The Naval Review
There is only one significant question worth asking about the Australian government’s naval review: when will the ships actually be delivered?
The history of defence reviews and promised military equipment for the past three decades has been a sorry saga of promises, delays and disappointments, of which the replacement of the Collins class submarines is the most egregious example.
The latest plan revealed last month offers nothing to counter these concerns.
The Plan
The Plan, in summary, involves six elements.
First, the independent review found a $25 billion funding hole in the Navy’s surface fleet program.
In response, the Albanese government will inject an additional $1.7 billion over the next Forward Estimates and $11.1 billion in additional funding over the next decade for the Navy’s surface combatant fleet and Australia’s shipbuilding industry.
The Government says it is committed to “continuous naval shipbuilding” in Australia with a promise of more than 3700 direct jobs in South Australia and Western Australia over the next decade.
Hunter-class frigates and destroyers will continue to be built at Osborne Naval Shipyard in South Australia. There is a plan for eight new general-purpose frigates to be built at WA’s Henderson Shipyard although the precinct is not currently configured for this build.
The plan will see a doubling of the Navy’s major surface combatant fleet, from 11 warships to 20 by the mid to late 2040s in addition to six semi-autonomous Large Optionally Crewed Surface Vessels (LOSV).
The “larger and more lethal Australian Navy” will comprise three upgraded Hobart class destroyers, six Hunter class frigates (rather than the initially planned nine), 11 new general-purpose frigates (which will eventually replace Anzacs), six new Large Optionally Crewed Surface Vessels (LOSVs)
Will It Work?
The Plan has all the hallmarks of a political response — and the dangers of the existing approach to defence, including excessive time frames and the risk of significant cost escalation.
There are a number of factors that have contributed to the defence inertia: the perverse influence of South Australian domestic politics on national security; the lack of urgency and the desire for bespoke solutions in the Defence department; the churn of governments and defence ministers; and the continuing ‘she’ll be right, mate’ attitude to the threats facing Australia.
If Australia is ever invaded, a large portion of the blame for our lack of preparedness can be sheeted home to a generation of South Australian politicians who put parochial interests ahead of national security.
The Rudd – Gillard governments wasted years without a ship purchase. The country is still playing catch-up in an increasingly fractious world.
This was exacerbated under Malcolm Turnbull who made promoting domestic defence industries a primary consideration. Bidding wars between states to manufacture equipment in Australia became commonplace when suitable equipment could have been purchased from overseas.
These factors are evident in the government’s response, particularly the continued emphasis on local shipbuilding, which is slower and more costly than purchasing off-the-shelf.
Raising defence expenditure to 2.4 per cent of GDP is welcome, but delivery on promises remains the issue. Timeframes out to the mid-2040s are less than reassuring. The region is not static. Potential aggressors are rapidly upgrading and expanding their militaries, including their naval fleets.
Of the $11 billion in additional funding, only $1.7 billion will be expended in the next four years!
It is a mark of the minister’s timidity that he has offered a briefing on the plan to the Chinese Communist Party.
There seems a continued tacit reliance on the US to come to our aid and a naive belief that regional conflict will not occur.
An urgent consideration of Australia’s defence needs over the next five years is overdue.
Instead, the government promises programs to be delivered well into the future and well after it will have left office.
Australia is sailing “on a wing and a prayer.”
___
Republished with thanks to the Hon. Kevin Andrews. Image courtesy of Soly Moses.
One Comment
Leave A Comment
Recent Articles:
10 December 2024
2.7 MINS
The Australian economy is tanking. A large part of the cause is government spending, and yet Labor treasurer Jim Chalmers believes all is well. Rather than motivate businesses to build growth, Labor has chosen to further bloat the bureaucracy instead.
10 December 2024
7.6 MINS
In the ancient Americas, cultures now considered to be highly influential and civilised saw human sacrifice as a necessary part of everyday life. Today, we are told that society is progressive and civilised because women’s "reproductive rights" and bodily autonomy are both supported.
10 December 2024
12.6 MINS
We need to go back almost 20 years to the time when the inaugural Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued the first dramatic arrest warrant for a sitting head of state. Will it prove a case of three strikes and you are out with respect to global governance?
10 December 2024
5.8 MINS
How much worse things get in Australia, in large measure, depends on the Labor leaders running the nation and most states. Ugly antisemitism seems doomed to simply worsen if they remain in power.
10 December 2024
3.8 MINS
Regrettably and importantly, the assisted dying bill gives no direction as to what the doctor should do if the “lethal” dose does not, in fact, kill the patient. This will certainly happen and it needs to be specified if the bill is to become law.
9 December 2024
4.3 MINS
My stand is against the treatment of Israel by the Australian government and the United Nations. The Australian government would rather reward the terrorism of October 7 and has continually pushed for a two-state solution, when all the terrorists want is a one-state solution.
9 December 2024
6.7 MINS
What is the difference between 9 November 1938 in Germany and 6 December 2024 in Melbourne? Nothing, except some 86 years. In both cases, Jewish synagogues were set alight. The truth is, Jewish people no longer feel safe in this country.
We are living in fairyland, ie totally unprepared. Our politicians have been nothing but a disgrace who waste billions on unimportant issues to buy votes to remain in power, but, don’t give a hoot about national security— in my opnion, nothing but lies and posturing. God help Australia because I don’t see the USA coming to our aid as it has now let Israel down .