One in a series of online lectures prepared by and presented by Andrew Klein Ph.D
Global Observations – local application – 2025
By Andrew Klein
On the evening of December 14, 2025, at a Hanukkah celebration on Sydney’s Bondi Beach, a father and son opened fire on a crowd. By the time the gunfire ceased, fifteen people were dead, including a 10-year-old girl and an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor. Forty-two others were wounded. Within hours, police declared the act a terrorist attack “inspired by Islamic State ideology,” noting ISIS flags were found in the perpetrators’ car.
This is the foundational, painful fact. Yet, before the blood was dry, this atrocity ceased to be merely a crime scene. It became a political battleground, a stage for long-simmering domestic fractures, and a stark case study in the global weaponization of grief.
The Official Facts: A Timeline of Terror and Response
· The Attack: At 18:47 on December 14, gunfire erupted at a Hanukkah event attended by around 1,000 people. Video footage shows two gunmen firing from a bridge above the park.
· The Heroes and Victims: Amidst the chaos, acts of immense courage emerged. A bystander, Ahmed al Ahmed, tackled and disarmed one gunman. Another couple, Boris and Sofia Gurman, were killed attempting to intervene. The victims were a cross-section of the Australian Jewish community, from the child to the Holocaust survivor.
· The Perpetrators: The alleged attackers were Sajid Akram, 50, and his son Naveed, 24. Sajid was a licensed firearms holder; Naveed had been examined by authorities in 2019 but was assessed as posing no ongoing threat. Police are investigating their travel to the Philippines in November 2025.
· The Immediate Response: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese vowed to strengthen gun laws, and both he and NSW Premier Chris Minns forcefully defended the police, who engaged and neutralized the attackers.
The Hijacked Narrative: Foreign Interference and Conflated Agendas
Almost instantly, a parallel narrative was launched from abroad, seeking to graft a geopolitical agenda onto Australian grief.
· Netanyahu’s Accusation: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly stated that Australia had “poured oil on the flames of antisemitism” through its prior recognition of Palestinian statehood, directly blaming this policy for the attack.
· The Conflation Playbook: This is a documented tactic. Critics argue that the widely adopted International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism deliberately conflates criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews. As one analysis notes, this allows pro-Israel groups to report surges in “antisemitism” that are, in fact, surges in anti-Israel sentiment during conflicts like the war in Gaza. Netanyahu’s statement was a blunt, real-time application of this conflation, attempting to silence policy disagreement by linking it to lethal violence.
The Domestic Fractures: Old Ghosts and Political Opportunism
While foreign actors sought to direct the story, domestic forces eagerly seized the moment, revealing deeper national rifts.
· A Familiar Failure of Intelligence: The attack carries echoes of the 2014 Lindt Cafe siege, where the perpetrator, Man Haron Monis, was known to authorities but not deemed an imminent threat. ASIO’s own 2025 threat assessment warned of a “dynamic, diverse and degraded” security environment where “politically motivated violence” was rising and social cohesion was strained. Yet, the system failed to connect the dots once more.
· Politicizing the Aftermath: The response from sections of the Australian right has been revealing. Figures like Senator Pauline Hanson of One Nation—whose history includes statements criticized as anti-Asian and anti-Muslim—and former Prime Minister John Howard, who later endorsed preference deals with One Nation, now position themselves as defenders of security and social order. Their rhetoric often frames the threat through a narrow, civilizational lens, sidestepping complex intelligence failures and the toxic domestic discourse they themselves have fueled.
A Measured Path Forward: Three Guiding Principles
In this polarized landscape, where tragedy is instantly commodified for political capital, a return to first principles is not just academic—it is a civic necessity.
1. Distinguish Between Criticism and Hate: The core malignancy here is the political weaponization of antisemitism. As the analysis of the IHRA definition shows, the deliberate blurring of lines between opposing a government’s policy and hating a people is a potent tool for stifling dissent. Honest debate, essential for democracy, is the first casualty.
2. Seek Primary Sources: In an age of narrative hijacking, we must return to the wellspring of fact. What do the police reports say? What is in the official threat assessments? ASIO’s own declassified report, for instance, is a primary source warning of foreign interference and communal violence. It is a more reliable guide than the commentary of a foreign leader with a clear agenda.
3. Observe the Constitutional Framework: Australia’s rule of law, with its presumption of innocence and equality before the law, is the ultimate bulwark against the “group exceptionalism” and arbitrary power that flourish in times of fear. It demands that our response be measured, just, and applied equally—protecting all communities from violence and all citizens from overreach.
Conclusion
The Bondi Beach shooting was an act of terror inspired by a global extremist ideology. Its aftermath, however, has been shaped by a different set of forces: the geopolitical cynicism of foreign leaders, the long shadow of domestic intelligence failures, and the opportunism of local politicians capitalizing on fear.
To honour the dead—the child, the survivor, the heroes, the everyday citizens—we must refuse the hijacked narratives. We must insist on a response grounded in the unblinking clarity of fact, the fair application of our laws, and the difficult but necessary work of distinguishing between a murderer’s ideology, a state’s policy, and a people’s faith. The path of least resistance is to let others write this story for us. The path of integrity is to write it ourselves, with truth as our only compass.
Sources & References
Official Incident Details & Police Response:
· NSW Police Force Public Statements & Media Conferences (December 14-16, 2025).
· Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO). Annual Threat Assessment 2025. (This report, often declassified in part, provides the official assessment of the terrorism and extremism landscape prior to the attack).
Analysis of Political and Foreign Response:
· Transcript of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s remarks on the Bondi attack, as reported by major international news agencies (Reuters, Associated Press).
· Wirth, Andrew. Critique of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism. (Academic paper analyzing the political utility and critiques of the IHRA definition, often cited in debates about conflating anti-Zionism and antisemitism).
· Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ). Annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia. (Provides data on reported incidents, used to illustrate trends and debates around measurement).
Context on Australian Domestic Politics:
· Coronial Inquest Findings into the 2014 Lindt Cafe Siege (Commonwealth of Australia).
· Public statements and policy platforms of One Nation (Pauline Hanson) and the Liberal/National Coalition, as recorded in parliamentary Hansard and party publications.
· Historical analysis of the 2001 Balmain riots and the political climate under Prime Minister John Howard, drawn from historical texts and news archives (e.g., The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald archives).
Guiding Principles & Legal Framework:
· The Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia.
· Australian Law Reform Commission publications on the Rule of Law and Presumption of Innocence.