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Marles questions cultural issues among top brass at Defence

February 26, 2024

Monday 26 February 2024
Joe Kelly
The Australian


 Defence Minister Richard Marles has revealed there are "issues of  culture within the senior leadership" of his own department that need to  be challenged, as he expressed concern about the accuracy and timeliness of  advice.
 
 Pressed on Sky News about reports that he was frustrated with his department  and had demanded a culture of excellence in a closed door meeting late last  year with defence secretary Greg Moriarty and Chief of the Defence Force  Angus Campbell, Mr Marles acknowledged problems within the "broader  leadership".
 
 "What we need to see in terms of the leadership of the Australian  Defence Force and the Department of Defence and I'm not just talking about  the two leaders (Mr Moriarty and General Campbell) but the broader leadership  is that all that we do is done with excellence," Mr Marles said.
 
 "That advice is timely. That advice is accurate. That we are expecting  of ourselves the same amount of excellence that we would expect of somebody  who's in the infantry or somebody who is maintaining an aircraft where there  is excellence and complete competence." Opposition home affairs  spokesman James Paterson said Mr Marles' comments appeared to be a  "public vote of no confidence in his own department and the military  leadership of our defence forces". "That's a deeply disturbing  thing," he told Sky News.
 
 "If he does have confidence in them he shouldn't publicly undermine them  by saying that." Mr Marles had earlier taken aim at Defence by saying  that "I think there are issues of culture within the senior leadership  and the more general leadership of the ADF and the department which needs challenging".
 
 "And that's something that, as I say, I've had complete collaboration  with from both the secretary of defence and the CDF (Chief of the Defence  Force)," Mr Marles said. "There is an issue in relation to culture  and we should be seeking to have a culture of absolute excellence and that is  the point that I've made." He also argued that morale within Defence had  been damaged by the previous Coalition government, warning there had been too  many ministers serving in the portfolio in too short a time period.
 
 "I've also made this observation . I mean, when you have six, really  seven different defence ministers churning through the portfolio over the  course of nine years, that has an impact on morale," he said.
 
 "So I think there were those issues within the ADF and within the  department. And I can understand how that has happened.
 
 Going forward, though, we need to address that culture.
 
 And, yes, government has its part to play . But the other side of that is  that we also then need to challenge Defence to meet the issue of that morale  and make sure that there is excellence in all that is done." The  comments from Mr Marles come after the government announced its plans to  increase the navy's surface fleet to 26 major combatants through the  procurement of a new class of 11 frigates and six large drone-style  "optionally crewed" vessels.
 
 To fund the larger fleet, the government will invest an additional $1.7bn in  defence over the four-year forward estimates and $11.1bn over the next  decade.
 
 This will take defence spending as a proportion of GDP from just over 2 per  cent to 2.4 per cent from the early 2030s.
 
 But Senator Paterson was sceptical about the planned increase to defence  spending, telling Sky News: "I'll believe that when I see it."  "How can you say seriously, if these are the most dire circumstances .  after World War II, that only $1.7bn over the next four years is going to be  enough?"

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