logo
Britain's AUKUS envoy dismisses fears over Trump review of submarine deal

Britain's AUKUS envoy dismisses fears over Trump review of submarine deal

The Age4 days ago
The issue is crucial for Australia's $368 billion investment in AUKUS because the deal assumes the purchase of existing Virginia-class submarines from the US over the next decade before new vessels are built.
Asked if the US had demanded the UK to commit its submarines to join US forces under their nuclear sharing agreement – which dates to 1958 – Lovegrove said: 'No, it hasn't.'
He added that Britain under former prime minister Harold Wilson chose not to join the US in the war in Vietnam and this did not undermine the nuclear-sharing agreement.
'That is not to say that there haven't been moments in which the US has wanted to seek the support from the UK in conflicts that it finds itself in,' he said.
'But I have never seen, in my experience, or seen any evidence, in my time, of the nuclear collaboration agreements playing any part in that whatsoever.'
Lovegrove was speaking to the Stop the World podcast produced by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, after addressing the think tank in Canberra on Wednesday. The podcast will be released on Friday.
In a series of revealing comments about the UK's confidence in the submarine agreement, Lovegrove said there was good progress on building a new submarine base in Fremantle and this would be vital for the US.
Asked whether the US could build Virginia-class submarines fast enough to be able to sell several to Australia before the AUKUS fleet is designed and built, he said 'never bet against America' in its ability to innovate.
He also signalled the agenda for the second pillar of the agreement, saying it needed to focus on a few key priorities rather than ranging across too many technologies. He emphasised work on autonomous underwater vehicles that were uncrewed and used artificial intelligence.
Loading
The Pentagon review, which took some US officials by surprise when it was revealed on June 11, has fuelled talk that Trump will demand more money from Australia or place new conditions on the agreement within weeks.
The head of the review, US Department of Defence under-secretary Elbridge Colby, has caused consternation in some quarters with an 'America first' approach that can deny help to allies.
Colby has been named as the key official who sought to freeze military supplies to Ukraine last week, while Politico reported he had also argued against a UK naval deployment in Asia.
When a British defence team met Colby and others in the US capital last month, according to the report, he told them they should turn back an aircraft carrier they had sent east.
'He was basically saying, 'You have no business being in the Indo-Pacific',' one unnamed official told Politico.
This masthead reported that several officials expect Colby's report on AUKUS to argue that Australia should add to the $4.7 billion it has pledged to help build up US industrial capacity to manufacture more submarines.
Two other Australian sources, one in the political establishment and one in defence who have both spoken to Colby, said the Pentagon believed Australia should give a public declaration or private guarantee that US-made nuclear submarines would be used in a possible conflict with China.
Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles played down the likely impact of the Colby review when visiting London late last month for a meeting with UK Defence Secretary John Healey.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also signalled in recent days that the US could not expect Australia to commit to any conflict automatically.
Loading
'I'm a supporter of AUKUS, that's important,' Albanese said in remarks to the John Curtin Research Centre and obtained by this masthead. 'But that doesn't mean that we are subservient to any other country.'
Lovegrove, a former national security adviser in the UK government, expressed great confidence the AUKUS pact would survive the Colby review and Trump's response.
'There is a huge bilateral support for AUKUS in the States,' he told the ABC's 7:30 program this week.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shane Love: So-called ‘bogans' want the basics not race track bribes
Shane Love: So-called ‘bogans' want the basics not race track bribes

West Australian

time34 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Shane Love: So-called ‘bogans' want the basics not race track bribes

