ASIO boss Mike Burgess:“Anti-authority beliefs are growing. Trust in institutions is eroding. Provocative,inflammatory behaviours are being normalised.”Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
The increased possibility of such a lone-wolf terrorist attack,as outlined by intelligence officials to reporters at a briefing in Canberra on Monday,helps explain why Australia’s top spy agency,ASIO,has raised the terrorism threat level to “probable”.
It was only in November 2022 thatASIO dropped the terrorism threat level from “probable” to “possible”,the lowest it had been in eight years. While not ruling out the possibility of an isolated terrorist attack,the updated assessment signalled a more benign security environment – one attributed to the declining allure of radical Islamism and the conspiratorial thinking that flourished during the COVID-19 pandemic. Espionage and foreign interference had officially supplanted terrorism as the nation’s principal national security concern.
Yet just a month later,Australians recoiled in horror at what was later classified as the nation’s first fundamentalist Christian terrorist attack:the killing of two police officers and a neighbour by three radicalised residents in Wieambilla,Queensland. If the terrorism threat had dissipated,it had certainly not disappeared.
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In April,a 16-year-old boy wasaccused of terrorism for stabbing a bishop during an Assyrian worship service in western Sydney. This came soon after themass killings at Bondi Junction Westfield,an incident not judged to be a terrorist attack,but that nevertheless confirmed the carnage and panic one disturbed individual can inflict upon society.
Global events also point to the increasingly febrile and risky times in which we live. In the United States,the Republican Party’s presidential candidate,Donald Trump,wasalmost assassinated by a registered Republican. In the United Kingdom,widespread far-right violent protests have broken out thanks to misinformation spread online following the killings of three children in the British town of Southport.
“Anti-authority beliefs are growing. Trust in institutions is eroding. Provocative,inflammatory behaviours are being normalised,” ASIO boss Mike Burgess said on Monday when explaining the new threat level.