Tue, 25 Mar 2025
What's in store for Australia if we persist with AUKUS

What's in store for Australia if we persist with AUKUS

Independent Australia
25 Mar 2025, 11:30 GMT+10

Surrounded by secrecy and unanswered questions, Australians are still in the dark as to what our country's persistence with the AUKUS agreement holds, writes DrBronwyn Kelly.

A NEWREPORTfrom Australians for War Powers Reform (AWPR), AUKUS and the surrender of Transparency, Accountability and Sovereignty, shows there is a multitude of unanswered questions about theAUKUSagreement.

For instance, what is the purpose of AUKUS? Is there even any real need for it? How much is it really going to cost us? Will it cost us our entire future if it makes us a nuclear target? Are there better and cheaper ways to defend Australia? Will we actually get the nuclear submarines proposed in the agreement before we are obliged to be the disposal site for nuclear waste from the aged submarines of the other two parties? Will we get any submarines at all?

And in the unlikely event that any submarines arrive here, will we be in control of them?

The secrecy surrounding AUKUS leaves all these and a multitude of other important questions without the official answers that Australians are surely entitled to.

Australia's autonomy from the U.S. has never been more vital

Never has there been a greater need for Australia to end its military alliance with the U.S. and forge an independent and peaceful foreign policy.

AUKUS, announced and pursued as it was without any consultation with the Australian people or the Parliament, is, without doubt, the most high-handed insult to Australians. Continued secrecy about it, including secrecy about as yet undisclosedpolitical commitmentsmade in 2024 by the three parties in a revised version of the agreement, confirms that the governments who locked us into it (Labor and the Coalition) have no intention of being open with Australians, much less accountable to them.

The governments would appear to consider that our future is theirs to do with as they like, regardless of the risks to our safety and sovereignty. They appear to regard our future as theirs to threaten by whatever form of executive overreach they consider necessary for their domestic political advantage.

Oddly enough, though, there is only so much a government can cover up about something like AUKUS. The few things that have been revealed about it make it very easy to see the extent of the threat it poses to our national security, personal safety and well-being.

Australians dont have to be insiders in the Canberra defence and security establishment to figure out the threat. They can spot it straight away, simply because certain things must be published about the agreement if those political parties that were so eager to sign onto it are to make any domestic political capital out of it. Some degree of disclosure is required for that purpose; and in this case, now that some disclosure has occurred, the risk posed to Australians by AUKUS is self-evidently far greater than any benefit the Government might try to advertise.

Contrary to the popular view among politicians, when it comes to obvious threats to their future, Australians are not stupid. Nor do they have no access to information that will enable them to spot a serious threat to their security and spot who is threatening them.

And in the case of AUKUS, there is just too much information around that gives the lie to the wisdom of the agreement and the real source of the threat. Each published detail makes AUKUS smell a little more foul. At a starting price of $368 billion, the cost is gobsmackingly high, especially if the U.S. can vacate the deal at any time (and they can). That alone would be enough to put millions of Australians off.

Flawed AUKUS pact sinking quickly

Things are going from bad to worse for the AUKUS agreement with a series of delays and blunders broadening its futility.

But a few more million would be put off when they consider whats in store for Australia if we persist with the deal. That, too, is something the Government cant cover up. AWPRs report makes it clear that AUKUS exposes Australia fully to existential disaster. There are any number of ways it can kill millions of Australians, including by exposing Australias lands and people to nuclear contamination and conventional military or nuclear attack.

And making matters worse, when AUKUS is combined with theForce Posture Agreement, it establishes Australia as amilitary base of the USAand therefore as the launching pad for any war that America may wish to start with any country, including nuclear powers like China which obviously makes Australia a target. This builds a very clear picture for Australians that the probability of large-scale attacks on Australia is high enough to suggest the deal should be vacated. It is just too risky and unnecessarily so.

And now thatDonald Trumphas burst back into the scene with all his rule-breaking, unreliability, untrustworthiness and contempt of allies, we can expect a few more million Australians to reject AUKUS. They only need to look to the experience of the Ukrainians for insight into what's in store for us if we do not abandon AUKUS and the Force Posture Agreement and seek instead to establish an independent defence capability built on peaceful economic cooperation and respect for international law (especially human rights law).

Trumps treatment of Ukraine shows us the ultimate fate of countries that are situated in regions America may consider strategically essential to the pursuit of its interests via military means. It suggests that any American administration that disregards the international rules-based order (as Trumps does) may well not stint at starting a proxy war from bases on our soil, watching millions of us be killed, leaving us to lose that war and then working with the enemy to divide up the spoils of Australia. This is what has happened to Ukraine.

Fortunately, though, this grim prospect need never be made a reality. It is not ineluctable. If anything, the AWPR report makes it clear how easy it would be to come up with a better, cheaper and more reliable plan for the defence of the nation, retention of our sovereignty over the continent and decisions about our future prosperity.

Australia has the capacity to develop an alternative defence plan that does not expose us to the huge risks posed by AUKUS and there is room at this point for the Government to step back, analyse the risks Australia is really facing, and tailor an integrated defence and diplomacy strategy that will head off those risks.

Under cloud of secrecy, U.S. weaponises Western Australia

The United States has continued to prepare key areas of Western Australia as bases to fight its wars while the public is left in the dark.

Any political party that chooses to be open and honest with Australians about the challenges we are really facing challenges that are not about China but are mainly about climate change and pollution is likely, at this time, to gather the respect of Australians. And the sooner Labor and the Coalition figure that out, the more likely they will be to retain seats in the Parliament.

There are dozens of ways to secure our future that are better and cheaper than AUKUS. Australians interested in practical and effective defence plans that offer the prospect of peace and security at an affordable price may be interested inanother reportreleased in 2022 by the Independent and Peaceful Australia Network (IPAN) called Charting our own course: Questioning Australias involvement in U.S.-led wars and the Australia-United States alliance A peoples inquiry.

And if the Government is looking for a path to a safer future, it can find strategies for creating a better relationship with Australians for that purpose inAustralia Together, the nations first community-driven, long-term, integrated plan for a future of well-being and security.

Disclosure: Dr Bronwyn Kelly is a committee member of Australians for War Powers Reform. The views expressed here are her own.

DrBronwyn Kellyis the Founder of Australian Community Futures Planning (ACFP). She specialises in long-term integrated planning for Australias society, environment, economy and democracy, and in systems of governance for nation-states.

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