The Phnom Penh Post

From boomerangs to A-bombs? Oz debates nukes

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FACING a wobbly ally in the US and an increasing­ly bellicose China, Australia’s military strategist­s are cautiously debating whether the country needs to consider developing its own nuclear deterrent.

For a long time, the country’s defence forces had relatively little to worry about.

A century-old alliance with the US brought bankable security guarantees, while mineral exports to China ensured 28 recession-free years at home.

But Donald Trump’s limited regard for alliances and Xi Jinping’s quest for primacy in the Pacific have put both pillars of Australian security in doubt.

“Far from being in a strategic backwater, Australia is very much now a state in the front line,” said Malcolm Davis, a military planner who has long called for a rethink in Australia’s defence.

So far the response from Canberra has been cautious – trying to preserve the alliance with the US while trading with the world’s rising economic power.

But Hugh White – former adviser to prime ministers, and a doyen of Canberra military analysts – believes it is time to get off the fence.

Amid arcane discussion­s about strategic autonomy, interests and capabiliti­es, his book How to Defend Australia, published this month, has ignited a firestorm of debate with one simple question: “What about nuclear weapons?”

White – a professor of strategic studies at the Australian National University – does not advocate for or against nuclear weapons, but says the question is becoming unavoidabl­e.

Citing “big strategic shifts in Asia” he argues that “it is no longer clear that nuclear weapons would never make sense” to Australian defence.

“The strategic costs of forgoing nuclear weapons in the new Asia could be much greater than they have been until now.”

Developing even limited deterrence would carry enormous economic, political, diplomatic and social cost – requiring Australia to withdraw from the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty and provoking neighbours.

But the vast nation-continent may be extremely difficult to defend alone with a limited population and convention­al weapons.

White argues that without a cast iron guarantee from Washington, even the mere threat of a nuclear attack from China could “force us to capitulate in a convention­al war.”

Decades in the making?

The discussion is not completely out of the blue.

White reports that for decades Australian planners had quietly considered nuclearisa­tion and worked on assessment­s of how long weapons would take to develop.

But until now Canberra always decided that the price was too high, the risks were low and Washington had its back.

But Trump’s capricious temperamen­t means half a century of policy could change with a single tweet.

Meanwhile the threat outlook has changed.

Historical documents show defence analysts did not believe Australia would be targeted even in a serious nuclear conflagrat­ion between the US and the Soviet Union.

Bumping up against China seems much more likely.

And two regions inside Australia’s sphere of interest have become geopolitic­al hotspots – the South China Sea and the South Pacific.

Australian warships and aircraft routinely patrol through the South China Sea, much of which is claimed by Beijing.

Even when Australian ships stick to internatio­nal waters, they are shadowed and challenged by the Chinese military.

In one recent incident, lasers were shone at Australian Navy helicopter pilots taking part in a months-long naval operation, forcing them to land.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has launched a diplomatic “step-up” in the South Pacific – hoping to reengage in a region that increasing­ly draws Beijing’s attention.

Critics have described White’s ideas as unaffordab­le, unrealisti­c and unnecessar­y.

“To put it mildly, the bipartisan political consensus on Australian defence policy is nowhere near White’s position,” Sam Roggeveen of the Lowy Institute said in a review of White’s book.

Nonetheles­s, Roggeveen went on to say that White’s view of a rising China and diminished US was “built on a dispassion­ate analysis” and was, to him, “convincing”.

Not everyone is as convinced, but the fact White’s ideas are being taken seriously speaks to a growing concern about Australia’s place in the world.

In recent weeks both a Chinese naval taskforce and a US assault ship have sailed into Sydney Harbour – the fact both were invited did little to quiet public debate about how Australia relates to the two world’s major powers.

 ?? WILLIAM WEST/AFP ?? Facing a wobbly ally in the US and an increasing­ly bellicose China, Australia’s foremost military strategist­s are cautiously debating whether the country needs to consider developing nuclear weapons.
WILLIAM WEST/AFP Facing a wobbly ally in the US and an increasing­ly bellicose China, Australia’s foremost military strategist­s are cautiously debating whether the country needs to consider developing nuclear weapons.

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