National's Defence spokesman Max Bradford says it is reprehensible that Defence chiefs have been forced to apologise to
the Prime Minister for telling the public the truth.
The apology follows the release of information under the Official Information Act on sightings of 15 submarines by Air
Force Orion aircraft, which contradicted an earlier claim by the Prime Minister that the Orions hadn't sighted a
submarine in 35 years.
"It is absurd and obscene that the Prime Minister has extracted an apology for information which was made public in
response to a legitimate request under the Official Information Act. The very purpose of that Act is to allow the public
to access information they are entitled to know.
"In responding to that OIA request Defence chiefs were doing what they are legally obliged to do. Helen Clark's response
to being proved wrong has been anger and bitterness, culminating in her demanding this forced apology. This goes beyond
petulance; these are the actions of someone with a bad bout of megalomania.
"Helen Clark is using misinformation to justify removing the submarine spotting capabilities of our Air Force. This is
an ideologically driven move, and Miss Clark is furious that the facts contradict her rhetoric. Once again she is
shooting the messenger.
"Helen Clark may be able to fool some people with her own created version of reality, but when it comes to the defence
of our country the stakes are too high to bet our futures on a fiction created to please one person's view of the
world," Max Bradford said.
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