The domestic spy agency says it foiled a plot by foreign intelligence operatives to recruit senior Australian government staffers to provide them classified information about Australia’s counterespionage activities.

If the plot was successful, ASIO believes it could have granted the foreign government significant strategic advantage over Australia.
The domestic intelligence agency says it conducted “overt activity “against the Australia-based foreign national and the network of foreign spies, which “thwarted the foreign intelligence operation and prevented the passage of classified information” to the foreign government.
ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said his organisation discovered and disrupted the plot this year.
“An Australia-based foreign national was working with a team of foreign intelligence officers, who were trying to recruit multiple Australian security clearance holders,” Mr Burgess said.
“The agents wanted sensitive information about the intelligence community’s operations, particularly those directed against their home country.”
While ASIO did not name countries which have been most involved in espionage and foreign interference against Australia, China is believed to be the country Australian security agencies are most concerned about.
Mr Burgess said there were now more foreign spies and their proxies in Australia “than there were at the height of the Cold War.
“Foreign governments are seeking information about Australia’s capabilities, research and technology, and domestic and foreign policy,” he said.
Mr Burgess also warned right-wing extremists were “more organised, sophisticated, ideological and active than previous years”.
“While we have been actively monitoring the threat for some time, this year extreme eight-wing individuals comprised around one-third of our counter-terrorism subjects,” he said.
“Many of these groups and individuals have seized on COVID-19, believing it reinforces the narratives and conspiracies at the core of their ideologies.
“They see the pandemic as proof of the failure of globalisation, multiculturalism and democracy, and confirmation that societal collapse and a ‘race war’ are inevitable.”
ASIO warned the threat level for terrorism remained at “PROBABLE”, with Mr Burgess saying he saw no prospect that it will be lowered in the foreseeable future.
Anthony is foreign affairs and national security correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.