Second,the government believes Australia’s existing fleet will become too vulnerable. The Collins-class submarines use diesel-electric power systems that require them to stay close to the surface for hours at a time so they can draw air into their systems. This exposes them to detection. Crucially,the advice from Defence is that this risk is increasing because quantum computing and artificial intelligence are making satellite and other forms of surveillance more powerful. The shift to nuclear propulsion dramatically reduces the risk.
Third,the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) wants a new fleet with greater power. The conclusion is that Australia needs submarines that can go further,faster and remain on-station for longer. A Collins-class submarine takes 10 days to travel from Perth to Sydney;a Virginia-class can do it in three. One takes 30 days to get to Hawaii;the other needs only 10. In addition,the interim and future vessels will carry cruise missiles as well as torpedoes,so they could strike targets on land as well as at sea.
The RAN’s request to Albanese and Marles has been summed up in two words by those working on this project:missiles and people. This is a clear indication the new submarines will use vertical launch tubes for Tomahawk missiles or,one day,hypersonic missiles. The request for people reflects the anxiety within the navy aboutassembling the workforce to develop,build and serve on the submarines. What is missing,so far,is any detail about how Canberra can create this workforce.
The advice from Australia’s most senior Defence figures is to lock in AUKUS. This has convinced Albanese and Marles,even though former prime ministerPaul Keating,a Labor icon,once said that developing eight submarines to protect Australia against China was like “throwing a handful of toothpicks at the mountain”.
Could today’s Labor leaders have listened to Keating and ignored the chiefs of the ADF? Not likely.
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Yet,the risks are real. AUKUS ties Australian defence capability to the US for decades. The reliance on the US is already extensive – the Five Eyes intelligence partnership,Pine Gap satellite surveillance base,the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter,the rotation ofUS forces through Darwin – and will now go even deeper. Will the US remain a reliable economic and security partner? Is it a declining power? The rise of former president Donald Trump gave Australians a good reason to doubt the American future.
The AUKUS decision this week makes a lasting commitment despite that doubt. Why? Because the Defence experts convinced Albanese and Marles it had to be made.
Cut through the noise of federal politics with news,views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weeklyInside Politics newsletter here.