular as Nixon, and the general consensus (barring Sheridan) is that his presidency was a gaffe prone, blind and blunderous escapade. This non event is but a mosquito in the swamp of reflection and regret that Bush will be wading through in two short months time.
You know James, an argument does not become more convincing merely because you may froth at the mouth. Good day sir.
‘Confected” Jared? Your allegation that John Howard labelled “Barak Obama as a terrorist sympathiser” is not merely “confected” but a willful lie.
Rabid Howard-haters such as yourself are not only inane but frequently liars as you have just demonstrated.
Presumably you refer to Howard”s response to a question about Obama’s plan in Feb 2007 to have all US combat troops out of Iraq by Mar 2008.
Howard unwisely but correctly said: “I think he’s wrong. I think that would just encourage those who wanted completely to destabilise and destroy Iraq, and create chaos and victory for the terrorists to hang on and hope for Obama victory. If I was running Al-Qaeda in Iraq, I would put a circle around March 2008, and pray, as many times as possible, for a victory not only for Obama, but also for the Democrats.”
Obama has now seen the fallacy of that original policy idea!
Forget about G.W., he is not the issue. All other leaders will be very careful about what is said in and around Rudd…… especially, as he is an intelligent man, Mr. Obama.
Senator Obama hit back, accusing Mr Howard of “cowboy rhetoric”.
“I think it’s flattering that one of George Bush’s allies on the other side of the world started attacking me the day after I announced [my presidential] candidacy,” he said.
“I would also note that we have close to 140,000 troops in Iraq and my understanding is Mr Howard has deployed 1400.
“So if he is … to fight the good fight in Iraq, I would suggest that he calls up another 20,000 Australians and send them to Iraq, otherwise it’s just a bunch of empty rhetoric.”
I realise that the Liberals have lost a lot in the last year. They no longer own the US/AU alliance. The man of steel was kicked in the guts by his own electorate. His sheriff is heading into retirement a defeated man.
As you say James, Obama is an intelligent man, and he won’t have forgotten Howard’s remarks as what was essentially the first catapult of mud thrown at him in his race for the Presidency.
The current gossip-gate who-said phone call drama would be stretching to become a page 12 issue on a slow news week. In case you haven’t noticed, the global financial system is collapsing around us. Get some perspective.