Australian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

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asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
RAN has transformed in the last few years

they are conducting operations from deep Pacific to Indian ocean and also South China Sea
 

Pika

Junior Member
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noticed with a slight delay
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Australian defence spending overkill
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Sound article. I take issue with the notion that Australia would ever join the US in engaging China. Such conflicts will be nuclear. And if Australia is actively attacking Chinese targets with the US, they must be prepared to face retaliation, conventional and nuclear.

The more realistic expectations will be Australia providing basing/staging area for US assets but even that will never include nuclear capable weapons.
 

broadsword

Brigadier
Sound article. I take issue with the notion that Australia would ever join the US in engaging China. Such conflicts will be nuclear. And if Australia is actively attacking Chinese targets with the US, they must be prepared to face retaliation, conventional and nuclear.

The more realistic expectations will be Australia providing basing/staging area for US assets but even that will never include nuclear capable weapons.

I would not even want to consider downplaying that possibility. Just saying.
 

Pika

Junior Member
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I would not even want to consider downplaying that possibility. Just saying.

Not downplaying. Just being realistic. Look at how Australia react to US pulling out of INF.
They shot down any notion of US basing missiles on their territory.

Australia military is a glorifying US ally. They will fight low end conflicts in ME; conduct peacetime patrols--maybe a few passage in SCS, allow US to base equipment on soil.

But I highly doubt they will ever actively engage in conflict against China along with the US. Right now for them, they have to balance diplomacy between US and China as their economy activity with China increasingly grow.
 

SamuraiBlue

Captain
I hope this was really worth it for Australians.

Submarine fleet tipped to cost $225b to build and maintain

Australia's new fleet of attack submarines is now estimated to cost about $225 billion to build and maintain, according to Defence officials.

The cost of building the 12 French-designed submarines has crept up from an expected $50 billion three years ago. The head of the Navy's submarine program, Greg Sammut, told a Senate estimates hearing on Friday the "out-turn cost" - the actual cost of the build calculated at the end of the project - was now estimated to be at least $80 billion.

This was on top of the cost to "sustain, update and upgrade" the submarines until 2080, which was estimated to total $145 billion when adjusted for inflation.... to read more
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The first attack-class submarine is still slated to enter service in 2034 or 2035. The $80 billion construction cost includes acquiring new weapons and electronic systems.

It would have been a fraction of that and would have been ready by mid 2020's if they selected the Soryu version.
 
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I hope this was really worth it for Australians.



The first attack-class submarine is still slated to enter service in 2034 or 2035. The $80 billion construction cost includes acquiring new weapons and electronic systems.

It would have been a fraction of that and would have been ready by mid 2020's if they selected the Soryu version.
business as usual

Aug 17, 2016
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
Sound article. I take issue with the notion that Australia would ever join the US in engaging China. Such conflicts will be nuclear. And if Australia is actively attacking Chinese targets with the US, they must be prepared to face retaliation, conventional and nuclear.

The more realistic expectations will be Australia providing basing/staging area for US assets but even that will never include nuclear capable weapons.

Last time I looked, an Australian Frigate is embedded with the US carrier strike group based in Japan.

So a US-China conflict automatically drags in Australia.

This is not something that the average person in Australia actually realises.
 

Pika

Junior Member
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Last time I looked, an Australian Frigate is embedded with the US carrier strike group based in Japan.

So a US-China conflict automatically drags in Australia.

This is not something that the average person in Australia actually realises.

I'm sure the Frigate has Rules of Engagement as to when a conflict starts they won't automatically jump in, but instead wait for orders from a higher Australian chain of command.

Say for instance out of nowhere this US carrier strike group, patrolling in the Pacific, is attacked without any provocation by China. Obviously the Frigate would defend itself and the US ships in the group.

But now let's say, this US CSG is sailing towards the Taiwan strait or some other contentions waters near China during times of high tension between China and US and the world can spot the precipitous of a conflict, I'll bet that you won't find the Frigate sailing with the CSG towards this conflict.

Allies embed the ships with US CSGs all the time to train with the US tactically, but on a strategically level, it means nothing.

Just because they sail ships together in times of peace doesn't means they will fight together. .
 
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