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Sunday, July 27, 2025

I Am Pretty Sure We Need To Make Sure Our Alliances(s) With The UK Are Rock Solid Given How Uncertain I Am On Trump / Vance Reliability!

This appeared last week:

Defence study is a wake-up call

12:00 AM July 26, 2025

Anthony Albanese’s insistence that his government “will invest in the (defence) capability that Australia needs” should be viewed in light of the compelling case for strengthening northern Australia as an Indo-Pacific allied stronghold.

That need is set out convincingly in a new study for Washington’s Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessment by former US deputy assistant secretary of defence Thomas Mahnken, who served under president George. W. Bush from 2006 to 2009 and as an officer in the US Navy Reserve including tours of Iraq and Kosovo. The study, reported by Cameron Stewart, is a serious wake-up call. Lifting defence spending is not about placating Donald Trump. It is about serving the nation’s interests.

By implication the study raises questions about leadership, political will and the need for the government to make sure the public is well aware of the importance of the issue. Addressing the concerns raised would require a significant realignment of budget priorities, underlining the importance of productivity fuelling growth and the likely need to divert resources from other parts of the economy, such as subsidising high-risk green projects. That vital conversation needs to happen sooner rather than later.

The study canvasses defence infrastructure in northern Australia, going beyond the 2023 Defence Strategic Review, which was right in recommending major upgrades of the northern network of bases, ports and barracks, including RAAF bases Learmonth, Curtin, Darwin, Tindal, Scherger and Townsville. Dr Mahnken also covers the importance of a long-range strike capability and an integrated air, drone and missile defence system to protect key facilities and improve “survivability”.

Geography, which has been central to Australia’s defence strategy for the better part of a century, still works in the nation’s favour. But the possibility that Australia will be attacked can no longer be ignored, the study finds. Existing defence efforts would probably be inadequate in the event of a major conflict, which is why the Australian Defence Force needs to act with greater urgency, including investing in basic logistic support, such as additional fuel and munitions storage and the expansion of maintenance facilities.

The report also emphasises the importance of close intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance in the region to warn of threats to Australia and its neighbours. That capability is becoming more important given the increasing level of Chinese activity near Australia’s periphery.

In contrast to the government’s relatively muted response to the PLA navy’s live-fire exercises in the Tasman Sea in February, Dr Mahnken notes that during a Senate estimates hearing in February Andrew Shearer, the head of Australia’s Office of National Intelligence, confirmed Chinese naval ships had never been spotted that far south before. “He suggested this troubling incident created a new paradigm because it is setting the stage for Beijing to regularise these activities near Australia,’’ the report says.

Beijing has steadily increased its ability to project naval power into Australia’s neighbourhood. In May 2022, for example, a Chinese spy ship operated off the coast of Australia for nearly a week, spending days near the Harold E. Holt Communications Station in Exmouth, Western Australia, which provides very-low-frequency communication transmission services to Australian and US submarines.

As Australia and Britain strengthen their AUKUS ties, co-signing a new 50-year treaty, Dr Mahnken’s study notes that the Virginia-class submarines to be acquired under AUKUS have the speed, range and endurance suited to the Pacific region. By 2035, however, the ADF will have at most two Virginia-class subs in its inventory, constraining operations in the meantime.

On Thursday, Defence Minister Richard Marles told the ABC that the current era of strategic contest was being shaped by the biggest increase in conventional defence spending seen since the end of the Second World War – from China: “without strategic reassurance, in a sense that there’s not a clear articulation of why that defence spending is occurring”. Australia needed “to be making sure that we are facing the complex strategic circumstances”. The process, Mr Marles said, included updating the National Defence Strategy every two years. It was due in the first or second quarter of next year.

Judging by the issues raised by the CSBA report, the next NDS will demand hard decisions because the time available to create an expanded, resilient defence infrastructure suited to 21st-century warfare is limited. The report’s insights and the opportunities our alliances afford must not be wasted. Business as usual, with defence on the backburner, no longer is good enough.

Here Is The link:

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/editorials/defence-study-is-a-wakeup-call/news-story/bf8d0f94dd8dfc6cbdab9314be2e60c9

Frankly I reckon if push comes to shove I am more confident of the UK than the US!

While I would like to keep both on side, with Trump as president my confidence levels are not as high with the US as I would like.

We can forget that the UK is a very well armed nuclear power in its own right (to counter Russia), and a pretty good long term friend! Maybe they have a nuclear sub or two to spare - they do have at least 5-6 already? (Note some of the UK subs, like the US, are both nuclear powered and armed - which is a pretty dramatic step up in force projection and deterrence, but unlikely to be available to us, except in pretty dire circumstances!. However, it sure can't hurt to have the Brits on our side!)

What do others think?

David.

2 comments:

Megan said...

An interesting and complex question David. Complex is as much as the relationships are entangled and certainly not a couple of independent strings that can be pulled without consequence. The US is going through a perilous period. The so-called MAGA itself is beginning to implode (seems to follow a standard pattern for this sort of movement). A lesson to be taken for progressive change - maybe be a little more subtle and avoid rubbing salt in the wounds of change - it clearly results in a backlash and as evident from the US manifest in ugly ways I will say this from Trump, he has certainly exposed the “swamp” - bet his supporters were not expecting it to be him and those backing him.

Anonymous said...

This headline pretty much sums up why everyone needs to move on (or change the channel)

Donald Trump targets Beyoncé, Kamala Harris, Oprah, escalates distraction campaign amid Epstein files pressure.