What does the team here think of some of the suggestions for the ADF by the writers at defence connect?
Defence Connect’s DSR priorities for delivering ‘impactful projection’
I note non nuclear ICBMs get a mention by 2 of the contributors.
The article mentions IRBM's, intermediate range ballistic missiles kitted with some sort of soft-kill anti-electronics warhead. Elsewhere the article mentioned ICBM's, though I have doubts that the claim that Israel operates ICBM's is accurate. The ICBM section also failed to note that the players fielding ICBM's are also nuclear powers, and it is the potential for nuclear warheads fitted to ICBM's that make them so potent. The implication in that section seemed to be that in order for Australia to be, or be considered a "major player" on the world stage, ICBM's were required. The inclusion of such ideas honestly caused me to stop reading the rest of the article, and I considered it's inclusion indicative of an article not really worth bothering to read.
There is an enormous elephant in the room which gets overlooked every time someone suggests standing up or potentially using ballistic missiles that are anything other than short-ranged. The elephant being the potential that an inbound ballistic missile or warhead a nuclear device and not a conventional or other sort of munition. If Australia were to suddenly start fielding land-based ballistic missiles which could potentially hit mainland China as far north as Shanghai if launched from the far north, then mainland China would need to consider the potential that any such missiles might have nuclear warheads. Any actual launch by Australia of such ballistic missiles could trigger a nuclear counterstrike by the PRC, because they could not afford to wait to see if inbound Australian missiles were nukes or not.
The mouse by the elephant in the room is that whilst Australia has at times had longer-ranged strike than others, Australia has never AFAIK really had a strike capability able to hit farther from Australia than SE Asia. In short, IRBM's would really only be for use vs. one potential adversary, that adversary could also field a potentially devastating response, and short of a first strike at the start of a major conflict, would not provide a great capability.
There is also the very real matter of the sort of detection and tracking capabilities which would be needed in order for Australia to have useful data on potential ballistic missile targets. Unless the missiles themselves were intended to disrupt, disable or destroy electronics and electrical systems across broad areas, so that precision targeting data was not required. However, due to the potential impact of mass disruption or destruction of electrical systems over broad areas, that is the sort of threat which would reasonably prompt a nuclear response. I do not see much value in Australia standing up a weapon system of such limited utility, especially when doing so could cause Australia to have nuclear weapons pointed back at it.
It very much has the feel of an idea which people have come up with and raised, without actually bothering to think through the potential implications