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'Alarming breakdown': PM under pressure over terror plot briefing

February 1, 2025

Saturday 01 February 2025
Mathew Knott
The Age


 Anthony Albanese is under mounting pressure to reveal whether authorities  kept him in the dark about an apparent plot to target a Sydney synagogue with  explosives, as a senior Jewish leader accused the prime minister of a ''moral  failure'' for not visiting Sydney's Jewish community after the discovery of  the potential mass casualty event.
 
 With the opposition demanding details about exactly when the prime minister  learnt about the apparent plot, Albanese refused to answer several questions  yesterday asking whether he had been briefed about the discovery of a caravan  packed with explosives in northwest Sydney before news of the investigation  broke.
 
 ''I do not talk about operational matters for an ongoing investigation,''  Albanese told reporters in Melbourne. ''I have no intention of undermining an  ongoing investigation by going into the details. What I will do is continue  to prioritise two things: the first and most important is keeping Australians  safe; the second is making sure I provide support to the police and  intelligence agencies for them to do their job.'' Opposition Home Affairs  Minister James Paterson said he was shocked by reports that NSW Premier Chris  Minns knew about the plot before it was revealed to the public but Albanese  did not.
 
 ''If true, this is an alarming breakdown of our national security  architecture,'' Paterson said.
 
 ''If the PM and ministers are not told about a planned terrorist attack, how  can they make the necessary policy decisions to protect the community from  other threats?'' David Ossip, the President of NSW Jewish Board of Deputies,  said it was ''deeply disappointing'' that Albanese had spent Thursday and  yesterday in Melbourne rather than with Sydney's Jewish community given  members' heightened state of anxiety.
 
 ''The prime minister's reluctance to offer comfort and reassurance in person  to Sydney's Jewish community is a moral failure and not the behaviour one  would expect from the leader of our country,'' he said.
 
 ''What could be a more important use of his time at a moment when the  security threat against Sydney's Jewish community is real and ongoing?'' The  prime minister's office was contacted for comment.
 
 Albanese was criticised for taking four days to visit Melbourne's Adass  Israel Synagogue after it was firebombed in December, but was praised by  Jewish leaders for visiting a childcare centre that was torched in Maroubra,  in Sydney's eastern suburbs, on the day.
 
 Alex Ryvchin, the co-chief executive of the Executive Council of Australian  Jewry, said he was concerned there appeared to have been a communications  failure between state and federal police and the federal government.
 
 ''When you are talking about a foiled terror plot of such magnitude and a  national crisis of antisemitism, you would expect the prime minister to be in  the loop,'' he said. ''I would have expected him to have been briefed.'' A  NSW government spokesperson said state police briefed Minns and Police  Minister Yasmin Catley about the matter on January 20 ''in line with  established protocol''.
 
 ''State premiers do not brief national cabinet on operational police  matters,'' the spokesperson said.
 
 ''NSW Police were liaising with federal counterparts through the joint  counterterrorism taskforce.'' A federal source, who declined to be named to  discuss sensitive matters, said there was no concern in the government about  the timing of the Australian Federal Police briefings to Albanese and others  about the caravan.
 
 While national cabinet was not told of the discovery in Dural when it met on  January 21, one source said this was because the police wanted to protect the  investigation.
 
 Sources familiar with the police operation said the fact a detonator was not  found in the caravan was a crucial factor in the determination there was no  imminent threat.
 
 The decision on briefing ministers was left to the Joint Counter Terrorism  Team that was set up by NSW Police and the AFP to run the investigation into  the caravan. The protocol for these teams was to decide collectively who  should be briefed and when, a federal source said.
 
 Jason Bassi, executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute,  said authorities should have warned both Albanese and Minns about the threat.
 
 ''There is distinction between the states and the federal level on crime but  terrorism and politically motivated violence is a special category in our law  because it is an attack on our whole nation,'' said Bassi, who advised former  prime minister Malcolm Turnbull on national security.
 
 ''If these threats are not discussed at the national cabinet, then what  should be discussed at national cabinet?'' Bassi said it was ''extremely  odd'' that so few details of the terrorism threat had been released, warning:  ''If you leave the public with uncertainty, it risks uncertainty becoming  fear.'' 'You would expect the prime minister to be in the loop.' Alex  Ryvchin, Executive Council of Australian Jewry

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