Is it?Labor was always going to slash defence. It is their raison d'etre. Historical precedent is particularly well documented.
I've been searching for ABS data to support the claim that Labor's primary focus is to slash defense spending, but I haven't found any conclusive evidence. Using defence spending as a percentage of GDP as an acceptable measure, a historical perspective can be attained:Labor was always going to slash defence. It is their raison d'etre. Historical precedent is particularly well documented.
Reading between the lines I think what Defence has been tasked with, and what many in industry are probably upset about, is less about cuts to capability, and more about cuts to waste.I am putting this article on this general ADF thread rather than the naval one I normally follow because it affects everything.
Defence Secretary Greg Moriarty flagged axing some programs to pay for other DSR requirements. Ouch.
Defence projects face axe to fund new weapons
The head of the Defence Department warns cuts will be made to planned military projects to free up cash for new weapons.www.afr.com
I have said before in my own field (Infrastructure planning) there has been a noticeable slowdown in work since IA announced a review in late 2022. Recently a number of projects were cancelled as a result of that. Strictly speaking it was not a budget cut in Infrastructure. The previous government had added projects without increasing funds, and so the program was cut to match funds.
With the advent of AUKUS without a large increase in defence spending I fear Defence is now in the same boat. Australia’s debt is now 3x larger than it was back in 2012/13 and interest rates have returned to historic norms. So borrowing would cost a lot more now. I expect Defence will need to live within its budget for 2-3 years or until interest rates drop.
Because it was part of a preexisting natural land mass it is possible that the continental crust / seafloor definition would apply.How can you have land holdings underwater?
Anything that isn't permanently above water isn't legally recognised as an island. It can't have territorial waters or an EEZ. Well, unless China claims it's part of China.
My take is rather different. Australia’s strategic outlook is vastly better than it was in 1941 but it is vastly uncertain now. Even if Australian strategic planners had full access to the plans of every potential adversary and ally the situation would still be utterly uncertain. Nobody knows who will win the US presidential election in 2024, what the health and legal status of the winner in 2026, what will be the state of US governance and social cohesion, and what will be the resulting state of great power relations.We are in some serious strife, the strategic outlook, not just in our own backyard and region, but globally is the worst, one could argue, in the history of the planet, and all any politician can do at the moment is blame everyone else, play games and pretend they are fixing the problem all the while making it worse, when all we need is someone with the kahuna's to get the bloody job done !!
My opinion, so you can take it or leave it, but the current far left Labor Government has no interest or intent on fixing Defence, but are spending a lot of time and money pretending to !! My two cents !! We are going nowhere fast !!
When I read this I immediately thought the shupbuilding industry would be the most affected. Really everything is on hold until the naval review is acted upon.I am putting this article on this general ADF thread rather than the naval one I normally follow because it affects everything.
Defence Secretary Greg Moriarty flagged axing some programs to pay for other DSR requirements. Ouch.
Defence projects face axe to fund new weapons
The head of the Defence Department warns cuts will be made to planned military projects to free up cash for new weapons.www.afr.com
I have said before in my own field (Infrastructure planning) there has been a noticeable slowdown in work since IA announced a review in late 2022. Recently a number of projects were cancelled as a result of that. Strictly speaking it was not a budget cut in Infrastructure. The previous government had added projects without increasing funds, and so the program was cut to match funds.
With the advent of AUKUS without a large increase in defence spending I fear Defence is now in the same boat. Australia’s debt is now 3x larger than it was back in 2012/13 and interest rates have returned to historic norms. So borrowing would cost a lot more now. I expect Defence will need to live within its budget for 2-3 years or until interest rates drop.
Actually nothing in shipbuilding is on hold.My take is rather different. Australia’s strategic outlook is vastly better than it was in 1941 but it is vastly uncertain now. Even if Australian strategic planners had full access to the plans of every potential adversary and ally the situation would still be utterly uncertain. Nobody knows who will win the US presidential election in 2024, what the health and legal status of the winner in 2026, what will be the state of US governance and social cohesion, and what will be the resulting state of great power relations.
Under these circumstances minor and medium powers hedge their bets. Australia’s bipartisan strategy has been to demonstrate its usefulness to the US by engaging in US-led coalitions in the hope that will generate gratitude in the time of need. That sounds like a stupid strategy (there are no permanent friends only permanent interests a la Palmerston) but it could work due to the vagaries of the US political system. It has (in most cases) been a stupid strategy where Australia encouraged the US to act against the US’s national interests (become embroiled in land wars in Asia).
In terms of hedging military preparations governments of both stripes have invested and held the course on the RAAF. On paper it is a superb small airforce. Governments of both stripes have avoided misusing it for domestic HADR, border protection, or foreign adventures (i.e. It has used RAAF assets extensively in those roles but in ways that are pretty close to their intended use). The mass is too small to be sustained in a major conflict but generally speaking Australian governments have done well with the RAAF (I struggle to think of anything of that scale across the whole of government programs that they have done better). The missing components: medium ( hopefully closer to long) range air defence, loyal wingmen etc are not too far off.
The RAN was on a sound upgrade path after 1999 (rectifying the deficiencies exposed by East Timor). However its major fleet units were trashed by border protection duties. The absolute height of idiocy was reached by ordering only 3 air warfare vessels (both sides of politics share blame for this). 3 DDGs guarantees one DDG available. That means one guaranteed task force, there is no guaranteed area defence for resupply, home defence, or separate landing points or a separate task force. Lose the DDG, and lose the task force, lose the war. Combined with the overworked ANZACs the limited escort numbers mean almost everything else in the ADF (outside the RAAF and SF and other air deployable elements) is broken. Even if Australia has deployable land force it can only get that somewhere (and resupply and reinforce) In benign conditions or with allied escort.
