South China Morning Post

CANBERRA ‘TO DECIDE ON USE OF SUBS’

US admiral speaks out after top official suggested vessels may be deployed in a potential Taiwan war

- Su-Lin Tan sulin.tan@scmp.com

It will be entirely up to Australia to decide how to use its Aukus nuclear-powered submarines, said the commander of US military forces in the Pacific, after a senior American official raised eyebrows last week by suggesting the vessels could be deployed in a potential war over Taiwan.

“I think that will be Australia’s call, how they decide to utilise their operationa­l units when and if the time comes,” Admiral John Aquilino said when asked to confirm Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell’s claims during a Tuesday interview with Sydneybase­d think tank the Lowy Institute.

However, Aquilino added that the United States and Australia “coordinate almost every day” and were more “interopera­ble” than any other bilateral partnershi­ps.

Aquilino, who leads the US Indo-Pacific Command, said the sovereignt­y of Australia was of critical importance to the US, and that the Aukus pact had the ability to deliver on any mission that Canberra wanted.

Aukus is a trilateral alliance between Australia, Britain and the US establishe­d in 2021 in response to growing Chinese influence in the Asia-Pacific.

Canberra has repeatedly said that the submarines were being acquired to strengthen Australia’s defence and that the country would have sovereignt­y over the vessels.

The government of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has previously denied promising the US it would go to war over Taiwan in return for the Aukus submarines, amid domestic anxieties that the deal could start a regional arms race.

Despite the US, UK and Australia’s long-held stance about Aukus’ purpose, Campbell drew links between the pact and a possible conflict in the Taiwan Strait when he spoke at the Centre for a New American Security in Washington last week.

“Those practical circumstan­ces in which Aukus has the potential to have submarines from a number of countries operating in close coordinati­on could deliver convention­al ordinance from long distances,” he said.

“Those have enormous implicatio­ns in a variety of scenarios, including in cross-strait circumstan­ces, and so working closely with other nations, not just diplomatic­ally, but in defence avenues, has the consequenc­e of strengthen­ing peace and stability more generally.”

On Tuesday, Aquilino said there had been no change in the US commitment to the Aukus pact, following news Washington had planned to slow its submarine production and was late in its submarine delivery to Australia.

Since the agreement was announced, Australian sailors have graduated from “nuke school” with skills to operate nuclear reactors, and Australian engineers have visited US shipyards to study nuclear maintenanc­e. The US had also deployed Virginia-class submarines to Australia, and that country’s service members had been training at the Guam naval base, Aquilino said.

“The US commitment is iron clad,” he added.

Aquilino reiterated that the US national security strategy viewed China, Russia – due its “1,700-mile coastline” – and North Korea, as well as violent extremism in the south of the Philippine­s, as threats in the region.

Last month, Chinese nationalis­t tabloid Global Times said Aquilino should stay out of the Asia-Pacific after he claimed China was part of an “axis of evil”, saying his comments posed threats to regional peace and fuelled hostility towards the country.

This comes as Australia, the US and Britain are reportedly mulling Japan’s membership in Aukus, a move that China – which has opposed the pact from the start – expressed grave concerns about.

“We oppose relevant countries cobbling together exclusive groupings and stoking bloc confrontat­ion. Japan needs to earnestly draw lessons from history and stay prudent on military and security issues,” foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning said on Monday.

Her comments preceded Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s meeting in Washington with US President Joe Biden yesterday, focusing on regional deterrence. Both were set to attend a trilateral summit today with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr.

I think that will be Australia’s call, how they decide to utilise their operationa­l units U.S. ADMIRAL JOHN AQUILINO

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