The Silent Erosion of Sovereignty: A Sino–Australian
Example
By Dr. Sascha-Dominik (Dov) Bachmann & Mr. Doowan Lee, / Published May 11, 2020
Wild Blue Yonder / Maxwell AFB, AL --
While the West has been predominantly grappling with disinformation campaigns stemming from
the Kremlin, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has employed phase zero influence operations that
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have wittingly or unwittingly eroded the sovereignty of both Australia and New Zealand. Spearheaded
by the United Front Work Department (UFWD), the CCP aims to effectively undermine the integrity of
the organic political processes to manufacture a friendly political environment for Beijing. Beginning in
2000, CCP-directed influence and disinformation campaigns in Australia and New Zealand went largely
underreported and unchecked for far too long. Australia needed some US “persuading” in the context of
China’s increased maritime aggression in the South China Sea to first recognize and then counter
Chinese hostile cyber-based information and influence operations. With the present government of Scott
Morrison in charge, Australia has finally become one of the most outspoken critics of the CCP’s
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interference and meddling in internal affairs in the Asia-Pacific.
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This short submission highlights the potential and current dangers of the CCP information and
influence operations as part of the People's Liberation Army’s wider noncontact warfare approach of the
three warfares in the so-called “grey zone” and looks at potential comprehensive countermeasures.
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Countering the CCP’s subversion and disinformation requires a new understanding of great-power
competition and, as a result, a new set of interagency, multistakeholder initiatives to keep the
Australian information environment—organic and unmolested. Existing doctrine is ill-equipped to
counter and defeat the CCP’s active disinformation campaigns taking place in Australia.
Great-power Competition and the CCP’s Approach to Hybrid Warfare
Great-power competition typically takes place below the threshold of declared war. While it
manifests itself in all domains, such as economic, diplomatic, social, military, cyber, and informational,
we focus on the information and economic environments, as the CCP appears to focus on shaping
friendly audiences through disinformation and investments. At the same time, the CCP has used
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information campaigns effectively to discredit or silence critics of Beijing’s foreign policy.
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(US Department of State image / D. Thompson)
Figure 1. Chinese propaganda. The CCP’s COVID-19 disinformation campaign poses a major challenge for Australia and
other Western nations in countering Beijing’s influence in the media, social media, and academia.
Hybrid threats like cyber-enhanced information operations and the use of foreign direct
investment to target states’ resilience and will to fight are all part of China’s hybrid, below-thethreshold, nonkinetic, warfighting approach. It appears to be a well-calibrated grand strategy to
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compete against and surpass the West as part of China’s “strategic preconditioning,” including the
use of unrestricted warfare and three warfares.
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Western vulnerability is the result of varying degrees of awareness of the threat posed by Chinese
information and influence operations, and the West’s lack of preparedness is highlighted by a dearth of
interagency coordination to detect and combat politically motivated disinformation:
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1. A lack of a proper unified legal framework to enable and authorize countermeasures by multiple security and defense
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actors as part of any comprehensive counterapproach;
2. A lack of understanding of the CCP’s doctrine on unrestricted warfare and concept of three warfares;
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3. A lack of adopting emerging technology on mapping and detecting disinformation;
4. A lack of digital literacy and data literacy; and
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5. A lack of authorities and permissions to integrate information and cyber operations with traditional military
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operations.
Examples of such CCP information operations in Australia have been plentiful and are always
used as a strategy to obtain a measurable advantage and to force compliance with Beijing’s strategic
goal/needs. The CCP’s targeting of politicians, media, and our business community are wellrecognized. Another example is education as Australia’s third-largest export. Beijing’s “long arm” can
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be felt on Australia’s campuses today and have led to an erosion of academic freedom on campus.
Coupled with this erosion is the very real existence of an essential dependency of Australian academia
on the CCP’s goodwill: no international students from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) means
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financial hardship for some of Australia’s more prestigious universities, a prospective which has
become even more realistic due to the economic effect of COVID-19.
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COVID-19 as a Test Case of CCP Influence Operations
The present COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare this financial dependency, with some universities
facing significant budget shortfalls. A dire state of affairs that is being exploited further by the CCP
when it criticized the Australian government for having “overreacted” with its travel ban and acted
outside the recommendations of the World Health Organization (WHO). We also note that these
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influence operations are nested within the PRC’s broader COVID-19 information campaign.
