The Columbus Dispatch

Australia: Nuclear subs part of a strategic shift

Move comes amid alliance with US, UK

- Rod Mcguirk

CANBERRA, Australia – Australia has canceled a contract with France for convention­al submarines and instead will build nuclear-powered submarines using U.S. technology because of changing strategic conditions in the region, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Thursday.

President Joe Biden announced on Wednesday a new U.S. security alliance with Australia and Britain that will help equip Australia with a nuclear submarine fleet.

The agreement would make Australia the first country without nuclear weapons to obtain nuclear-powered submarines.

Morrison said U.S. nuclear submarine technology wasn’t available to Australia in 2016 when it entered a $43 billion deal with France to build 12 of the world’s largest convention­al diesel-electric submarines. The United States has previously only shared the technology with Britain.

Biden did not mention China by name in announcing the new security alliance, but it is likely to be seen as a provocativ­e move by Beijing, whose military strength and influence have grown rapidly.

Peter Jennings, head of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute think tank, said Australia’s decision to acquire nuclear submarines was a response to China’s increasing military might, aggressive bullying of Australia and intimidati­on of Japan and Taiwan.

“We should call the first submarine

in this new category the ‘Xi Jinping,’ because no person is more responsibl­e for Australia going down this track than the current leader of the Chinese Communist Party,” Jennings said.

Australia notified France that it will end its contract with DCNS, a majority state-owned company, to build the convention­al submarines. Australia has spent $1.8 billion on the project since 2016. The first of the French-designed submarines was to have been delivered in 2027.

French Foreign Minister Jean-yves Le Drian expressed “total incomprehe­nsion” at the decision and criticized both Australia and the United States.

“It was really a stab in the back. We built a relationsh­ip of trust with Australia, and this trust was betrayed,” Le Drian said Thursday.

Morrison said he told French President

Emanuel Macron in June that there were “very real issues about whether a convention­al submarine capability” would address Australia’s strategic security needs in the Indo-pacific.

“Of course they’re disappoint­ed,” Morrison said. “They’ve been good partners. This is about our strategic interest, our strategic capability requiremen­ts and a changed strategic environmen­t and we’ve had to take that decision.”

Unlike nuclear-powered submarines, convention­al subs that are traveling long distances must spend time on the surface, where they are most vulnerable, using their diesel engines while they recharge their batteries. The batteries propel them underwater.

Morrison said he expects the first of the nuclear subs, which are to be constructe­d in the Australian city of Adelaide, will be built by 2040.

 ?? U.S. NAVY VIA AP ?? Australia would become the first country without nuclear weapons to obtain nuclear-powered submarines.
U.S. NAVY VIA AP Australia would become the first country without nuclear weapons to obtain nuclear-powered submarines.

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