Townsville Bulletin

Pacific the new nuclear frontline

- JUSTIN VALLEJO

UNITED States Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin said the “historic” AUKUS agreement was central to meeting the rising threat of China, which includes sending nuclear weapons to allies in the Indo-pacific.

Speaking at the Pentagon, Mr Austin said the People’s Republic of China is the only country with “both the intent to reshape the internatio­nal order, and increasing­ly the power to do so”.

“The cost of aggression against the United States, our allies and partners, far outweigh any conceivabl­e gains,” Mr Austin said to release the unclassifi­ed document, including a Nuclear Posture Review.

“We’ve updated our posture in the Indo-pacific to make it more survivable against aggression, and with AUKUS we’re putting campaignin­g into action by linking our cutting edge capabiliti­es with robust military exercises alongside our allies.”

Under the headline “Strong and Credible Nuclear Deterrence in the Indo-pacific Region”, the newly-declassifi­ed strategy outlines the Pentagon’s plan to send massive amounts of firepower to the region.

“Toward that end, we will work with Allies and partners to ensure an effective mix of

capabiliti­es, concepts, deployment­s, exercises, and tailored options to deter and, if necessary, respond to coercion and aggression,” the 2022 Defence Strategy says.

“The United States will continue to field flexible nuclear forces suited to deterring regional nuclear conflict, including the capability to forward deploy strategic bombers, dual-capable fighter

aircraft, and nuclear weapons to the region and globally.”

Mr Austin’s public release of nuclear posture and missile defence review comes after the White House said earlier this year that China represente­d “most consequent­ial geopolitic­al challenge” of the modern era, which risked turning into a new Cold War.

He said integratin­g the US’S national defence, nu

clear posture review, and missile defence strategy – all three together for the first time – means working more closely with allies to deter aggression globally

“In the Indo-pacific, you see the power of partnershi­p with the historic AUKUS agreement. With out trilateral co-operation with Japan and Korea. And with our many multinatio­nal exercises

to increase readiness and interopera­bility,” Mr Austin said.

“Our nuclear capabiliti­es remains our ultimate backstop for our strategic deterrence. And that’s why we’re committed to modernisin­g all three legs of our nuclear triad,” he added.

“We’re building and exercising the forces we’ll need in a crisis or conflict.”

 ?? ?? U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said the AUKUS agreement could include basing nuclear weapons with is IndoPacifi­c partners, which includes Australia.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said the AUKUS agreement could include basing nuclear weapons with is IndoPacifi­c partners, which includes Australia.

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