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more interested in acquiring greenland and Panama — by cash or by force?....In September 2021 the US, UK and Australia announced a joint project to build eight nuclear submarines for Australia at a cost of AU$368 billion. To conclude the deal, Australia had to scrap an already concluded agreement with France to build 12 conventional submarines for the Royal Australian Navy at a cost of AU$50 billion. Watch CN Live!: Nuked: The submarine fiasco that sank Australia’s sovereignty By Consortium News and Andrew Fowler
France, which had been strung along by Australia until the same day AUKUS was announced, was furious. The Anglo-Saxon deal has dangerous overtones for the Pacific region as it ramps up unnecessary tension with China, Australia’s largest trading partner. A new book, Nuked: The Submarine Fiasco that Sank Australia’s Sovereignty by CN Live!‘s guest, the journalist Andrew Fowler, is a tale of treachery, deception and dominance, while Australia’s sovereignty is undermined amidst manufactured tensions with China. The subservience of the Anthony Albanese government to the United States in its continuation of the AUKUS project begun by the previous prime minister Scott Morrison, in which Australia will fork out billions of dollars for submarines it does not need, in order to protect itself from an enemy it does not have, is at the core of Fowler’s book. Nuked: The Submarine Fiasco that Sank Australia’s Sovereignty is published by Melbourne University Press. It won a Walkley Award (Australia’s Pulitzer) for its author, Andrew Fowler, who joins CN Live! to discuss it. Andrew is an award-winning investigative journalist and a former reporter for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Foreign Correspondent and Four Corners programs. Fowler began his journalism career in the early 1970s, covering the IRA bombing campaign for the London Evening News. He has been the chief of staff and acting foreign editor of The Australian newspaper. Andrew wrote The Most Dangerous Man in the World, the story of Julian Assange and WikiLeaks in 2011, which was updated in 2012 and 2020. Fowler first interviewed Assange for Foreign Correspondent in 2010, which won the New York Festival Gold Medal. His two other books are The War on Journalism (Random House, 2015) and Shooting the Messenger: Criminalising Journalism (Routledge, 2017). Fowler is a winner of the United Nations Peace Prize, has lectured on journalism at universities in Australia and the U.K., and has contributed to various academic papers. https://johnmenadue.com/watch-cn-live-nuked-the-submarine-fiasco-that-sank-australias-sovereignty/
SEE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8tiS3INynw
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Will Donald Trump renegotiate the AUKUS treaty or walk away? That’s the $368 billion question
Given the United States is Australia’s most consequential military ally, it is natural to consider what Donald Trump’s return to the White House will mean for the future of Australian defence policy – especially the AUKUS agreement.
Judging by the initial comments by one of the most senior members of Australia’s government, there certainly appears to be concern that Trump may look to modify – or even scrap – AUKUS.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong noted in the immediate aftermath of Trump’s victory:
We look forward to particularly prioritising AUKUS in our engagement [with the Trump Administration], which is the thing that we have been most focused on in the lead-up to this election.
This is a remarkable statement. In just over three years, AUKUS has now become the most important topic for discussion with the incoming US government. It has received higher billing than any other joint defence project and activity, as well as the global economic threat posed by potential US tariffs on Chinese imports.
This illustrates the enduring Australian government support for AUKUS and its centrality to our defence planning, as well as the significant concern this enthusiasm is not shared by Trump or his team.
Trump could seek a renegotiationIt is an extremely risky to try to predict what Trump will do. That said, the Australian government’s apprehension seems to be well-founded.
A consistent theme of Trump’s foreign policy has been his lambasting of allies he believes are taking advantage of the US and not paying their way. This has included South Korea, Japan and the members of NATO.
In each of these cases, Trump has wanted to renegotiate the terms of agreements. He’s tried to compel South Korea and Japan to contribute a greater share of the financial cost for basing US troops on foreign soil. And with NATO, he has threatened to withhold US assistance unless certain financial thresholds are met.
As a result, some commentators have posited that Australia may be asked to contribute more to the overall cost of AUKUS. This could be beyond the £2.4 billion (A$4.6 billion) and US$3 billion (A$4.6 billion) that Australia has already committed to invest in the UK and US defence industrial bases, respectively.
As the agreement currently stands, there is little to prevent Trump from making such a demand – or, indeed, any of the parties (Australia included) from walking away from the deal.
The most formal articulation of the deal so far is a draft trilateral treaty that was tabled in the Australian parliament in August. This treaty is designed to provide the legal framework for the parties to cooperate on the provision of US and UK naval nuclear propulsion information and technology to Australia.
As well as making its way through the Australian parliament, the treaty was presented to the UK parliament in September and transmitted to the US Congress in August.
Once approved by the three legislatures, it would enter into force until December 31 2075 (unless terminated or amended beforehand).
However, as with other US security treaties, if Trump decides he is unwilling to abide by the terms in the treaty, there’s ultimately little the Australian government can do about it. As is commonplace in these kinds of agreements, the members only need to give 12 months’ notice to withdraw.
So, this is an important formal step between the partners, but as with any such agreement, the longevity of AUKUS is fundamentally a question of political will.
AUKUS has sizeable US supportEven so, there is strong support for Australia in Congress, as well as broad support for AUKUS, specifically.
If Trump sought to formally renege on the agreement, or modify its terms, this would likely need congressional approval. This is by no means a guarantee.
Pat Conroy, the Australian minister for defence industry and capability development, and Matt Keogh, minister for defence personnel, have both stressed the same point in recent interviews – that there is support for AUKUS “across Democrats, Republicans, [and] Trump Republicans”.
As Conroy said in a recent interview, this includes “an 80% yes vote in an evenly divided Senate and a 75% yes vote in a Republican-dominated House of Representatives” on three key pieces of AUKUS legislation in December 2023.
Additionally, with the nomination of noted China hawks Marco Rubio as secretary of state and Mike Waltz as national security advisor, Trump’s foreign policy team is beginning to take on a certain Indo-Pacific emphasis.
This would undoubtedly see a crucial role for Australia, along with other US treaty allies in the region. Whether this is a role that is ultimately in Australia’s interests is another matter altogether.
So, while concerns about the future of AUKUS are perfectly reasonable (and sensible), initial signs do not point to a risk of US disengagement from the region.
If anything, it’s the opposite. Alliance entrapment in a future conflict seems a more pressing concern than alliance abandonment.
What will the future bring?Whether the current AUKUS partnership remains the same in five, ten or 20 years, though, is an open question. The debate over Trump’s intentions has only focused on Pillar 1 of the AUKUS agreement – the submarine component – and not the array of advanced capabilities being developed under Pillar 2.
This is truly a revolutionary agreement that is expected to last at least half a century. In that time, change and evolution are far more likely than not.
The question then is how you manage potential changes, and how much further Australia is willing to bend before any associated costs become too prohibitive. That question will certainly outlast Trump.
David Andrews is a Senior Policy Advisor at Australian National University's National Security College.
https://nsc.anu.edu.au/content-centre/article/opinion/will-donald-trump-renegotiate-aukus-treaty-or-walk-away-thats-368
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
HYPOCRISY ISN’T ONE OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS SINS.
HENCE ITS POPULARITY IN THE ABRAHAMIC TRADITIONS…
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME AMERICA.