Victory in the War for Influence & Invoicing: Australia’s Mandarin Advisory Complex at work in two reports

Written by

Marcus Hellyer and Michael Shoebridge
March 17, 2026

President Eisenhower’s 1961 farewell address warning of the US Military Industrial Complex echoes in Canberra today – but with industry and products replaced in the Canberra version by advisory services, post-career consultancies and invoices.

Marcus and Michael discover that biofuel brewing isn’t so easy even in a fuel crisis. Feedstock like the National Anti-Corruption Commission‘s (the NACC) indigestible and philosophically inventive 445 page report into the huge Robodebt scandal proves toxic enough to break the process.

And the Grumpy Strategists attend another funeral of a fallen warrior for accountability and transparency when it comes to the $billions spent on Australia’s faltering military – the now deceased but invaluable Major Projects Report, killed quietly by a Parliamentary committee that should know better. A new secret Parliamentary committee is apparently the antidote. But anyone who expects Defence’s poor performance to improve because it talks to a few well-disposed politicians in a dark room is probably suffering from exposure to the NACC’s report.

It’s a lengthy episode but an important one for anyone interested in how the Canberra bureaucratic machine’s most senior levels engage with our political leaders – and keep doing so after both the politicians and the senior Mandarins have left their official roles. It’s also a depressing story of comfort zones and single sources of advice that often turn out to be wrong.

The latest effort from the now embarrassing National Anti Corruption Commission will be reassuring to anyone who thinks things are peachy – like, say, a former or current Canberra Mandarin. But not to anyone who cares about Australia’s security, public services or future.

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