Reports

US says Australia submarine deal will be delivered

Despite the hurdles, Australia’s ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd, appeared on a conservative podcast on Wednesday to talk up the agreement and convince listeners it was a “good deal for America”.

Speaking on The Hugh Hewitt Show – two weeks after he was attacked by former president Donald Trump, who is an occasional guest on the program – Rudd said AUKUS would enhance shipbuilding jobs and investment in the US.

Loading

He also said he believed that production would ramp up in coming years, and that the attack subs promised under the deal could be delivered, as planned, by the 2030s, which he described as “the decade of living dangerously in terms of the Indo-Pacific”.

“The geography in Australia helps the allied strategic interest on this as well,” said the former prime minister, who is considered a leading China expert.

Speaking separately at a Centre for New American Security forum, Campbell also made a rare link between AUKUS and Taiwan, AAP reported. He said the new submarine capabilities would enhance peace and stability, including in the Taiwan Strait which separates China and the island it claims as its own.

The new submarine capabilities “have enormous implications in a variety of scenarios, including in cross-strait circumstances,” Campbell said.

“I would argue that working closely with other nations, not just diplomatically but in defence avenues, has the consequence of strengthening peace and stability more generally,” he added.

Campbell said the US would find a way to deliver its commitment to Australia, and that momentum for the deal would “continue under almost any political circumstance” – a reference to anxiety over the future of the pact under a second Trump presidency.

Acknowledging that US submarine production had slowed due to pandemic supply chains, he said that Australia’s “very generous” $3 billion contribution to the US shipbuilding industry had helped, but noted that “to undertake this work, it will require new investments and probably again, new capabilities here in the United States over time”.

The White House’s new deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell.Credit: Andrew Taylor

But he added: “I think it would be fair to say there’s been substantial focus on this at senior levels of the White House, the Defence Department – it’s natural home – and the State Department.”

“AUKUS, in many respects, is a game changer,” Campbell said. “It is basically finding the way forward.”

with AAP

Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for the weekly What in the World newsletter here.

  • For more: Elrisala website and for social networking, you can follow us on Facebook
  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

Related Articles

Back to top button