Doubtless mortified at being scooped by Fairfax, The Australian has been alternately downplaying the WikiLeaks Australian cables, attacking Phillip Dorling, criticising Fairfax for failing to release the cables — ahem, days after Crikey made the same point — and, once Fairfax obliged by screen-dumping dozens of cables on its website, cut-and-pasting them and trying to turn some crumbs from the Fairfax table into a feast, or at least a tasty morsel, for its readership.
But like Fairfax, News Limited requires a certain suspension of disbelief regarding the cables. To conjure up a story from many of the cables, you have to take US diplomats’ often-confused thinking on local politics as accurate, and their reports of comments from local figures, as correct depictions of conversations, rather than recycling of gossip and speculation.
You also have to regard it as unusual that politicians speak to diplomats. In fact in Canberra it’s almost impossible to be a journalist, senior public servant, politician, staffer, trade unionist or business figure and not talk to diplomats, especially at the constant procession of functions held in Parliament House during parliamentary sitting weeks. Thus it was that Canberran ALP figure and former senior staffer Michael Cooney found a conversation with a diplomat eventually transformed by Oz attack Shihtzu James Massola — temporarily reassigned from attacking bloggers and rival journalists — into an outing as a “secret US source”.
More peculiar though was today’s effort by Patricia Karvelas, about the last of the decent political journalists left at the paper, to turn a single comment by South Australian right-wing (in all senses of the term) power broker Don Farrell into a claim that Julia Gillard “was eyeing off Mr Rudd’s job before Tony Abbott replaced Malcolm Turnbull as Coalition leader”. The single attributed comment “campaigning for the leadership” (in cable 09CANBERRA545) is ambiguous — the leadership when?
After Rudd, as the text immediately following it suggests, or immediately? Moreover The Oz’s interpretation is undermined by the observation a sentence later: “At present, the question of a successor to Rudd is probably two elections away.”
The peculiarity lies in the failure to spot the more obvious significance of Farrell’s remarks. Farrell always disliked Kevin Rudd because Rudd’s initial popular support and dislike of Labor’s factions was a direct threat to power brokers like him. In 2006 Farrell strongly supported Beazley, who worked within the factional system, over Rudd — to the extent that one of the reasons Farrell knifed South Australian senator Linda Kirk was her support for Rudd in defiance of his demand she back Beazley.
This issue is specifically addressed in another cable in 2009 (09CANBERRA188) by the Americans: “Two ALP Right factional leaders we have spoken to, AWU President Joe Ludwig and Senator Don Farrell, former head of the SDA in South Australia and the most influential powerbroker in that state, both agreed that Rudd’s political power in the ALP is now unchallenged, but they opined that the factions would reassert themselves once Rudd’s popularity declines.”
That’s about the most accurate observation to emerge from the WikiLeaks material so far. The cables clearly show a factional powerbroker determined to bide his time until he could strike back at Rudd, which is exactly what happened.
[Oz attack Shihtzu James Massola ]
Bloody hell Bernard! You’re getting worse than Rundle and Firstdog.
That line just destroyed another keyboard. 🙂
Todays Oz story and subsequent comment piece by Liberal Party Press Secretary D. Shanahan represents a new low for the Oz in mealy-mouth petty clueless journalism. If there was a Most Embarrassing Award that would win in a canter. Just paint the paper green why don’t you?
Bernard
The fact that all these people talk to foreign embassies is neither surprising nor inappropriate. It is what they say that counts. Some examples of behaviour that I consider inappropriate:
1. Kim Beazley, having told the US Embassy that the Howard Government knew all about the AWB kickbacks and was lying to the public about who knew what and when (fair enough so far) going on to urge Washington to remonstrate with Canberra about that. We are supposed to close ranks when dealing with foreign powers, no matter how friendly. If Beazley had been reported saying that in Washington he would have copped a biffing. So he shouldn’t be saying it to the US Embassy ether.
2. Arbib telling the US Embassy that the earth is beginning to move under Prime Minister Rudd’s feet. This is directly undermining: from that moment on our Prime Minister deals with the most powerful country in the world with diminished authority. If there are difficult issues being negotiated they have a more realistic option of waiting the PM out rather than making concessions.
3. Beazley, aspiring to become PM, tells the US Embassy that for the ALP it is absolutely essential to be beyond criticsim regarding ANZUS and the security alliance. Whether that is right or wrong, this insight into his mind is valuable to the US – it can keep him firmly in line by indicating that they might be forced to disagree with him publicly.
There is more, but overall what is revealed in the cables released so far is a desperate need for our leaders to play their cards closer to their chest. Not many poker faces in evidence.
This highlights the problem with the dissemination of the WikiLeaks cables, that whilst the information is theoretically there for all to see, in practice it is presently filtered through the usual channels with their usual agendas. As an interested but not dedicated follower of this I was surprised to read a Michelle Grattan piece making passing reference to a cable describing the Coalition’s cynicism about boat arrivals. This didn’t receive much if any coverage on release, no doubt it didn’t suit the day’s required storyline.
Every cause needs a champion
These WikiLeaks publications en masse demonstrates the difference between data information and revealed knowledge. Of course most of the published cables are now relatively less significant due to the very volume and lack of framework of the cables.
Now more than every we need people, good people or champions to digest the data and create some sense of it all in some sort of subjective context. These people used to be called journalists and the publications used to be called Newspapers.
I’m pleased to see there are a few journalistic refugees walking our shores still, some of which I note are being offered asylum under the corrugated roof of Crikey.com.au
So give me some context and information, ask some good questions and allow us to have an informed conversation please.