THE government has demanded Bill Shorten discipline frontbencher Stephen Conroy for breaking with convention in a “cowardly”, “unprovoked” and “outrageous” attack on a senior serving army officer.
Coalition senator Ian Macdonald shut down a Senate estimates hearing after Senator Conroy, Labor’s defence spokesman, launched an extraordinary attack on the head of the government’s border protection operation, Lieutenant General Angus Campbell, accusing him of being involved in a political cover-up.
Senator Conroy likened General Campbell to the fictitious Colonel Nathan Jessup from the movie A Few Good Men for his approach to restricting the flow of information on the interception of asylum-seeker boats.
“That is called a political cover-up, a political cover-up, you are engaged in a political cover-up,” Senator Conroy yelled from the bench.
The most bitter exchange began after General Campbell said it was necessary to keep details of Operation Sovereign Borders secret to avoid damaging Australia’s relations with its neighbours and to prevent people-smugglers from gaining an advantage.
Senator Conroy retorted: “Can’t we handle the truth?”
General Campbell responded: “It kind of sounds like a movie, senator.”
Senator Conroy: “It is a movie, and we are living it, Colonel Jessup. I mean seriously, you can’t tell us the truth, you can’t tell the Australian public the truth because you might upset an international neighbour. That is called a political cover-up.”
General Campbell remained calm during the incident but said he wanted to put on the public record that he took “extreme offence at that statement”.
Senator Macdonald, who was chairing the hearing, brought proceedings to a halt for 10 minutes after Senator Conroy failed to apologise for the remarks. When proceedings resumed, Senator Conroy said he withdrew the comment but did not apologise.
At a press conference after the hearing, Defence Minister David Johnston demanded Mr Shorten discipline Senator Conroy for what he said was an attack on an officer of the utmost integrity who had conducted a difficult task with professionalism and a great deal of integrity.
“Lieutenant General Campbell was subject to an unprovoked and most outrageous personal attack by the shadow minister for defence,” Senator Johnston said.
“Senator Conroy, accused a serving three-star general staff officer of the Australian Army of a political cover-up. Comparing him to a fictitious Hollywood fantasy character is simply beneath contempt.”
Senator Johnston said such an accusation was unacceptable to the government and it should be unacceptable to the parliament.
“The real question now is does Bill Shorten endorse his defence spokesman’s unprecedented attack on one of Australia’s most senior and respected military leaders?” the minister said. “And if he does not endorse these comments, what does the Opposition Leader intend to do about it?”
Senator Johnston said Senate estimates hearings were not the place for gratuitous insults.
Senator Conroy told The Australian last night the government should itself apologise for once again placing the military in a highly partisan political position and refusing to tell the Australian people the truth about Operation Sovereign Borders.
“The government is engaged in a political cover-up when it comes to Operation Sovereign Borders,” Senator Conroy said.
Mr Shorten’s spokesman said Senator Conroy had withdrawn the comment made during the committee hearing.
General Campbell has been seen as a likely commander of the army and possible of the ADF.
He was selected for his current “three star” role because he had the broad experience of dealing with a range of diverse agencies involved in the complex border protection operation.
The tough experience gained by leading troops in East Timor and Afghanistan prepared him for his exacting role in charged of the Coalition’s Operation Sovereign Borders.
Long marked for senior rank, General Campbell served as a platoon commander in the army’s parachute battalion, then as a troop and squadron commander in the Special Air Service Regiment. In 2001 he played a role calming tensions in East Timor and encouraging a terrified population to return home from the mountains to which they had fled.
When he took on the border protection role he was promoted from major general to lieutenant general.
In 2005, General Campbell joined the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet to head the Office of National Security. He was later promoted to deputy secretary and became deputy national security adviser, co-ordinating a whole-of-government national security policy.
General Campbell was later brought back into the army and sent to command Australian troops in the Middle East.
In question time, Tony Abbott was forced to defend Immigration Minister Scott Morrison over the death of detainee Reza Berati inside the Manus Island detention centre.
“I am very happy to state my full confidence in the minister. What we need in this particular job is a minister who is strong and decent,” the Prime Minister said.
Mr Abbott noted that Australia had gone 70 days without a successful people-smuggling operation.
His comments came after the opposition continued to press Mr Morrison on when he was told Mr Berati, a 23-year-old Iranian man, had died inside the detention facility rather than outside it - as Mr Morrison had announced earlier. Mr Morrison said he had received the fresh information on Saturday, the day he corrected the mistake.