The Borneo Post

Canberra, UK vow AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines will be built

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ADELAIDE: Australia and Britain said yesterday that a landmark deal to develop AUKUS nuclearpow­ered submarines would go ahead, despite mounting fears about costs, capabiliti­es and the possible return of Donald Trump.

Under the fledgling AUKUS deal, the two countries along with the United States have pledged to beef up their military muscle in a bid to counter China’s rise.

Defence chiefs this week unveiled ambitious plans to supply Australia with a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines, a key pillar of the agreement.

“The three government­s involved here are working at pace to make this happen,” Australian defence minister Richard Marles told reporters yesterday.

“This is going to happen and we need it to happen,” he added.

Barely two years old, there are already signs that AUKUS and its central project could be under threat.

Some fear Trump could jettison the pact if he wins this year’s presidenti­al election, returning to his ‘America first’ style of foreign policy.

UK foreign secretary David Cameron suggested that ‘brilliant’ AUKUS and other alliances like Nato – which he dubbed ‘the most successful defence alliance in history’ – needed to be fighting fit come US election time.

“I think whoever is president, the best thing we can do is to get those alliances, to get those projects into the best possible shape so whoever is the new president can see that they’re working,” Cameron said.

He added that the nuclearpow­ered submarines deal was ‘a huge project, a huge undertakin­g, but absolutely essential for our security’, adding that he had ‘total confidence’ that the deal would go ahead.

With potential flashpoint­s emerging across the globe, and China taking an increasing­ly aggressive stance in the Taiwan Strait, visiting UK defence minister Grant Shapps said AUKUS was as crucial as ever. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Marles (right) and Shapps taking part in a signing ceremony at Parliament House in Canberra.
— AFP photo Marles (right) and Shapps taking part in a signing ceremony at Parliament House in Canberra.

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