China | Top guns for hire
Former military pilots from the West are being lured to China
Are they giving the Chinese air force a leg up?
‘ENOUGH EVIDENCE’ FOUND TO REVIEW LAWS ON
RAAF TRAINING CHINESE
written by Adam Thorn | November 9, 2022
Two RAAF F-35s over the Northern Territory during Exercise Diamond Storm 2022 (Defence, LAC Samuel Miller)
Defence Minister
Richard Marles has revealed “enough evidence” has emerged into claims that
ex-RAAF personnel are training Chinese pilots to warrant a review of current
laws.
However, Marles
crucially refused to tell reporters whether it had been confirmed any
Australians were involved.
It follows reports
last month that China had been reaching out to former UK and Australian pilots. It was shortly followed by
local police arresting a former US Marine Corps pilot and flight instructor at
the request of US authorities for his work in China.
“The information
provided to me so far presents enough evidence to warrant the need for a detailed
examination into the adequacy of current Defence policies and procedures
addressing this matter,” Minister Marles said in a statement.
He added former
personnel had an “enduring obligation” to protect national secrets, and changes
to the law would be made if “weaknesses” were found.
“I want to make this
point. For those who do come into possession of our nation’s secrets, either
through service in the Australian Defence Force or, indeed, service in any
other part of the Commonwealth, there is an enduring obligation to maintain
those secrets for as long as they are secrets, which persists well after their
engagement with the Commonwealth, and to breach that obligation is a very
serious crime.
“And that is clear
and unambiguous.”
Currently,
ex-service personnel can only work with overseas militaries with permission
from Australia.
Last month,
Australian Aviation reported that Defence would launch an investigation into UK
newspaper claims that ex-air force pilots were training the Chinese armed
forces in aircraft such as Typhoons, Jaguars, Harriers, and Tornados.
It followed The Times reporting that former RAF personnel were being paid
AU$430,000 a year to help China “develop its tactics and technological
expertise”.
The
Australian then subsequently revealed that RAAF veterans were part of the
Western cohort of 30 who were approached through a South African flight school
acting as an intermediary.
Defence Minister
Richard Marles said then he would be “shocked and disturbed” if pilots placed
being “lured by a paycheck from a foreign state above serving their own
country”.
Finally, weeks
later, Australian police arrested a former US Marine Corps pilot.
Daniel Edmund Duggan, 54, was arrested
on 21 October in Orange, NSW and appeared in court on the same day, according
to court records, his lawyer, and two police sources. He later said he
would “vigorously” fight his extradition.
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