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the aussie government goes swimming with sharks....The Government has just announced a spend of $1.7B on new ‘Ghost Shark’ underwater drones. But there appears to be more stealth in the budget than there is in the capability. Former submariner Rex Patrick reports. Pete Quinn must be pretty happy.
Ghost Shark drones – “music to Trump’s ears” by Rex Patrick
While he was in that role, Anduril Industries (Anduril) were successful in two limited tenders; one awarded in 2021 for $4.9M and the other awarded in 2022 for $77.5M. Quinn left the Navy in December 2022 and started a new job with Anduril in January 2024 as their Vice President of Strategy. This week the Defence Minister announced that Anduril would receive a $1.7B contract for a future Navy capability. Boom! Submarines v dronesSubmarines perform a diverse range of useful peace and wartime military roles. In peace time they can deploy secretly to foreign waters to gather intelligence. In times of tension, they can work silently conducting surveillance in a forward operating area. When the conflict starts they can covertly lay mines, land special forces, launch land strike missiles, carry out anti-shipping operations and engage in anti-submarine warfare. Submarines are capable of conducting all of the above functions in a single deployment, because of their size, the range of mission payloads they carry and their crew, which enables them to react to complex and rapidly changing circumstances. Their size also allows them to deploy at long range for long periods. Their key characteristic is stealth, once they leave port enemy commanders are left wondering where they are, where they’re going and what they will do next. Underwater drones, even the ‘large’ ones, are much smaller than submarines and, hence, can generally only be configured for one mission at a time. Their endurance is limited by the energy they can carry in their small bodies, though they may be able to sit on the bottom to conserve propulsion energy. This limitation is a key reason why they have generally been deemed undeployable over long distances, unless they are launched from surface vessels nearer to the target, an activity which can easily be seen. Because high frequency radio waves can’t penetrate water, underwater drones don’t enjoy the same connectivity with their human operators as aerial drones do. Underwater drones have to be relatively autonomous, or come to the surface on a regular basis to communicate with their controllers. Underwater drones can and do have role in the underwater battlespace, but they’re not anywhere near as capable as ‘crewed’ submarines. Stealthy budgetVery little is known about the ‘Ghost Shark’ drone that the Navy is buying. We do know it’s about six metres in length and about two metres high and our government will purchase “dozens” for $1.7 billion. The US Navy has a large underwater drone capability called ‘Orca’ made by Boeing and Huntington Ingalls Industries (HHI), which is about 16 metres long. Unlike ‘Ghost Shark’ that will require some sort of parent vessel for forward deployment and recovery, ‘Orca’ has a range of 6,500 miles and can therefore ‘swim out’ of a home or forward port. The US Navy recently paid just over $400 million Australian dollars for five of these, including non-recurring engineering costs. Whilst MWM is of the view that it’s worthwhile paying a premium for Australian designed and built defence capability, it is hard to reconcile the price difference between ‘Ghost Shark’ and the proven ‘Orca’ drone, particularly given ‘Orca’s significant size and persistence compared to ‘Ghost Shark’. Lapdog politicsOne can imagine executives at Anduril’s privately owned US parent company would be very happy with Quinn’s work. So too would President Trump. The Trump Administration has been publicly and privately advocating for Australia to double its defence spending. The ‘Ghost Shark’ announcement will be music to Trump’s ears. It’s defence spending, and with a US company to boot. The announcement has been made in the lead-up to Prime Minster Anthony Albanese’s visit to New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly. Perhaps the unexplainably high price for the ‘Ghost Shark’ will serve as an incentive for Trump to meet with him? There’s been a lot of ‘will he, or won’t he’ in relation to a meeting. With Australia about to recognise the State of Palestine, it’s probably going to be the latter. But the awarding of a generous ‘Ghost Shark’ contract couldn’t hurt Albanese’s prospects. https://michaelwest.com.au/ghost-shark-drones-music-to-trumps-ears/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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Australia to spend $8 billion on nuclear sub shipyard
Dharvi Vaid with AFP, Reuters
Australia has earmarked billions in funds to revamp facilities at a shipyard in order to prepare it for nuclear-powered submarines to be delivered under the 2021 AUKUS pact. The spending will span a decade.
Australia is shelling out an initial sum of AU$12 billion ($8 billion, €6.8 billion) to upgrade facilities at a shipyard as part of a 20-year plan to turn it into a maintenance center for a future fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.
The Australian government is pumping funds into the Henderson shipyard near Perth after a 2021 agreement with the United Kingdom and the United States — called AUKUS — to acquire the submarines.
Under the pact, the UK and the US will provide Canberra with nuclear-powered attack submarines from the next decade to tackle China's growing influence in the Indo-Pacific region.
Shipyard key to Australia's AUKUS ambitionsAustralian Defense Minister Richard Marles said on Sunday that the "very significant" investment will be spent over a decade at the shipbuilding and maintenance precinct situated in Western Australia.
"Henderson is a key piece of the AUKUS story, and, from that point of view, it will be welcomed in the US, as it will be welcomed in the United Kingdom, for sure," Australia's Sky News quotes Marles as saying.
"But this is about what Australia needs to do in order to meet its strategic moment," he added.
The AUKUS deal — which is worth hundreds of billions of dollars — will see the US sell several Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines to Australia, while Britain and Australia will subsequently build a new AUKUS-class submarine.
At present, Australia has no infrastructure to service nuclear-powered submarines.
The country's center-left Labor government plans to prop up Henderson with high-security dry docks to maintain the submarines.
It will also create facilities to build landing craft for the Australian army and new general-purpose frigates for the navy, in steps that could support around 10,000 local jobs.
Australia says US will have access to nuclear submarine shipyardThe Australian defense minister also said the United States would be able to use the planned defense facilities near Perth to help deliver the AUKUS submarines.
"This is about being able to sustain and maintain Australia's future submarines but it is very much a facility that is being built in the context of AUKUS," Marles told Australian Broadcasting Corporation television. "I would expect that in the future this would be available to the US."
US President Donald Trump's administration is conducting a formal review of the AUKUS pact.
Edited by: Sean Sinico
https://www.dw.com/en/australia-to-spend-8-billion-on-nuclear-submarine-shipyard/a-73986955READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
MEANWHILE:When Australia is too delicious to miss
By Song Yi | chinadaily.com.cn
You don't need to fly to Sydney to see the Opera House — it's right here in Beijing. And what's the ice cream flavor that even Iannis Patin, commercial counselor at the Australian embassy in China, cannot stop raving about? We toured the largest-ever 360-square-meter pavilion of Australia — the Guest of Honor country at this year's CIFTIS, where nearly 60 Australian companies and organizations are showcasing products across education, tourism, and consumption sectors — giving visitors a full taste of Australian innovation and culture. https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202509/14/WS68c6893fa3108622abca0a5e.html