Scott Morrison calls for creation of joint US base in Australia amid review by Donald Trump’s administration
Morrison made the remarks while speaking to reporters in Washington after appearing before a congressional committee on the Chinese Communist Party.
‘I know they value AUKUS’
Asked if he believed the Trump administration would go ahead with the deal, Morrison said: “I think they’ll complete their review. I know they value AUKUS … There are many ways to address the issues that are being highlighted in this review, and it would be a mistake for us to think they’re not real issues.”
Australia must build the Henderson yard to service its own needs under AUKUS. Former home affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo has also advocated making it a joint base, arguing it could be “at least as significant” as the Pine Gap satellite surveillance station near Alice Springs.
“The US would have to pay for only labour and material costs for maintaining its own boats, taking advantage of Australia’s capital investment in Henderson for free,” he wrote in a piece for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in May.
Pezzullo, who was removed by the Albanese government in 2023 over his attempts to influence the previous Coalition government, said Australia would have to blitz through planning and construction to have two dry docks ready by 2032. In return, it could lock in the three submarines by negotiating a treaty with Trump.
The US president wants to expand US shipbuilding, and one of his key appointees, retired Navy captain Jerry Hendrix, has also called for Henderson to service US boats.
“The problem [is] that shipyard is tailored to supporting Australia’s shipbuilding requirements as well as Australia’s maintenance requirements,” Hendrix said in an interview last year.
“We would need to put some additional money into that if they were going to have excess capacity to repair American boats, and for that matter, the boats of the Royal Navy in the United Kingdom.”
As this masthead revealed on Wednesday, Hendrix said his main concern about AUKUS was that Australia was “noticeably fickle”, and he doubted the country’s long-term bipartisan commitment.
Morrison played down other matters being examined by the Pentagon’s AUKUS review, including command structure and posturing of Australia’s submarines in the event of a US conflict with China.
The US was not asking Australia to depart from a policy of strategic ambiguity over what it would do in a war over Taiwan, Morrison said, but to engage in “deep operational planning” for the submarines.
The USS North Dakota, a Virginia-class boat of the type Australia would acquire under AUKUS.
“The ultimate decision about whether those operational plans are activated in the event of a conflict – that is, of course, the decision of any sovereign government at that time,” he said.
“But I can tell you, if you’re the one that has to make that decision to engage or not engage, you’ll be very grateful if those previously have enabled that operational planning to take place at a very detailed level.”
Morrison said there had been some “breathlessness” in how the Australian media had reported the Pentagon review, with separate issues being conflated.
“There’s a suggestion that somehow Australia has to make some commitment to some future conflict. I don’t think the United States is asking that at all, and that would be inconsistent with everything they’ve ever said.”
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