Asked if Australia had secured a guarantee that US export control rules would be wound back to allow for the crucial transfer of nuclear technologies under the AUKUS pact,Sinodinos said that while a lot of work had been done to speed up the process,“it’s not finished”.
“The attitude we’ve taken is we want to push the[Biden] administration process as far as possible,” he said,adding that the upcoming AUKUS announcement would build on the momentum “to get this done”.
“But the very fact that Americans are prepared to share their crown jewels with us implies that there will have to be progress on the seamless transfer of technology. None of us want this to be bogged down.”
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The comments came as Sinodinos prepares to stand down as ambassador in the coming weeks to make way for his successor,former prime minister Kevin Rudd.
Rudd previously headed up the Asia Society,an international-relations think tank in New York,and is regarded as one of the country’s foremost experts on China. He will also be the first former prime minister to become US ambassador – something that carries great weight in the corridors of power at the White House and Capitol Hill.
Asked if he had any advice for Rudd,Sinodinos,a former senator and chief of staff to prime minister John Howard,replied:“We should not be afraid to have more ambition in where we take the relationship. And I think Kevin is a big thinker,and I think he’s the sort of person who is well suited to doing that.”