The Protest Years: The Official History of ASIO, 1963-1975
JOHN BLAXLAND
ALLEN & UNWIN, $49.99
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation of 1975, at the end of the controversial federal Labor government of Gough Whitlam, was very different from that of 1963, when the long-serving Liberal prime minister Robert Menzies was still in power.
As John Blaxland explains in this rather pedestrian account of our signature intelligence agency, during the protest years, from the expulsion from Australia of Soviet spy Ivan Skripov in   February 1963 to the ascension of Whitlam as prime minister in   December 1972, ASIO grappled with new and difficult challenges, including Croatian extremism. 
This was despite the fact that, as Blaxland puts it, "the old threats of Soviet espionage and communist subversion remained".
Under the Whitlam government, things got considerably more difficult for the spy agency, especially after the 1973 raid on ASIO's headquarters in Melbourne, led by the erratic attorney general Lionel Bowen, accompanied by the federal police.
Blaxland's laboured writing style does not help this long book, which contains some errors, for example about the positions held by anti-communist activist B.A. ("Bob") Santamaria. It is also confusing that the project's principal research officer, Dr Rhys Crawley, is acknowledged as the author of chapter 12.
Entitled "Australia's Cold War Frontline", this key section concerns ASIO's role in Papua New Guinea from 1962 (a year before this volume begins) to 1975. However, a close reading of Crawley's chapter does not reveal, at least to this reviewer, a different or more energetic narrative voice.
While the conspicuously drab text leaves much to be desired, the photographs and other illustrations, including political cartoons, are a highlight of The Protest Years. In particular, there are two fine photos of one of Australia's finest photographers, Ponchita Hawkes, both taken by ASIO operatives in 1973.
Hawkes was one of the main collaborators, with Victorian activist Joan Coxsedge, in the Committee for the Abolition of Political Police, which sought to expose ASIO officers and to embarrass them.
Other revealing photographs include a magisterial portrait of Menzies, who from 1950 to 1966 had a close relationship with ASIO's director-general, Brigadier Charles Spry, and one of Skripov with the tantalising caption, "Many wondered whether poor ASIO tradecraft had tipped off his illegal contact".
For me, the standouts are two stark photos of prominent Australian Labor Party senator Arthur Gietzelt, who because of his close relation with the Communist Party of Australia leadership was strongly suspected of being a committed communist.
One of the strongest sections in the text also concerns ASIO's extensive surveillance of Gietzelt and its gathering of evidence about him. In a section dealing with ASIO during the Vietnam War, Blaxland claims that while ASIO had corroborating information about Gietzelt, Spry thought the risk to ASIO of divulging it outweighed any benefits of exposing him.
A careful reading of The Protest Years makes it clear that ASIO considered Gietzelt, an outspoken critic of the war in Vietnam and a senator from 1971 to 1989, to be a prominent "hush hush" communist member of the ALP.
Blaxland seems to agree with the notion that Gietzelt was a communist operative inside the ALP who, to avoid detection, was not a formal member of the CPA and who, while attending CPA functions and meeting its leadership, used the alias "Arthur James".
This book reveals that ASIO records show an "Arthur James" on the CPA payroll, earning $2000 a year - a substantial sum at the time. If "Arthur James" was Gietzelt, his double life would, Blaxland writes, "have enabled him to influence the ALP on behalf of the CPA".
Although ASIO surveillance during the 1960s and '70s captured many secret meetings with CPA leaders Laurie and Eric Aarons, throughout his life Gietzelt resolutely denied being a communist. Moreover the former ALP senator, who died in   January 2014, never acknowledged that he was the Arthur James mentioned in ASIO files and featured in many Australian press reports.