Get real. If you hang out with known terrorists at al-Qaeda training camps in Yemen, then you really cannot complain if an armed American drone comes looking for you.
That is the uncompromising message from the Prime Minister to those who argue that the death - some call it murder - of New Zealander Daryl Jones by drone strike should see the the whistle being blown on co-operation - some would call it complicity - between the Government Communications Security Bureau and its sister American intelligence agencies.
Jones' death - or, as the Greens put it, "extra-judicial killing" - might have altered the debate about the ethics of using unmanned drones as assassination devices by bringing something out of sight and thus out of mind much closer to home.
But not close enough, given Jones had long been living in Australia and had held an Australian passport at one stage.
That, plus the timing of the strike that killed him - last year, rather than last week - has made it easier for the Prime Minister to gloss over the death.