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Moving to the overall objective of the PRC’s information operations, namely influencing internal
affairs in the “target” states, the Australian and New Zealand government should pay particular
attention to UFWD activities and affiliates. The UFWD has been quite active in Australia. Moreover,
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the UFWD has exploited the pandemic to further religious persecution. These activities, conducted by
the PRC’s propaganda apparatus, are squarely antithetical to democratic values. Canberra and
Wellington should focus on updating and refining their legal frameworks and enforcement mechanisms
to identify and ban inauthentic advertisements in Australian and New Zealand newspapers and
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magazines to sway the public away from Beijing’s critics. Much of these inauthentic advertisements
originate from foreign social media and media outlets closely aligned with the CCP. China’s CCP has
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been exploiting the current COVID-19 pandemic to weaponize its ongoing maritime aggression in the
South China Sea and against Taiwan and Hong Kong. Beijing has also exploited the real and
anticipated lack of resolve of Western and Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
governments, utilizing both “mask diplomacy” and “mask mercantilism,” using information operations
as both force-enabler and -enhancer, and attempting to start a strategic buying spree into essential
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services and critical infrastructure of weakened Western market economies, especially in Europe and
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Australasia.
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Conclusion
Given the nature and scale of the CCP’s hybrid threats, we argue that governments need to enable
a multistakeholder comprehensive approach involving state agencies, academia, the media and the
private sector to curtail Beijing’s influence operations in Australia, New Zealand, and abroad. Such an
approach should include the following courses of action:
1. Establish an interagency coordination cell to ensure the entirety of Australian society remains inoculated against
externally induced and motivated disinformation campaigns;
2. Promote public–private partnership (PPP) to proliferate disinformation-mitigation technology to civil society;
3. Promote emerging tech incubation funds to accelerate the organic development of disinformation mitigation capability;
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4. Promote not only digital literacy (how to understand and detect disinformation online) but also data literacy (how the
CCP and the Kremlin exploit private data in the information environment).
Resilience through increased awareness and a comprehensive multistakeholder counterapproach
is needed to address Chinese influence operations, which have become exacerbated in the wake of the
current COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Sascha Dov Bachmann
Dr. Bachmann is a Professor in Law at the University of Canberra and Fellow NATO SHAPE Asia Pacific (Hybrid Threats and
Lawfare), author of more than 50 articles on the topics of new security challenges of the twenty-first century, such as hybrid
warfare, information operations, the use of lawfare, cyber-enhanced hybrid warfare, and grey-zone operations. He is a
regular contributor to NATO’s Legal Advisor Web (LAWFAS), with his publications often being used as NATO reference
documents. He acted as NATO SME (Cyber and Rule of Law) for the 2011 Countering Hybrid Threats Experiment in Tallinn,
Estonia and The Hague. Sascha has worked with and presented to NATO, USCENTCOM, USAFRICOM, the Austrian Ministry
of Defence, the Swedish Defence University, the Royal Danish Defence College, the South African National Defence Force,
and the Australian Defence Forces among others on the subjects of hybrid war/threats, lawfare, info ops, and targeting. He
is a regular visiting lecturer at the Australian Defence Force’s Information Operations Staff Officer Course as guest of the
Directorate of Joint Influence Activities of the Information Warfare Division of Australian Department of Defence’s Joint
Capability Group.
Doowan Lee
Mr. Lee (BA, Korea University; MA, Simon Fraser; and AM, University of Chicago) is a senior director of research and strategy
at Zignal Labs, leading AI-powered omnisource analytics platform that provides unparalleled influence intelligence to
empower risk management, open society, and democracy through disinformation mitigation. Lee designs and executes
integration strategies for influence intelligence and foreign policy objectives. He also leads external engagements with
government research-and-development agencies to collaborate on emerging technologies on network analysis and
visualization. Before joining Zignal Labs, Lee was a professor and principal investigator at the Naval Postgraduate School for
11 years, where he developed and executed federally funded projects with the Combatting Terrorism Technology Support
Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense, and Defense Advanced Research Programs Agency on collaborative C4I, network
analysis of ideological diffusion, external exploitation of social movements, and social media analysis. He completed his
graduate studies at the University of Chicago while interning at the Argonne National Laboratory and the Santa Fe Institute.
Notes
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9 Sascha-Dominik (Dov) Bachmann, Andrew Dowse, and Håkan Gunneriusson, “Competition Short of War—How
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12 Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui, Unrestricted Warfare (Beijing: PLA Literature and Arts Publishing House, February
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27 Ryan Manuel, “The United Front Work Department and How It Plays a Part in the Gladys Liu Controversy,” ABC
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29 Steve Cannane and Echo Hui, “Federal Election 2019: Anti-Labor Scare Campaign Targets Chinese-Australians,”
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30 Hoang Trung, “US Criticized China at ASEAN Conference—Vietnamese Pressident Remains Silent,” Thoibao (blog), 27
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32 Mike Watson, “China’s Mask Mercantilism,” National Review, 23 March 2020, https://www.nationalreview.com/.
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34 Samantha Hutchinson and Anthony Galloway, “Foreign Investment Board Braces for Chinese Takeovers of Distressed
Australian Assets,” Sydney Morning Herald, 26 March 2020, https://www.smh.com.au/.