The Afghan Files are a set of Australian Defence Force documents about the operation of Australia's special forces in Afghanistan.[1] The documents were leaked to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) by David McBride,[2] and seven stories were ultimately published as a result. The documents covered a wide range of topics, however most notably it detailed multiple cases of possible unlawful killings of unarmed men and children. In response to the leak, the Australian Federal Police raided the ABC's offices in June 2019,[3] confiscating all material related to the matter.
The main author of the Afghan Files, ABC investigative journalist Dan Oakes, was later awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for "service to journalism" regarding his work on the Afghan Files.[4]
The documents raised concerns over the “organisational culture” including a “warrior culture”, with particular concern over “desensitisation” and “drift in values” among elite Special Air Service Regiment (SAS) soldiers serving in Afghanistan. Additionally, the documents alluded to a deep division between the two elite units that make up the majority of the Australian Army special forces.
The documents contained at least 10 accounts of possibly unlawful killings of unarmed men and children. Two of the incidents, both occurring in September 2013, are currently under investigation by the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force.[5] These incidents involved the death of a man named Bismillah Azadi and his son Sadiqullah in an Australian raid in Uruzgan Province, when Bismillah allegedly pointed a pistol at SAS troopers. Contrary to the soldier's reports, police found Bismillah and Sadiqullah in bed beside each other the next day, apparently killed while asleep. The documents also contained a report of a detainee alone with a soldier being shot after allegedly trying to seize a weapon. Later in 2013 after these incidents, Australian troops allegedly killed an Afghan motorcyclist, and injured his female passenger. This incident allegedly sparked agitation from the Afghan authorities, who threatened to stop working with Australia unless the killing of unarmed civilians ceased.
The files provided insight into the response of the ADF over, and background of an incident in which an SAS soldier severed the hands of an Afghan insurgent for identification confirmation purposes.[6] Preceding the event, the special forces were searching for an Australian National Priority Target codenamed "Objective Rapier", a senior insurgent commander responsible for numerous terrorist attacks.[7] Helicopters and over 120 troops were involved in the search. During a fight in the Zabul Province, four insurgents were killed. An SAS Corporal searched the bodies, and then severed a single hand of each of the insurgents with a scalpel. Troops are required to gather fingerprints and eye scans of every Taliban member killed, if it is possible to do so.[8] Mutilation of the dead, however, is a violation of the laws of war.[9] Captain Andrew Hastie, disturbed by the event, reported the incident up the chain of command. Members of the troop pointed blame to an official training session held just nine days prior, in which two experts explicitly sanctioned the removal of hands.
The SAS soldier responsible for severing insurgent hands was later cleared of all charges, with the inquiry finding it was not done in a spirit of revenge or barbarity with the intent to mutilate but with the purpose to identify the deceased insurgent.[10] [11]
ABC Ultimo Raid | |
Time: | 11:32am[12] |
Duration: | 8 hours |
Location: | 700 Harris Street, Ultimo |
Coordinates: | -33.8821°N 151.1973°W |
Type: | Government raid |
Cause: | Release of the Afghan Files |
First Reporter: | Lorna Knowles |
On 5 June 2019, the Australian Federal Police raided the Sydney based headquarters of the ABC over a period of eight hours, reportedly over the Afghan Files.[13] Another agency, likely ASIO or ASD, was also present.[14] During the raid, lawyers representing the ABC were forced to interpret the warrant and work with the AFP to ensure privileged information not under the purview of the warrant was not released.[15] The raid was immediately met with wide public criticism,[16] and an FOI request into the incident revealed that the AFP were intentionally targeting journalists, and that prosecution of journalists involved was considered. Following the raid the ABC began litigation against the AFP, claiming the warrant was too broad and thus not enforceable.[17] [18]
In February 2020 the case was dismissed by the federal court,[19] and the AFP began the process of accessing the confiscated files while the ABC rushed to get an injunction.[20] [21]
In June 2020, the AFP sent a brief of evidence to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP), the federal public prosecutor, recommending charges be laid against journalist Dan Oakes for breaking the Afghan Files story. As it was such a high profile case, prosecution also required final approval from the then Attorney General of Australia, Christian Porter.[22] In October 2020, the CDPP announced that, despite believing they would succeed in conviction on several charges, they would not be prosecuting Oakes.[23]
The raid on the ABC offices, along with another AFP raid on the home of News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst in the same month, became the subject of a Senate inquiry by the Environment and Communications References Committee on press freedom. The final report, published in May 2021, made 17 recommendations, including proposed reforms to laws that have the potential to criminalise public interest journalism, as well as proposals to improve federal protections for whistleblowers.[24] [25]