Dennis Argall Explained

Dennis Argall
Ambassador From:Australian
Country:China
Term Start:1984
Term End:1985
Predecessor:Hugh Alexander Dunn
Successor:Ross Garnaut
Birth Date:7 July 1943
Birth Place:Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Death Place:Nowra, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality:Australian
Education:Newington College
University of Sydney
Occupation:Senior career officer with Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Profession:Diplomat

Dennis Walter Argall (7 July 1943 – 13 June 2023) was an Australian diplomat and senior career officer with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT). He was Australia’s Ambassador to China from 1984 until 1985.[1] A tribute in John Menadue's, public commentator, and formerly a senior public servant and diplomat, journal of public policy, Pearls and Irritations described him as "curious, funny, fiercely intelligent, committed to social justice, and fairly often the world had to catch up with him. He didn’t laugh at sexist and racist jokes, he didn’t find them funny. He was a career diplomat, a former Ambassador to China, and he wrote the first speech in the Australian Parliament that talked about human rights."[2]

Biography

Argall was born in Newcastle, New South Wales. His father worked for the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and he grew up in Newcastle, Sydney, and Maryborough before returning to Sydney. He attended Newington College (1955–1959)[3] on a scholarship[4] and completed a Bachelor of Arts degree with honours in anthropology at the University of Sydney.[5] [6]

Argall died in Nowra, New South Wales on 13 June 2023, at the age of 79.[2]

Career

Argall joined the Department of External Affairs (which later became the Department of Foreign Affairs) in January 1964. He was posted to Manila (1965–1967), Rome (1968–1969), and Washington DC (1976–1978) where he was Counsellor, later acting Minister. From 1972 to 1974 he worked in a policy area of the Department of Defence and then as Assistant Secretary in the Department of the Special Minister of State.

In 1978 and 1979 he was senior advisor to Lionel Bowen MP, deputy leader of the Australian Labor Party in the Australian Parliament, before returning to Foreign Affairs as Assistant Secretary North Asia. Argall was later acting head of the North and South Asia Division in 1982 and 1983. Argall was Ambassador to China in 1984–1985. Illness shortened Argall's appointment in Beijing. He completed a master's degree in defence studies at the University of New South Wales College in the Australian Defence Force Academy in 1988, with a minor thesis analysing decisions made by the Australian cabinet about the relationship with China in 1980. Though returning to work for a time as head of research in the Commonwealth Parliamentary Library, Argall's health deteriorated again, much later diagnosed as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and fibromyalgia, factors preventing return to regular work. In pursuit of rehabilitation he for a time secured organic registration of a very small fruit farm near Bodalla New South Wales with the National Association for Sustainable Agriculture Australia (NASAA) and a permaculture designer's certificate, to personal and but not financial advantage.

In 2003 and 2004 Argall gave speeches critical of the Australian Government's entry into war with Iraq comparing events with the beginnings of World War 1 and expecting comparable unravelling of violence.

Argall subsequently sought to assist communities in Africa with developing practical business plans for development. In 2008, he ran for mayor of the City of Shoalhaven.[7]

His papers, from the period 1984 until 1988, are held by the National Library of Australia. These include writing on the 1980 Cabinet decision that gave direction to Australia's modern relationship with China and the complex of issues at the end of 1975, during turbulent last days of the Whitlam Government concerning the 'Korean Question' at the United Nations and the sudden departure of all of the staff of the embassy of the DPRK from Canberra.

Notes and References

  1. News: Argall new envoy to China. 17 February 1984. 3. The Canberra Times.
  2. https://johnmenadue.com/vale-dennis-argall/ Vale Dennis Argall
  3. Newington College Register of Past Students 1863-1998 (Syd, 1999) pp5
  4. News: Newington College Scholarships . . 36,487 . New South Wales, Australia . 30 November 1954 . 14 September 2016 . 7 . National Library of Australia.
  5. http://nla.gov.au/nla.oh-vn6073901 National Library of Australia Oral History
  6. See other activities of Argall at Blogger, Dennis Argall.
  7. http://www.southcoastregister.com.au/story/994624/argall-presents-his-a-team/ South Coast Register: Argall presents his A-team