Socialist Alliance: Cut military spending to address housing, cost-of-living and climate crises

March 25, 2025
Issue 
Donald Trump is demanding that Australia increase its military spending from 2% of gross domestic product (about $56 billion a year) to 3% ($84 billion). Image: AI generated

The right-wing Donald Trump United States administration has demanded that Australia increase its military spending from 2% of gross domestic product (about $56 billion a year) to 3% ($84 billion) and the major parties have been, predictably,Ā quick to obey.

Socialist AllianceĀ calls instead for a and to use the $28 billion instead to address the urgent housing, cost-of-living and climate crises.

Coalition leader Peter Dutton wants to go all the way with Trumpā€™s war drive demand and Labor defence minister Richard Marles announced on March 25 that the budgetĀ wouldĀ increaseĀ defence spending byĀ $10.6 billionĀ over the next four years.

This will bring $1 billion in defence spending for guided weapons manufacturing, an AUKUS submarine base and a frigate program,Ā MarlesĀ said.

Labor had already announced a $50 billionĀ military spending boost over a decade, which he said was the ā€œmost significant increase in defence spending since the end of World War IIā€.

This would be a massive waste of public funds and is irresponsible when the biggest threat we are facing is actually the climate emergency, which Labor and Coalition governments alike have worsened by giving coal and gas companies billions more in subsidies and tax concessions making Australia a global climate rogue state.

The billions spent by Australia on the military have overwhelmingly been used to join the US and other imperialist states in waging war on other countries, from the Gallipoli invasion to the longĀ and disastrousĀ wars in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq, which have mainly killed millions of people in the countries invaded.

It is a total misnomer to callĀ thisĀ ā€œdefenceā€.

Australiaā€™s growing military expenditureĀ toĀ increasingly integrateĀ all wings of the armed forces into the US military machine and the AUKUS deal is pivotal to advancing this integration,Ā also known as interoperability.

AUKUS is also speeding up the integration of a growing arms industry with the US, British and Israeli military industries, making Australia even more complicit in the genocide in Gaza.

The major parties share the ambition of making Australia one of the 10 top arms exporters in the world, and Labor has played an insidious role in enticing the trade union movement into this project with the promise of new, well-paid and highly skilledĀ jobs.

Socialist Alliance rejectsĀ this plan toĀ publiclyĀ subsidiseĀ the worldā€™s blood-stained arms corporations, which have an increasing interest in perpetuating wars for their profit.

The Australian Greens have recently announced a plan to cancel AUKUS and reallocate $4 billion from savings within the defence budget towards ā€œdomestic production capabilities of uncrewed marine and aerial vehicles as well as missiles, strictly for defensive purposesā€, without relying on US and foreign arms companies.

Senator David Shoebridge, the Greens defence spokesperson, claims that this is a practical alternative to ā€œdependence and integration with the US militaryā€, which wouldĀ beĀ usedĀ onlyĀ to ā€œto defend Australia, not threaten our neighboursā€.

Will the Greens proposal really do this and how does it sit with its core value of ā€œpeace and non-violenceā€?

ThisĀ questionĀ isĀ beingĀ asked by many Greens members and supporters,Ā as well asĀ othersĀ in the peace and anti-war movements. The Greensā€™ plan must be critically examined and assessed. Greens members should also ask how this policy was decided without consulting membersĀ in theĀ partyā€™s branches.Ā 

The reason why Australiaā€™s armedĀ forcesĀ have been used more for offensive purposes in imperialist wars on other countries rather than real defence is not only because Australian governments have been forced to do this by imperialist powers, such as the US (and before that Britain),Ā it is alsoĀ because Australia, itself, is a junior imperialist power founded as a racist colonial settler state.

Australian governments, Labor and Coalition alike, have always been the most enthusiastic supporters of imperial wars and Laborā€™s shameful complicity for the ongoing Israeli-US genocide in Palestine is fully in this tradition.

A truly defensive plan for security needs to be built around breaking from Australiaā€™s imperialist role and on building relations of solidarity with its neighbours.

For a start that meansĀ Australia mustĀ stop being the biggest climate rogue state in the Pacific and respect our regional neighboursā€™ urgent calls to stop expanding our fossil fuel extraction and exports.

We should scrap AUKUS, close Pine Gap and all the other US bases and arrangements allowing the stationing of US military anywhere in Australia.

Australia could follow Cubaā€™s good example in helping countries in the GlobalĀ South with medical training and literacy aid, instead of demanding hegemonic military links with neighbouring countries.

The Australian military isĀ totally shaped for imperial purposes. Turning it into a truly defensive institution would require more than breaking with the US military.

It will require breakingĀ fromĀ the globalised arms industry, including so-called Australian arms manufacturing companies. It would require the replacement ofĀ theĀ military machine,Ā nowĀ firmly in the control of the capitalist class (regardless of which party is in government), with truly defensive institutions under the control of the people.

Thatā€™s a big change, but thatā€™s what is required.

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