
If further clues were needed as to why AUKUS, the security pact between the United States, Britain and Australia was created, the latest announcement on weapons gave the game away.
Just as it became real estate to park British nuclear weapons experiments in the 1950s, Australia it is now looking to be a promising site for hypersonic missile testing, development and manufacture.
A from US President Joe Biden, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on April 6 committed 鈥渢o commence new trilateral cooperation on hypersonics and counter-hypersonics, and electronic warfare capabilities, as well as to expand information sharing and to deepen cooperation on defence innovation鈥.
Officials from all three countries are also best suited for the nascent nuclear-powered submarine program, the ABC reported on April 4.
Australia has no infrastructure to speak of in this field and no skills that merit mention for the development of any such fleet. There is also a lack of clarity as to when the vessels might make it to sea and no clear sign as to what model of submarine 鈥斅燘ritish or US 鈥斅爓ill be preferred.
US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley stirred up paranoia by suggesting last October that with its hypersonic capabilities. Milley said China鈥檚 testing of a 鈥渉ypersonic weapon system鈥 was 鈥渧ery concerning鈥.
Russia has also staked its claim in the hypersonic race. The Russian military claims that its Avangard system, in December 2019, is capable of flying 27 times faster than the speed of sound with dizzying manoeuvrability. Last month, Moscow its new Kinzhal (Dagger) hypersonic missile was used to target a Ukrainian fuel depot in Kostiantynivka, near the Black Sea port of Mykolaiv.
The hypersonic missile venture is being marketed by the government here as a wonderful opportunity to show independence, not subservience. Morrison and various officials are publicly showing their appreciation of these latest developments.
There has been an emphasis on danger. Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce the acceleration of the hypersonic weapons鈥 program by claiming that Australia faces an 鈥渆xistential threat鈥 from China鈥檚 hypersonic capabilities. It would only take 鈥渁bout 14 minutes鈥 for such devices to reach Australia, he said on April 5, 鈥渟o we have to make sure that we are right at the top of our game鈥.
This, for Joyce, means doing everything to make Australia 鈥渁ttractive鈥 鈥 in an existentially doomed way 鈥 to other powers in the region.
China鈥檚 UN ambassador Zhang Jun against the provocation of such military arrangements. 鈥淎s the Chinese saying goes: if you do not like it, do not impose it against others鈥, he said.
The Coalition government views the hypersonic missile venture as a step towards military self-sufficiency and self-reliance, a 聽by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
It wants to bolster defence capabilities, recently announcing a with strategic partners Raytheon Australia and Lockheed Martin Australia.
For Defence Minister Peter Dutton such weapons are part of a broader strategic vision to maintain national security and sovereignty 鈥 a contradiction in terms given the role played by US weapons-making giants.
鈥淭his is an incredibly complex undertaking that will see this new manufacturing capability built from the ground up鈥, Dutton claimed.
This is 鈥渁 whole-of-nation endeavour鈥, he said, that will provide unspecified 鈥渙pportunities鈥 for Australian companies and workers in manufacturing, maintenance, infrastructure, research and development and test and evaluation.
[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]