The RAN has also been the victim of political machinations. New PMs cut, delay or cancel programs. This happens across party lines and has affected subs and everything else. The political machination of RAN procurement Is a major national failing. The current government can definitely be faulted for not having a navally competent DSR team but we need to see the response to the surface fleet analysis before casting judgement. I don’t agree that is kicking the can down the road. As the thousands of posts on the RAN threads indicate they are intensely difficult problems.
The shining light is AUKUS (only possible due to the revolving door PM events) but crewing issues cast dark clouds. On a lower scale with the arrival of land attack cruise missiles the ADF will have a sovereign long range strike capacity for the first time in decades.
Australian Army was also on a solid upgrade path but I surmise that it has itself to blame for some of its problems. It established plans to reacquire a combined arms capability (it was obvious with the proliferation of roadside IEDs from about 2002 that M113s could not deliver that safely) but implemented them very slowly (often seemingly with the intention of acquiring the best possible bespoke solution in small numbers). Army also organized itself around generating forces for distant coalition operations where equipment could be transported in benign maritime environments and operate under air supremacy. Now that is no longer required (if the US wants to invade Lebanon or Iran the best support an ally like Australia could offer the US is to refuse to support it).
Australia’s 1st Division will begin to have a combined arms capability again some time late this decade when IFVs arrive (in reduced numbers than planned). That seems coordinated with the rapid acquisition of littoral manoeuvre vessels for regional deployments (and shore based anti ship missiles and HIMARS). The possible mission for the concentrated forces in North Queensland is vague but there are excellent domestic and geopolitical reasons for keeping that vague. Unfortunately they may have difficulties getting where they need to go safely due to limited escorts.
Shining lights for Army (lots of problems unstated admittedly)? Excellent decisions on helicopters made by previous government being followed through promptly. Domestic production facilities for armoured vehicles and missiles mean that (unless export orders take away capacity) more local orders should follow (political expediency will recognize military necessity). Fires Brigade.
So the arguments that all the problems are from one side of politics are just political. The arguments that the current government is just saving money are appealing, it is true of governments most of the time, but some of the things this gov’t is doing are expensive in the next four years which is what Australian gov’ts mainly care about.
The argument that the gov’t is doing nothing is definitely wrong. It is doing heaps of things. Most of those things are not well explained and receive a lot of critical commentary on this site (some from me) but you will wait in vain for an explanation.
Maritime sustainment has definitely been put on hold. Quite a lot of decisions have been deferred until after the Maritime Review is released. This has already impacted on timings, scope of maintenance availabilities etc for next year. Cheers.Actually nothing in shipbuilding is on hold.
The Hunter program may or may not be cut back, the Arafuras may or may not be cut back, the submarine pathway had been announced and the DDG and ANZAC upgrades are progressing. Nothing in the immediate future has changed.
Later batches of existing programs may be cut to buy something else instead, but nothing, right now, at this moment, or for the near future, has changed.
Your loyalty to the Labor party is sort of impressive, if a little sad. The last 100 years tells a story your ideological inclinations cannot alter.Is it?
Could you please share these well documented documents?
Be fair. Questions were asked. They were not unreasonable.Your loyalty to the Labor party is sort of impressive, if a little sad. The last 100 years tells a story your ideological inclinations cannot alter.
Mate, I am not the one making blind partisan statements, and I can guarantee you don't have a clue about my ideological inclinations. I'll give you a peek though - I am absolutely against unsupported claims being presented as facts.Your loyalty to the Labor party is sort of impressive, if a little sad. The last 100 years tells a story your ideological inclinations cannot alter.
agree with all of that, Dutton was excellent in that role but blotted his record by revealing a version of the Virginia deal when out of office (no harm done though it seems). Some of the tasks assigned to the ADF during COVID were also really terrible misuse of personnel but smack of Morrison to me (and were chiefly in Reynolds’s time).I have no hesitation in saying that the Gillard government in particular was woefully shortsighted on Defence. But so were the Howard, Abbott and Turnbull governments. Rudd at least was on the right track, and I have quite a lot of time for much of what was done under Morrison, although that was largely due to the good work Payne, Pyne and Dutton did as his respective Defence Ministers (Reynolds however appears a complete dimwit).
The point of my long diatribe above (admittedly lost in the flood of words) is that the political critique also has to address why the RAAF has evaded the ire of the ALP. If their aim was to slash defence and save money then buying fewer cheaper overseas built aircraft would be a good play.To my questions:
- Please show me where the current Government has slashed Defence.
- Please show me where in the ALP's platform cutting Defence is a major plank, ie their "raison detre."
- Please provide links to books or peer reviewed articles which support your claim that "Historical precedent is particularly well documented."
- Please expand on your claim that "the last 100 years tells a story."
I don't believe you can as I don't believe the statements you made are supportable but I am happy to be proven wrong.
This is the worst idea the Department of Defence ever had. Australia needs to get serious about resolving problems without forever resorting to passport giveaway festivals. I have a lot of insight into our 'Pacific Island family' and their 'security' elements and we definitely DO NOT want them here let alone giving them access to our military structure and classified data.Media talk once more of enlisting Pacific Islanders in the ADF.
Spoken on here in the past with most posters in favor.
Often wondered (with the British Armys reduction of Gurkha Regts ) if a battalion of Gurkhas could be introduced into the Aust Army.