Australia to build eight nuclear-powered submarines under new
Indo-Pacific security pact
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[September 16, 2021]
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia will build
eight nuclear-powered submarines under a new Indo-Pacific security
partnership with the United States and Britain that analysts say will
likely rile China, which will see the pact as an attempt to contain it.
Australia will be only the second country after Britain in 1958 to be
given access to U.S. nuclear technology to build nuclear-powered
submarines.
"Our world is becoming more complex, especially here in our region, the
Indo-Pacific," said Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
"To meet these challenges, to help deliver the security and stability
our region needs, we must now take our partnership to a new level."
In announcing the new security group on Wednesday, the leaders of the
United States, Australia and Britain did not mention China, but
Washington and its allies are seeking to push back against its growing
power and influence, particularly its military buildup, pressure on
Taiwan and deployments in the contested South China Sea.
China's U.S. embassy said that countries "should not build exclusionary
blocs targeting or harming the interests of third parties".
"In particular, they should shake off their Cold-War mentality and
ideological prejudice," it said.
The trilateral pact, including access to U.S. nuclear submarine
technology, will be seen in Beijing as a threat, said Asia Society
Policy Institute senior fellow Richard Maude.
"China will see the suit of announcements today as further evidence of a
strengthening coalition to balance its power. It will object, but its
own assertive and uncompromising behaviour is driving these new
alignments."
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern welcomed the focus on the
Indo-Pacific but said Australia's new nuclear-powered submarines would
not be allowed in its territorial waters under a long-standing nuclear
free policy.
"I am pleased to see that the eye has been turned to our region from
partners we work closely with. It's a contested region and there is a
role that others can play in taking an interest in our region," Ardern
said at a news conference.
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President Joe Biden delivers remarks on a National Security
Initiative virtually with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison
and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, inside the East Room at
the White House in Washington, U.S., September 15, 2021. REUTERS/Tom
Brenner/File Photo
SHOT ACROSS BOW
Morrison said Australia would scrap a $40 billion deal with France
to develop conventional submarines to replace its ageing
Collins-class fleet and negotiate over 18 months with the United
States and Britain to build eight nuclear powered submarines. The
submarines will not carry nuclear weapons.
Nuclear-powered submarines can spend longer underwater, allowing for
stealth in potential flashpoint areas with China such as the South
China Sea, security analysts said.
"Beijing will certainly interpret the new subs as a shot across
China's bow," Bates Gill, head of Asia-Pacific Security Studies at
Macquarie University, told Reuters.
"Like the recently announced plan to acquire long-range anti-ship
missiles, this move is intended to deter hostile maritime forces
from approaching Australia. China is currently the only country that
could pose that kind of threat to Australia," Gill said.
The submarine decision "reflects growing concern in the government
about China's military build-up, future intentions in the region and
willingness to use coercion", said Maude.
The trilateral security pact could worsen Australia's strained trade
ties with its biggest export customer China but its insatiable
appetite for resources may limit its punitive responses, say
analysts.
China has in recent years imposed hefty tariffs and restrictions on
Australian exports of items including wine, beef and barley, and
outright banned coal imports to express its anger over Australia's
foreign policies.
Morrison will travel to Washington this month to meet leaders of the
Quad, a group that includes India and Japan and has been criticised
by China, to discuss security.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Writing by Michael Perry; Editing by
Robert Birsel)
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