Opposition grows to billions for AUKUS nuclear submarines

March 14, 2023
Issue 
British SSN(R) concept design chosen for Australia's nuclear-powered submarine. Photo: Reddit/WarshipPorn

The reaction against Prime MinisterĀ Anthony Albanese’s promise to spend $368 billion over 30 years has been swift.

Many are saying the real threat to people’s safety and security right now is the rising cost-of-living, climate and housing crises, not China.

Even conservatives, such as the United States Director of National Intelligence, have pointedĀ out that .Ā Avril Haines, the US’ chief spy, on March 9: ā€œIt’s not our assessment that China wants to go to war.ā€

Some Australian are also publicly wondering about Labor’s decision to embed Australia more deeply with the USĀ and British war machines.

described AUKUS on March 14 as a ā€œreckless alliance, cooked up by the Morrison government and backed by Laborā€, which ā€œcompromises Australia’s sovereigntyā€.

The push to ā€œjoin the nuclear sub clubā€ is ā€œcausing unrest with our regional allies and adds fire to a growing arms race.

ā€œSecond-hand Virginia class subs leave Australia totally reliant on US crews, docks and leadership to operate what are meant to be sovereign defence assets.ā€

Shoebridge said the Greens ā€œwill not cooperateā€ with the government to ā€œforce budget cuts on public services to pay for nuclear subsā€ and warned Labor to stop ā€œmortgaging our future to stoke regional tensions.

ā€œWhat should send a shiver down every Australians’ spine is that the $368 billion budget is just the ADF’s starting bid, because we know major defence projects routinely blow their budgets and timelines.ā€

Sam Wainwright, a national co-convener of the and active in the Walyalup Climate Action and Stop AUKUS WA, told Āé¶¹“«Ć½ the sums going to a new cold war were incredible and it must be stopped.

ā€œIn the space of a few days the estimated cost of this deranged plan has gone from $170 to $280 to $368 billion!

ā€œWe can’t possibly pour billions of dollars into a new cold war and meet the challenge of climate change. It’s one or the other. It really is that simple,ā€ Wainwright said.

The activist said ā€œout-of-control military spendingā€ combined with ā€œthe push to confront China represents a desperate threat to our security and well beingā€.

He said Labor must urgently sign and ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and ā€œadopt an independent foreign policy based on peace and justiceā€.

John Quelch of the Independent and Peaceful Australian Network, Geelong, told Āé¶¹“«Ć½Ā that the massive spend exceeds Australia’s annual budget.

ā€œFor three quarters of $1 trillion, the government could instead purchase: 1480 brand new schools; 10 fully equipped hospitals and fully fund aged care packages for three years to help the elderly stay at active and at home instead of in nursing homes,ā€ Quelch said.

According to a , published last year, 51% said ā€œAustralia should stay neutralā€ in any war between US and China.

This is significant because it comes after years of propaganda against China from the former Coalition government and Āé¶¹“«Ć½ of the corporate media.

Alison Broinowski, spokesperson for , said the AUKUS deal was ā€œa serious failure of public policyā€ because ā€œthe public and parliament have been shut out of the decision-making processā€.

The original AUKUS decision was made in secret, in 2021, by former Prime Minister Scott Morrison and a small number of ministers.

Along with the ā€œmind boggling price tag for the submarinesā€, Broinowski said ā€œserious questionsā€ remain about how much control Australia will have over AUKUS.

ā€œThese concerns about sovereignty have been raised by two former prime ministers, large Āé¶¹“«Ć½ of the union movement, and multiple defence and security experts,ā€ she said.

The military threats ā€œhave been wildly exaggerated seemingly to justify a massive defence build upā€, she said.

Former PM Paul Keating, who supports the Australia-US military alliance, isĀ strongly opposed to the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines, describing them as a . He said,Ā in 2021, the to ā€œ[try] to find our security from Asia rather than in Asiaā€ and he has .

Keating also joined the outrage after the Fairfax-Nine Network published their red scare propaganda on March 7.

The front-page stories on the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age heard from five ā€œexpertsā€ about how Australia would be at war with China within three years.

Keating has also publicly critiqued Labor’s position on China, which he believes is ā€œat odds with its own geographyā€. Australia’s ā€œchallengeā€, he said, ā€œis to have the United States remain as a balancing and conciliatory power in Asiaā€.

Besides a number of unions opposing AUKUS, an inner-city branch of also voted unanimously on March 1 against it.

It said that given the US, British and Australia’s illegal invasion of Iraq 20 years ago, and ā€œthe historic roleā€ of the Coalition partners in ā€œglobal conflicts worldwide from Vietnam to Yemen, this military alliance plays no positive role in world affairsā€.

ā€œAUKUS undermines Australian sovereignty and our relations with our Asia-Pacific partners,ā€ the resolution said.

ā€œThe proposed nuclear submarines are not only an obscene waste of money, but will irreversibly enmesh Australia into the nuclear weapons and nuclear waste industry.ā€

It said ā€œthe enforced interoperability, required by AUKUS and the submarines in particular, will mean permanent US and UK military involvement in Australia’s armed forces, further undermining Australian sovereigntyā€.

Australia ā€œshould refuse landing and berthing rights to any plane or vessel that is capable of being nuclear armedā€, it said, and instead pursue ā€œan independent, non-nuclear and non-aligned foreign policy that pursues disarmament and peaceā€.

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