Last week, West Australians were treated to an eyebrow-raising admission from former Labor premier Brian Burke, who claimed the new $217 million Burswood race track was the Cook Labor Government chasing the so-called 'bogan vote.' Let's set aside the obvious question: who exactly gets to decide who qualifies as a 'bogan'? From where I stand, these are ordinary West Australians, hardworking people, many from regional communities, who, to quote a well-known advertising campaign, like 'BCF-ing fun.' They fish, camp, drive four-wheel drives and dirt bikes on the weekend. They also enjoy recreational and competitive shooting. Activities Labor might sneer at as 'bogan' are, in fact, woven into the fabric of Australian life. Here's a message for the Premier: the people you're trying to win over want to feel safe in their communities. They want the confidence that police are ready, willing and able to help when needed. They want timely access to high quality health care. They want well-resourced schools that aren't overcrowded. And they want roads that are maintained and safe to drive also want to be left alone to enjoy the great outdoors without being regulated and restricted into oblivion. But what has Labor delivered to the very people it has labelled 'bogan voters' and claims to be trying to win back? A weekend spent under the watchful eye of bureaucrats and green activists. A fishing rod gathering dust. A locked gate at the entrance of a national park. And a system that makes it impossible for law abiding citizens to keep their firearm licences. Let's start with recreational fishing. Labor blindsided thousands of families with a nine month ban on demersal fishing, no warning, no consultation. Then came the South Coast Marine Park, more than 1000 kilometres of coastline locked up, stripping fishers and tourists of access and enjoyment. And on the horizon? Plans to triple the size of Marmion Marine Park. Fishing businesses are closing. Tourism operators are desperate. The Fisheries Minister is missing inaction. And for what? Decisions not backed by science but by ideology. Then there's off-road driving, another simple, popular pastime made increasingly difficult under Labor. For years, the Government has ignored calls for proper legislation and infrastructure. As a result, recreational drivers are blamed for damaged tracks and beaches while the Government refuses to invest in managing or maintaining those areas. The same neglect applies to our national parks. Labor has forgotten that their legislative purpose is to promote and facilitate recreation and tourism. Take the decision to ban visitors from the iconic Horizontal Falls, a move that will cost the Kimberley $15m a year, 58 jobs, and a piece of its identity. Labor is locking West Australians out of their own backyard. And of course, there's the firearms legislation targeting law abiding owners, farmers, sporting competitors and recreational shooters, treating them like criminals. Labor's reforms do nothing to address illegal guns or gang activity. This is a Government actively attacking the recreational pursuits that define our way of life, all while pretending to represent 'everyday Australians.' And its response to the growing backlash? Throw $217m at a new racetrack, a headline-grabber few would oppose in principle, if only the basics were being delivered. But they're not. Regional communities, home to many of Labors so called 'bogans,' or as I prefer to call them, West Australians, don't feel safe. Crime is rising and confidence in the justice system is falling. Families feel vulnerable. Businesses are being targeted. Communities are crying out for help. After 4pm, calls to local police stations are often diverted to larger centres hundreds of kilometres away, leaving residents without real time support in moments of crisis. It is not just frustrating, it is dangerous. The justice system is buckling under pressure, and front line officers are doing their best with limited resources. Imagine what $217m could achieve if invested in more police officers, upgraded regional stations, mobile patrol units and faster access to justice. Instead, the Government prioritises a race track while communities are left to fend for themselves. Government Regional Officer Housing and social housing across regional WA are in a dire and unacceptable state, crippled by chronic underfunding. Rental affordability has reached crisis levels. Hospitals are overwhelmed, with long promised upgrades either delayed indefinitely or quietly abandoned. Schools are bursting at the seams, and teachers are facing a disturbing surge in student violence. Meanwhile, roads beyond the metropolitan and South West regions are being blatantly neglected. I would invite the Minister to drive the Great Northern Highway, though there's a real chance she might vanish into one of the potholes. These are not luxuries. They are the foundations of a functioning State, and they must come before racetracks and ribbon cuttings. It is time the Cook Labor Government took a long, hard look at what truly matters to West Australians. If it wants to regain the trust of the voters it so flippantly dismisses, it must start by respecting their values and way of life. Get the basics until the Government does that, no race track in Burswood, no matter how shiny, will bridge the growing divide between this Government and its so-called bogan vote. Shane Love is the leader of the Nationals.

Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi talks
Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi talks

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi talks

Political differences will bump up against economic opportunities as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets his Chinese counterparts in the imposing Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Tuesday's bilateral meetings with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Communist Party Chairman Zhao Leji - the three highest-ranking members of China's ruling committee - mark the centrepiece of Mr Albanese's six-day tour of the Middle Kingdom. President Xi is top dog in China, and the optics of Mr Albanese's rendezvous with one of the world's most influential leaders will be powerful. But it's his meeting with Premier Li, notionally the head of government in China, that will deliver any tangible agreements from the trip if they occur. The meetings come as the Chinese-Australian free trade agreement passes its 10th anniversary. Co-operation between the two nations has increased following a falling out during the COVID-19 pandemic. Mr Albanese will emphasise the potential for further developing business links at a CEO roundtable hosted by the Business Council of Australia on Tuesday evening. Greater engagement between China and Australia has delivered practical benefits to both nations, building understanding between governments and businesses. "It enables us to express our differences and to manage them, without our relationship being defined by them," he will say. "This is about building stronger ties where our national interests are aligned." Dialogue will help the countries work together to address the structural imbalances of global steel supply, maximise the economic opportunities of the global shift to net zero, and provide certainty and confidence for businesses to invest, he will say. But fundamental political differences limit the extent of economic co-operation. Mr Albanese is likely to raise Australian concerns over increased Chinese militarism, including Chinese naval exercises off Australian waters, and the detention of Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun. Beijing's dissatisfaction over Australia's plan to tear up a Chinese-owned company's lease of Darwin Port is also likely to be broached. An article by a Chinese state media influencer suggested Beijing could restrict Australian imports as retaliation, risking financial blowback for Australian companies. Business Council of Australia chief executive Bran Black says the two nations' challenges and opportunities would be best met with dialogue. "And that's exactly what this roundtable is about," he will say at the event. "Today's agenda points to the breadth of that shared opportunity: education, smarter agriculture, the green economy and low-carbon transformation. "But that opportunity is underpinned by the personal connections that we, collectively and personally, have the privilege to establish, re-establish, confirm and enhance today." Expanding the free trade agreement further into the services and investment sectors will be high on the agenda of the roundtable, as will exploring co-operation in education, smart agriculture, health and aged care. Green energy and low-carbon steel will once again be a hot topic after it formed the focus of a roundtable between Australian iron ore miners and Chinese steelmakers in Shanghai.

Greens candidate injured in protest set to face court
Greens candidate injured in protest set to face court

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Greens candidate injured in protest set to face court

A former Greens candidate who ran against the prime minister will face court over what police claim was an unauthorised protest, where she sustained a serious eye injury during her arrest. Hannah Thomas, 35, was charged with hindering or resisting police and not following a move-on direction in a protest at SEC Plating in Sydney's southwest on June 27. Her case is scheduled for a mention in Bankstown Local Court on Tuesday. The activist and lawyer was among five people arrested. They were protesting outside an Australian firm reportedly linked to the manufacture of components for US fighter jets used by the Israeli Defence Force. The arrests are subject to an internal review with external oversight by the police watchdog after Thomas suffered an eye injury requiring surgery. Her lawyer Peter O'Brien has said she might permanently lose vision in that eye. Mr O'Brien reviewed footage of the arrest and alleged a male officer punched Thomas in the face. "The charge of resisting police could never be sustained as the police officers were plainly acting outside of the execution of their duties ... with brutal and life-changing consequences," Mr O'Brien said. Police had misunderstood the law and unlawfully applied move-on directions, he claimed. Mr O'Brien has also flagged a civil suit against the state over potential allegations including assault and battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, misfeasance in public office, and collateral abuse of process. NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden has previously said he did not observe any misconduct in the body-worn camera footage of the incident. The officers involved remain on duty. Protesters returned to SEC Plating on Friday evening for another rally, where a statement from Ms Thomas was read out. "We owe it to Palestinians to escalate, to keep targeting companies like SEC Plating, which play a role in the F-35 global supply chain and enable genocide against the Palestinian people," she said. Ms Thomas ran second to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the inner-west Sydney seat of Grayndler at the May federal election.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store