
Weeks out from a federal election, and with Donald Trumpās unpredictability and belligerency growing by the day, neither Labor nor the Coalition has demurred from their outright support for the AUKUS nuclear military pact.
AUKUS, signed up by Coalition PM Scott Morrison in 2021 with the Labor Oppositionās full support, has never been put to a vote and has had little official discussion.
This election will be an opportunity to vote against the major partiesā failure to consult on the eradication of the countryās nuclear protections and its military pact with a White House that believes it could win a nuclear war against China.
Despite Trumpās threats about Greenland, Panama, Mexico and Canada and his green light to Israel to obliterate Gaza, both major parties are sticking to the pro-war script.
AUKUS pillar I, the $368 billion nuclear-powered attack submarines, are unlikely to materialise in the next four years. But their endeavour allows Australia into an exclusive nuclear weaponsā club, as well as setting up the conditions for greater interoperability between the US and Australiaās defence forces.
AUKUS pillar II is about boosting universities funding to come up with more lethal technologies, which private weaponsā industries can then capitalise on.
Even before Trumpās election, Ā鶹“«Ć½ of Australiaās ruling elite were uncomfortable with AUKUS and this has only become more widespread since the president has made clear his disdain for the ārules-basedā order.
Former Liberal PM Malcolm Turnbull and former Labor foreign minister Bob Carr have been especially outspoken, pushing for what they call a defence āPlan Bā.
Turnbull told his own , in Canberra at the end of last month, that āTrump makes it very clear he is both a less reliable and a more demanding allyā. He said Australia must ābe more resilient and independentā.
is one of the few serving Labor critics of AUKUS, arguing in an understated way that it āmayā undermine Australiaās commitment to nuclear non-proliferation. Despite promising to sign the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, Labor has not done so.
Ā that because the AUKUS nuclear submarines are unlikely to eventuate because the US is already behind on its own submarine capacity, Australia needs to ārecalibrateā for its own national security interests. In 2017, he argued that to Australia.
Carr, whose record shows he has a to China, says AUKUS leaves Australia ātotally integrated in American defence planningā and that it means Australia will be āhosting even more potential nuclear targetsā.
Such establishment criticism of AUKUS, while couched around questions of āindependenceā and āsovereigntyā, nevertheless do not want to break Australiaās close military ties with the US.
US canvasses āPlan Bā
The ās February report affirms that the USās nuclear-powered submarine building program is way behind.
It says that while Australia was supposed to get five Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) by 2028 (each about US$4.5 billion) before its AUKUS SSNs, even building two such SSNs a year will not fix the backlog until late into the 2030s.
It canvasses Plan Bs, including a new ādivision of labourā between the US and Australia, which echoes the deal between the US and NATO countries.
In brief, the US Congressā Plan B is to turn Australia into a giant base for the US nuclear submarine force.
One alternative is building up to eight additional Virginia-class SSNs and, rather than selling a few to Australia, the US Navy operates them āout of Australia along with the five US and UK SSNsā.
Another option is that rather than spend on SSNs, Australia āinstead invest[s] ā¦ in other military capabilitiesā ā long-range anti-ship missiles, drones and long-range bombers. This, it says, would allow Australia to have non-SSN military missions āfor both Australia and the United Statesā.
It then lists variations of these alternatives, including that US Navy SSNs operate out of Australian ports and āperform Australian SSN missionsā in a similar arrangement to the . From 2027, under Pillar 1, one British and up to four US conventionally armed nuclear-powered submarines will use HMAS Stirling.
Opposition grows
Last November, after Trumpās election, about said Labor should reconsider AUKUS: 21% āstrongly agreedā and 27% said they āsomewhat agreedā that Australia should āreview its commitment to the , including the purchase of nuclear-powered submarinesā.
A poll last September found only 25% of Australians agree with AUKUS. It also found that defence spending is not popular either in Australia, the US or Japan.
A Ā on April 1 found that 46% believe Australia should form closer relations with other countries ā including China.
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Labor defence minister Richard Marles still insists the nuclear submarines will arrive from 2032, and that last monthās transfer of nearly $800 million to US shipyards is a āgood investmentā.
Labor has promised an additional $50.3 billion to the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and an extra $1 billion to enable the ADF to āacquire capabilities fasterā. The Coalition has, so far, promised $3 billion for more joint strike fighter jets.
A growing number want Australia to lead on making the region more secure and peaceful.
The says āAUKUS diverts the massive resources we need to cut carbon emissions and to pull our weight in the global effort to achieve a rapid carbon-free transformationā.
have long opposed AUKUS and argue that they will push for the new government to āwithdraw from the AUKUS political pact and renegotiate Australiaās position in the ANZUS treatyā.
(AFWPR) said in a March report that AUKUS has āno social licenseā, ābecause the public has been shut out of the processā.
It said AUKUS supportersā efforts to bolster support for the military alliance have āmostly failedā, because they have ārelied on scare campaigns, suggesting China wants to invade Australia, a notion for which they have produced no evidenceā.
Further highlighting Australiaās deputy sheriff role, AFWPR criticised Australia for not consulting its Pacific Island neighbours. It said Laborās diplomatic drive āhas not overcome their view that they are not respectedā.
AUKUS allows weapons-grade uranium to transit the Pacific, while the Tindal RAAF airbase in the Northern Territory is upgraded to house US nuclear weapons-capable B52 bombers.
āWhether or not the later development complies with the Raratonga Treaty hinges on the technicality of whether nuclear-armed B52s will be deemed to be āstationedā at Tindal or merely āvisitingā,ā AFWPR said.
Climate emergency the real threat
Socialist Alliance spokespersonĀ Sam WainwrightĢż³Ł“Ē±ō»å Ā鶹“«Ć½ that while the major parties and much of the media are pushing for āa new cold warā because of a āsupposed existential military threatā, it is not borne out by facts.
āThey are trying to gear us up for a war with China on the basis that there is a supposed need to block Chinaās economic and political development.
āThat is terrifying. The wars weāve seen in Sudan and Ukraine are terrible enough. But the idea that Australia would be allying with the US to block Chinaās economic growth by force and risk World War III is anti-social in the most profound sense.
āAustralia needs to move in a fundamentally different direction,ā Wainwright said. He highlighted by at least 50% and have the funds directed to āmore pressing and immediate social and environmental problemsā.
āGlobal warming is the emergency societyās resources need to be spent on dealing with. Any discussion about defence and security should start with: What really is essential to security?ā
Admiral Chris Barrie, a former ADF chief, who was once a supporter of AUKUS, said now is the time to rethink, in his op-ed in the March 30 .
The US is ānot a consistent and reliable allyā, Barrie said, adding that conventional-powered diesel submarines are āsufficientā for defence and that āstrong alliances with the archipelago nations to our immediate north are the basis of an alternative to the China-war strategyā.
, a founding member of the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group, which states the changing climate is the biggest security risk, has challenged Marles to answer questions about Australiaās economic future in a US-led war on China, this countryās most important trading partner.
Wainwright said Marlesā $800 million down payment for AUKUS shows āthe ideological commitment of a dominant section of the ruling class to the US push to contain Chinaā.
As not all establishment figures agree, Wainwright said there is the space to debate a better strategy in an increasingly dangerous world.
Wainwright pointed to Keating and Turnbullās argument that Australia should not have to choose between the US and China. āThey argue Australia could just trade and make up its mind as it goes along ā a more sensible pro-capitalist defence policy.
āSA is for an independent foreign policy based on peace and justice. Thatās by the front bench of the Liberal and Labor parties and the section of the ruling elite which is locked in behind AUKUS.ā