The Manila Times

Australia unveils new defense strategy with eye on Beijing

-

Australia unveiled its first National Defense Strategy on Wednesday, signaling a new focus on deterring China’s “coercive tactics” in a region seen as lurching toward conflict.

The 80-page document offers a gloomy assessment of Pacific security and sets out a massive increase in defense spending to retool Australia’s military to cope.

“The optimistic assumption­s that guided defense planning after the end of the Cold War are long gone,” Defense Minister Richard Marles said in presenting the new strategy.

Warning that “China has employed coercive tactics in pursuit of its strategic objectives,” the text describes an Australia vulnerable to foes strangling trade or preventing access to vital air and sea routes.

“We are a maritime-trading island nation,” Marles said.

“The invasion of Australia is an unlikely prospect in any scenario, precisely because so much damage can be done to our country by an adversary without ever having to step foot on Australian soil,” he added.

So instead of focusing on maintainin­g a military that can do a range of tasks almost anywhere in the world, Marles said there would be a laser focus on building a deterrent force that can protect Australia’s interests in its immediate region.

At the center of the strategy are plans to develop a fleet of stealthy nuclear-powered submarines, to triple-key missile capabiliti­es and develop a large surface combatant fleet.

“Having the most capable Navy in our history will be at the heart of our projection and our strategy of denial,” Marles said.

The strategy boils down to making any attack against Australia’s interests prohibitiv­ely expensive and risky.

As a share of gross domestic product, defense spending is set to increase from about 2 percent currently to 2.4 percent within a decade.

That will only fuel an arms race that is taking place across the Pacific, with China, South Korea and Japan all piling more money into defense.

The Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute said military spending in Asia and Oceania had increased 45 percent since 2013.

Given that backdrop, Australia predicts an increased risk of conflict in the Taiwan Strait, the South and East China Seas, or on the border with India.

Marles said old assumption­s about how much time Australia would have to prepare for war were gone.

“Australia no longer has the luxury of a 10-year window of strategic warning time for conflict,” he said, upending a long-held belief.

Asked about Canberra’s strategy at a regular briefing, Beijing urged Australia to “refrain from making accusation­s against China at every turn.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines