Nick Warner, director-general of Australia's Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS)—AFP Photo
Nick Warner, director-general of Australia's Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS)—AFP Photo

SYDNEY: Australia's top spy warned of the “very real threat” from extremists on Thursday, in the first public address by the head of the country's Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) in its 60-year history.

Nick Warner said the security challenges for agents had dramatically changed over the past decade, as he provided a rare glimpse into the agency's work in a speech designed to raise public awareness about the intelligence community.

He said the 9/11 attacks and the Bali bombings a year later in 2002 had redefined how spies worked.

Those events had seen ASIS, Australia's foreign spy agency, intensify its focus on the “very real threat” posed by organisations like al Qaeda and its affiliates.

Warner said there was now “a web of links between extremists from Australia to Indonesia, to the southern Philippines, to the Fata region in Pakistan, and to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen, and on to Somalia”.

“We know that the intention to conduct mass casualty attacks against Western countries, including Australia, remains very real,” he said, speaking at the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra.

“We also know that many of these planned attacks are being conceived in places remote from Australia.”

The threats had seen ASIS evolve from “a small, essentially regional body vitally focused on the Cold War into a larger, geographically dispersed organisation” that liaises with foreign intelligence services in 70 countries.

Warner said ASIS, working with foreign partners, has been closely involved with the arrest and detention of dozens of terrorists in Southeast Asia over the past decade — including in recent months.

“At its heart ASIS has a cadre of highly trained intelligence officers who recruit and run agents,” he added.

ASIS filed thousands of secret reports each year covering everything from “political developments, economic growth, defence modernisation, and social cohesion in a particular country, to terrorist and insurgent planning”, he said.

While terrorism remained a major worry, cyber security had also become a “rapidly evolving and potentially serious threat” to national security, Warner added.

“Government departments and agencies, together with corporate Australia, have been subject to concerted efforts by external actors seeking to infiltrate sensitive computer networks,” he said.

Warner gave no examples, but the computers of Australia's prime minister, foreign and defence ministers were reported last March to have been hacked, with China under suspicion.

Energy giants Woodside Petroleum and Shell Australia have both expressed concern over hacking, with Woodside chief Don Voelte saying his firm had seen attempts from regions including Russia, Eastern Europe and China.

Canberra has described government and private networks as being under “continuous threat” of cyber espionage.

“Considerable resources are now being invested by the government to counter this threat and harden the defences of departments and agencies,” said Warner.

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