EPIC FAIL: AUKUS Pact Submarine Deal Exposed As Monumental Folly

EPIC FAIL: AUKUS Pact Submarine Deal Exposed As Monumental Folly
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EPIC FAIL: AUKUS Pact Submarine Deal Exposed As Monumental Folly

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The much-celebrated AUKUS Pact submarine deal may have turned out to be the worst decision ever made by an Australian government in history. This epic boondoggle was predicated on the the believe that China poses some sort of grave military threat to the country of Australia and the SEATO treaty bloc. Sadly, Australians, along with the public living in other NATO nations, were cleverly duped into backing what has become an unmitigated disaster not only for Australia, but for the security and stability of the wider Oceania and ASEAN regions. 

A new book lays bare the lies and long con used by the US and UK ‘defense’ establishments in order to deceive the Australian and world public into believing this money-spinner was essential to protect the region from a Chinese menace. The author argues deal brought short-term political advantage for then PM Scott Morrison, but the time has come to abandon ship…


Mark Beeson reports for Asia Times

Nautical metaphors are irresistible, I’m afraid, when talking about Australia’s seemingly endless submarine saga. But as investigative journalist Andrew Fowler makes clear in “Nuked: The Submarine Fiasco that Sank Australia’s Sovereignty“, his excellent and excoriating analysis of the genesis of the AUKUS pact, there isn’t much room for levity otherwise.

Anyone who doubts the accuracy of former Labor luminaries Paul Keating and Gareth Evans, who have argued that AUKUS is, as Keating put it, “the worst deal in all history,” really ought to read this book.

The plan for Australia to acquire eight nuclear-powered submarines, built locally in partnership with the United States and the United Kingdom, is projected to cost up to A$368 billion (US$249.4 billion). But it is not just the cost of the AUKUS project that is astounding.

While many people should hang their heads in shame, the principal architect of this monumental folly is Scott Morrison, whose reputation will be deservedly further diminished by the revelations contained in Fowler’s carefully researched volume.

One question the book does not address in detail is the abysmal quality of political leadership in this country – especially, though not exclusively, on the conservative side of politics.

Whatever the reasons for this, the end result was that the huge shift in Australia’s foreign policy alignment was hatched by a Christian fundamentalist former tourism marketing manager with no training in strategic or foreign affairs but a great gift for secrecy and deception.

The shift in question was the decision to abandon an agreement to buy much cheaper, arguably far more suitable and deliverable submarines from France, with the aim of “welding Australia’s military to the United States.” In retrospect, it is hard to believe how badly the French were misled, or how shortsighted the rationale for the switch actually was.

In Fowler’s view, buying the French submarines would have been a “remarkable achievement.” It would have given Australia “greater independence and a more influential position in the world.”

Properly explaining Australian policymakers’ fear of strategic and foreign policy independence would take another book. But what clearly emerges from Fowler’s account is how irresponsible and self-serving Australia’s approach to national security became under Morrison. The fate of the Australian people, not to mention the endlessly invoked “national interest,” was of less concern than short-term political advantage.

“The fact that the increasing US military presence in the Indo-Pacific could draw Australia into a conflict,” writes Fowler, “seemed of little consequence in Morrison’s desire to wedge Labor on national security.”

Of course, being painted as “weak” on security, and the US alliance in particular, was the stuff of nightmares for the Australian Labor Party. It still is.

Consequently, the ALP’s leadership has gone to extraordinary lengths to try and convince voters, and its own increasingly skeptical rank and file, not only that they are they equally committed to national security but that the AUKUS agreement is the best way of achieving it.

The Independent Australia writes: “The principal takeaway from this fiasco must be that the cabal of vested interests and elected politicians who parade themselves as the Liberal Party and the National Party must never be allowed to run Australia’s Federal Government again. The costs and the risks are just too high.”

Watch this scathing rebuke of AUKUS by former Australian PM Paul Keeting at the National Press Club (2023):
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September 8, 2024 at 07:33AM

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