
The reaction against Prime MinisterĀ Anthony Albaneseās promise to spend $368 billion over 30 years has been swift.
Many are saying the real threat to peopleās 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 USā chief spy, on March 9: āItās not our assessment that China wants to go to war.ā
Some Australian are also publicly wondering about Laborās decision to embed Australia more deeply with the USĀ and British war machines.
described AUKUS on March 14 as a āreckless alliance, cooked up by the Morrison government and backed by Laborā, which ācompromises Australiaās sovereigntyā.
The push to ājoin the nuclear sub clubā is ācausing unrest with our regional allies and adds fire to a growing arms race.
āSecond-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 āwill not cooperateā with the government to āforce budget cuts on public services to pay for nuclear subsā and warned Labor to stop āmortgaging our future to stoke regional tensions.
āWhat should send a shiver down every Australiansā spine is that the $368 billion budget is just the ADFās 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.
āIn the space of a few days the estimated cost of this deranged plan has gone from $170 to $280 to $368 billion!
āWe canāt possibly pour billions of dollars into a new cold war and meet the challenge of climate change. Itās one or the other. It really is that simple,ā Wainwright said.
The activist said āout-of-control military spendingā combined with āthe 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 āadopt 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 Australiaās annual budget.
āFor 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 āAustralia 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 āa serious failure of public policyā because āthe 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 āmind boggling price tag for the submarinesā, Broinowski said āserious questionsā remain about how much control Australia will have over AUKUS.
āThese 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 āhave 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[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 āexpertsā about how Australia would be at war with China within three years.
Keating has also publicly critiqued Laborās position on China, which he believes is āat odds with its own geographyā. Australiaās āchallengeā, he said, āis 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 Australiaās illegal invasion of Iraq 20 years ago, and āthe historic roleā of the Coalition partners in āglobal conflicts worldwide from Vietnam to Yemen, this military alliance plays no positive role in world affairsā.
āAUKUS undermines Australian sovereignty and our relations with our Asia-Pacific partners,ā the resolution said.
āThe 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 āthe enforced interoperability, required by AUKUS and the submarines in particular, will mean permanent US and UK military involvement in Australiaās armed forces, further undermining Australian sovereigntyā.
Australia āshould refuse landing and berthing rights to any plane or vessel that is capable of being nuclear armedā, it said, and instead pursue āan independent, non-nuclear and non-aligned foreign policy that pursues disarmament and peaceā.