Waikato Times

Optimism amid concerns over sub production

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Australia has doubled down on its support for the United States and a plan to acquire US-built nuclear submarines after concerns that a dwindling production rate could jeopardise the superpower’s defences.

A Virginia-class submarine has been cut from the 2025 proposed US defence budget. America is set to sell Australia at least three, and possibly five, second-hand Virginia-class subs in the early 2030s, raising concerns that cuts to its production could hamper Canberra’s planned acquisitio­n.

But Australia, Britain and America remained committed to the Aukus pact under which they would be delivered, Defence Minister Richard Marles said.

“All three Aukus partners are working at pace to integrate our industrial bases and to realise this historic initiative between our countries,” he said.

US President Joe Biden's budget request for 2025 also includes US$11 billion (NZ$17.8b) for additional investment over the next five years for the domestic submarine industry.

Australia will also contribute A$3b (NZ$3.22b) to the US submarine industry to help increase production rates.

Australia was completely dependent on Washington to acquire the submarine, and America would always back its own navy if there was a shortage in production, former Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said.

“The Americans are not going to make their submarine deficit worse than it is already by giving or selling submarines to Australia, and the Aukus legislatio­n actually sets that up,” he told ABC radio yesterday.

“The reality is, unless the Americans are able to dramatical­ly change the pace at which they’re producing submarines, and there’s no reason to believe they will be able to do so, we will not ever get the submarines that were promised.”

Virginia-class submarines supposed to be delivered this year in the US were running an average of more than 30 months late, US defence undersecre­tary comptrolle­r and chief financial officer Michael McCord said.

There are more than a dozen on order that remain in production.

“We’ve already had some beginnings of submarine industrial base investment­s ... It was a priority in last year’s budget, which, again, we don’t have that money yet, so that’s a problem,” Mr McCord said.

Spending money to prop up industry rather than spending it on another submarine was a smarter investment, he added, as America pushed to boost the production rate to two submarines a year.

Rank and file Labor members have come out against the Aukus agreement, questionin­g why Australia would send billions of dollars to prop up the US production line. Labor Against War branded the US budget cut to the Virginia-class a “potential lethal blow to Aukus”. – AAP

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