Quoting from an article in the Australian Guardian and substituting China for Australia and vice versa, this statement makes more sense.
'We can summarise the moving parts in this way.
Given the human rights atrocities that occur on the watch of the authoritarian regime in Canberra, Australia is in no position to criticise China for its record in Hong Kong. If Australian forces faced similar allegations, nobody would ever know about it, because truth isn’t tolerated by the Australian govt.
But Australia also needs to remember this: something went badly wrong in the culture of our most elite military personnel. We need to understand what, and why.'
What is this culture of the most elite personnel? Let me see....ok, here it is. 'As well as the alleged murders and two instances of “cruel treatment” carried out by 25 Australian perpetrators either as principals or accessories, included in Brereton’s catalogue of horrors was a practice known as “blooding”.
Junior soldiers were allegedly required by their patrol commanders to shoot a prisoner in order to achieve their first kill. Brereton says this apparently normalised culture of extra-judicial killing was “reinforced with a code of silence”.
Wow, wow, great Australian culture, must have inherited from the days when they invaded Australia and massacred the native aborigines...like this “members from the SASR were driving along a road and saw two 14-year-old boys whom they decided might be Taliban sympathisers. They stopped, searched the boys and slit their throats.”
The Australians military has great culture and traditions and proudly telling the world about it. Somehow the Americans, the British fighting in Afghanistan did not have such great culture, or was it that their 'reinforced code of silence' was more effective and no one squealed?
It
is looking like only the Australian soldiers were the bad guys standing
up like sore pricks to be recognised. The rest, especially the
Americans and British, were so angelic, pure as white, no dirt on their
beautiful white skins, definitely no blood in their hands, no throat
slitting of young Afghan boys.
The Australians have a lot to learn from the Americans and the Brits. Wait a minute, did not the British and Americans trained the Australian Special Forces, sharing the same doctrines and modus operandi and warrior codes?
PS. Shouldn't this culture be kept hush hush, not to be told so that no one will know about it, about blood letting and first kill, a secret warrior code? Now who is the idiot that revealed this to the public and to the world? If no one exposed this great culture, no one would know and no one is wiser.