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Page "Australian Secret Intelligence Service" ¶ 37
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ASIS and was
ASIS was expressly required to " operate outside Australian territory.
At the time, ASIS was substantially modeled on the United Kingdom Secret Intelligence Service, also known as MI6.
ASIS was at one time referred to as MO9.
On 1 November 1972, ASIS was sensationally exposed by The Daily Telegraph which ran an exposé regarding recruitment of ASIS agents from Australian universities for espionage activities in Asia.
" The Ministerial Statement of 1977 stated that the " main function " of ASIS was to " obtain, by such means and subject to such conditions as are prescribed by the Government, foreign intelligence for the purpose of the protection or promotion of Australia or its interests.
Aside from the observation that ASIS was ' singularly well run and well managed ', the report ( s ) on ASIS were not released.
This allegation was investigated and denied by Samuels and Codd ( see below ), but the Minister did acknowledge that ASIS maintained files.
They concluded that the disclosure of the information was unnecessary and unjustifiable and had damaged the reputation of ASIS and Australia overseas.
They rejected any suggestion that ASIS was unaccountable or ' out of control '.
When he went to investiage he was forced back into the lift ASIS officer, who rode the lift down to the ground floor and forcibly ejected Rice into the lobby.
It was alleged that ASIS had been involved in training Papua New Guinean troops to suppress independence movements in Irian Jaya and Bougainville.
( In 1997 it was alleged that ASIS and DSD had failed to collect, or the Government had failed to act upon, intelligence regarding the role and presence of Sandline contractors in relation to the independence movement in Bougainville.
Towards the end of 1993 ASIS became the subject of media attention after allegations were made by former ASIS officers that ASIS was unaccountable and out of control.
They raised two issues of public interest regarding the effect of secrecy on the operation of grievance procedures and the extent to which the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade was aware of or in control of ASIS operations.
Use of weapons was prohibited by ASIS ( except for self defence ).
Passed on 1 April 2004, five and a half months after it was introduced, the legislation enables ASIS Intelligence Officers to carry a firearm, but only for protection.
A large portion of the history of ASIS was adapted from the Parliament of Australia Bills Digest No. 11 of 2001 – 02 of Intelligence Services Act 2001
Outside of specific areas of law, the court was also involved in several cases of public significance, including the Chamberlain case ( 1984 ), concerning Lindy Chamberlain, and A v Hayden ( 1984 ), concerning the botched ASIS exercise at the Sheraton Hotel in Melbourne.
Jull was chair of the Parliamentary Committee on the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation 1997 – 2002, and of its successor, the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security ( formerly the Parliamentary Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS and DSD ), since 2002.
* Walter Joseph Cawthorn-Soldier, diplomat and a former head of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service ( ASIS ) was born in Prahran in 1896.

ASIS and Executive
On 13 May 1952, in a meeting of the Executive Council, Prime Minister Robert Menzies established ASIS by the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution, appointing Alfred Deakin Brookes as head.

ASIS and such
The Bill allowed ASIS to work with other organisations ( such as the CIA or MI6 ) in paramilitary operations, provided ASIS staff and agents were not personally involved in carrying it out.
It is known but unspoken that " some " of the diplomats are secret agents for the Australian Secret Intelligence Service ( ASIS ), which can be a useful cover to disguise travel whilst also providing diplomatic privileges such as diplomatic immunity.

ASIS and had
In particular it alleged that agents were being targeted in a purge by being threatened with criminal charges relating to their official conduct, reflecting a pattern which suggested to some that ASIS or a senior ASIS officer had been ' turned ' by a foreign intelligence service.
The officers personally claimed that ASIS advice had been ignored by DFAT.
* The character Claude who appeared in an episode of the US TV series Burn Notice had previously worked for ASIS.
* A legislative basis for the Australian Secret Intelligence Service ( ASIS ) and the Defence Signals Directorate ( DSD ), both of which had been previously established by executive order.

ASIS and no
The journalist noted that ' according to legal advice taken by The Sunday Age there is no provision that prevents the naming of an ASIS agent '.
Subsequently, in A v Hayden, the High Court held that the Commonwealth owed no enforceable duty to ASIS officers to maintain confidentiality of their names or activities.

ASIS and basis
In addition to their recommendations, Samuels and Codd put forward draft legislation to provide a statutory basis for ASIS and to protect various information from disclosure.

ASIS and .
The Australian Secret Intelligence Service ( ASIS ) is the Australian government intelligence agency responsible for collecting foreign intelligence, undertaking counter-intelligence activities and cooperation with other intelligence agencies overseas.
ASIS is part of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade portfolio and is housed within DFAT's headquarters in Canberra.
The existence of ASIS remained secret even within the Government for a period of twenty years.
It stated that " he ASIS role is to collect and disseminate facts only.
The Richardson Report in June examined the roles and relationships of the collection agencies ( ASIO, ASIS and DSD ) in the post cold war era.
Both reports endorsed the structure and roles of the organisations and commended the performance of ASIS.
As with the first Hope Royal Commission, the reports on ASIS and DSD, which included draft legislation on ASIS, were not made public.
In response to a Four Corners program aired on 21 February 1994, on 23 February 1994, the Minister for Foreign Affairs Gareth Evans announced a ' root and branch ' review of ASIS.
Four Corners reporter Ross Coulthart made allegations regarding intelligence held by ASIS on Australians.
The Minister said: ' ASIS does have some files, as one would expect in an organisation of that nature, even though its brief extends to activities outside the country rather than inside.
Bearing in mind the context in which the members of ASIS work, it is not surprising that there should develop a culture which sets great store by faithfulness and stoicism and tends to elevate conformity to undue heights and to regard the exercise of authority rather than consultation as the managerial norm.
They recommended that complaints regarding ASIS operations continue to be handled by the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security ( IGIS ) but that staff grievances be handled by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.

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