October 18, 2022
AUKUS Has Big Technology Hurdles with Some Very Big Rewards
Implementing the nuclear submarine agreement is an opportunity for wider defence collaboration between the US, the UK, and Australia.
At just over a year since the AUKUS announcement, dramatic, leader-level diplomacy has now given way to more prosaic efforts at implementation.
On a recent visit to Australia, and after consultations on the pact in Washington, I have a new appreciation for the promise – and the potential barriers – to AUKUS’ execution. The agreement remains extraordinarily promising, but tangible results will make the measure of its success.
Amid the rise of Chinese power and the changing Indo-Pacific dynamic, allies like Australia and the US must work together even more closely than before.
Enthusiasm for AUKUS endures at senior levels on both sides of the Pacific, which stands to reason: its fulfillment would add real allied defence capability in the region where it matters most. As the military balance across the Indo-Pacific deteriorates in China’s direction, AUKUS can represent a step toward repairing it.
It’s worth recalling that the pact is fundamentally a defence technology sharing agreement. It is not primarily a new diplomatic platform and certainly does not represent some new tripartite alliance.
Rather, AUKUS is a mechanism that would permit collaboration on technologies – including but not limited to nuclear propulsion for submarines – that would otherwise be impossible. That, in turn, promises to supply each of the three members with new military capabilities they would lack in the absence of it.
Read the full article from AFR.
More from CNAS
-
Ukraine Negotiations: Prospects and Pitfalls of Peace
This week Brussels Sprouts breaks down the latest negotiations on Ukraine. American officials told reporters that they had resolved or closed gaps around 90 percent of their d...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor & Jim Townsend
-
Can the Global Order Be Saved? Not Without Punishing Russia
The only way to succeed in the urgent task of achieving a just peace settlement, therefore, is radically reshaping Russia’s calculus....
By Nicholas Lokker
-
CNAS Insights | Russia Is Winning the Battle for Influence in Nigeria
Across Africa, Russia and its proxies are well known for providing security and extracting wealth. In the Sahel the Wagner Group, and subsequently the Russian Defense Ministry...
By Kate Johnston
-
Transatlantic Tensions in the New National Security Strategy
On December 4th, the Trump administration released its long-awaited national security strategy, sending another round of shock waves through the transatlantic community. The N...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor & Jim Townsend
