We have spent billions on platforms that do not and never have met requirements while losing capabilities we knew we needed to achieve our strategic aims.
The worst part of this is multiple papers, reports and assessments have identified needs and gaps to be addressed. Each one of them has been parked or watered down for political, cost or ideological reasons.
Often great ideas and extremely sensible actions are trashed because of who voiced them, this is insanity.
Many, including me, knock John Howard, but to his credit, he would act on good ideas, even steal (possibly with a new name) entire policies from the opposition and previous governments. He would back flip and cop the flack for doing so, rather than steaming full speed ahead into the rocks. These days, I fear politicians in general are so afraid of the consequences of admitting ideas expoused by the other side have merit, they will blindly tear down everything, good and bad, while painting themselves into the corner policy wise.
Sadly, these days narrative means more than fact, right and wrong, morals and decency just can't hack it against partisanship.
Jelico predicted the navy Australia needed should Japan launch a war of conquest in South East Asia. Chevelle outlined the motorised and mechanised army we would need in a modern war. Williams desperately tried to build the integrated airforce Australia needed, while Gobell pushed for a seperate Fleet Air Arm and carriers. All of them were proven right, all of them were ignored, Australia paid in blood.
There are a great many detailed papers based on strategic realities that have been shelved or ignored. Occasionally they, in particular the very perceptive, difficult to ignore ones, are rebutted and replaced by fairy tale works that pretend the strategic reality doesn't exist.
The fairy tales can always be traced to elitist interests, be they private business, or dare I say, the equally bad elitist left. Both are, though on opposite sides of the spectrum, heavily beholden to foreign interests. Follow the money.