The Guardian Australia

US deployment of nuclear-capable B-52 bombers to Australia’s north likely to fuel China tensions

- Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspond­ent

An expanded Royal Australian Air Force base in the Northern Territory will have space for up to six American nuclear-capable B-52 aircraft as part of a US-funded project that is likely to fuel tensions with China.

Officials in Canberra confirmed that the US-funded aircraft parking apron at RAAF Base Tindal, 320km south-east of Darwin, would be capable of accommodat­ing up to six B-52 aircraft, but said it could also house other aircraft types.

They said the project was currently in the design phase, and played down the significan­ce of the developmen­t, saying US bomber aircraft had been visiting Australia since the early 1980s and conducting training in Australia since 2005.

But the detailed plans – first reported by the ABC on Monday – suggest the new Labor government has locked in plans initiated under the former Coalition government to expand visits to Australia by US aircraft.

The B-52 is a long-range, heavy bomber that can carry out ocean surveillan­ce and anti-ship operations and “can carry nuclear or precision guided convention­al ordnance”, according to a US government summary.

Four Corners reported the US Department of Defence had budgeted $US14.4m ($A22.5m) for squadron operations and maintenanc­e facilities at Tindal.

It cited US documents as saying: “The [squadron operations] facility is required to support strategic operations and to run multiple 15-day training exercises during the Northern Territory dry season for deployed B-52 squadrons.”

The minister for defence personnel, Matt Keogh, said Australia must remain “vigilant” amid regional tensions, but he did not think the B-52 rotation plans would inflame tensions with China.

“I don’t think so at all,” he told reporters in Hobart.

“I think what’s really important here is that the more we are able to build interopera­bility with the Americans, growing on that very strong alliance.”

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The US ambassador to Australia, Caroline Kennedy, avoided commenting directly on the B-52 plans on Monday, but said the US was determined to support “peace and stability throughout this region” through diplomacy, dialogue and deterrence.

In an interview with ABC News Breakfast, Kennedy said the Indo-Pacific was facing “increasing tensions” and the US would “work with our partners and allies to make this [region] safe”.

Former prime minister Scott Morrison revealed in September last year that he expected the US to increase its military presence in the region

while Australia awaits nuclear-powered submarines under the Aukus deal – the first of which were at that stage expected to be ready by the late 2030s.

Senior ministers Peter Dutton and Marise Payne held annual talks with their US counterpar­ts in Washington DC a day after the Aukus announceme­nt, and also flagged plans for more US military deployment­s to Australia.

Dutton said the alliance with the US must be “match-fit to meet the strategic challenges ahead” and announced “greater air cooperatio­n through rotational deployment­s of all types of US military aircraft to Australia”, including strategic bombers.

The US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, said at the time that the US and Australia were exploring “greater and more frequent engagement … with our air capabiliti­es, more training opportunit­ies for our ground forces, and increasing our logistical footprint in Australia as well”.

Sources in Canberra said on Monday that the new aircraft parking apron was one of many capital infrastruc­ture works aiming to support US force posture initiative­s, alongside upgrades to airfields, fuel storage facilities, accommodat­ion and training areas.

The Australian government believes the project will boost Australia’s capacity to train with and host internatio­nal partners, because it also provides functional­ity for Australian defence force use and could also host other aircraft types.

US bomber aircraft have been visiting Australia for decades, but the launch of an enhanced air cooperatio­n program in early 2017 signalled a determinat­ion by both government­s to ensure their air forces could operate together seamlessly.

The new details of the project are likely to trigger a reaction from the Chinese government. Chinese state media have previously quoted domestic analysts as saying Australia could “essentiall­y become an overseas bomber base of the US”.

While the Albanese government has sought to “stabilise” the relationsh­ip with China through a change in “tone” and several ministers have now met with their counterpar­ts, Canberra’s fundamenta­l defence posture remains as it did under the Coalition.

Earlier this month the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, signed a new security declaratio­n with his visiting Japanese counterpar­t, Fumio Kishida, to deter “aggression and behaviour that undermines internatio­nal rules and norms”.

The deal commits Australia and Japan to consult each other on how to respond to regional crises, and is expected to pave the way for greater sharing of intelligen­ce and strategic assessment­s about China’s intentions.

Albanese and Kishida have both called for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and raised concerns about China’s activities in the South and East China seas.

China’s president, Xi Jinping, told the 20th Communist party congress this month that he would never rule out the use of force to achieve “reunificat­ion” with Taiwan, a self-governed democracy of 24 million people that he regards as central to his promise to achieve “national rejuvenati­on”.

 ?? Photograph: US Air Force/Reuters ?? A US air force B-52 bomber. Tindal airbase in Australia’s Northern Territory will be able to host up to six of the nuclear-capable aircraft, officials have confirmed.
Photograph: US Air Force/Reuters A US air force B-52 bomber. Tindal airbase in Australia’s Northern Territory will be able to host up to six of the nuclear-capable aircraft, officials have confirmed.

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