
United States President Donald Trumpās decision to order a snap review of AUKUS has spurred opposition to AUKUS here, including from less likely quarters, as the chorus demanding Labor rethink its commitment to the United States war machine grows.
Anti-war groups, Socialist Alliance, the , a section of Laborās membership and even a retired general are calling on Labor not to help the US pursue its dangerous China containment strategy.
The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weaponsā Dr Tilman Ruff and Associate Professor Marianne Hanson said in late May that āAUKUS will come at a huge financial cost and ⦠is likely to compound Australiaās strategic risks, heighten geopolitical tensions, and undermine efforts at nuclear non-proliferation.ā
It said it āputs Australia at odds with our closest neighbours ⦠distracts us from addressing climate change and risks increasing the threat of nuclear warā.
Ā spokesperson Peter Murphy said: āThe AUKUS pact has become a textbook example of how to disenfranchise the community, providing almost no transparency or democracy in a sweeping and exorbitantly expensive decision which will affect Australia for decades.āĀ Some of the multiple unanswered questions about AUKUS are documented in AWPRās recent report .
spokespersonĀ Dr Vince Scappatura urged the government to adopt a defence policy focused on āsafeguarding Australiaās territory and grounded in non-nuclear armed neutrality. This means refraining from involvement in wars between other countries.ā
āThere is no foreseeable direct military threat to Australia posed by China,ā he said, adding that the Force Posture AgreementĀ ā which governs the US military in AustraliaĀ ā and AUKUS need to be terminated.
Socialist Alliance has opposed AUKUS since its inception in 2021 and continues to call for it to be scrapped, along with closing Pine Gap and other US bases.
, Greens spokesperson for defence and foreign affairs, said Labor must have a āfull inquiry into this dud dealā. He said it is already clear what the US review will say: āThe US does not have any spare submarines to give to Australia.
āTrump will use this review to either terminate AUKUS and pocket the money already paid or extract an even more eye-watering sum from Australia to stay in the sinking project without any hard promises for the US to deliver.ā
Retired Major General Michael Smith, a founding member of the Australian Peace and Security Forum (APSF), also called on a parliamentary review ofĀ AUKUS āinviting full public consultationā. He said on June 13 it is āmisleadingā for Labor and the Coalition to claim thatĀ AUKUSĀ was reviewed as part of the 2024 National Defence Strategy. APSF said āAUKUSĀ was conceived in secret, without parliamentary nor public disclosure or consultationā.
FutureĀ AUKUSĀ submarine bases, as well as existing US bases and so-called ājoint facilitiesā, contribute to Australia unnecessarily becoming a military target in the geopolitical rivalry between the US and China.
Smith said the $368 billion cost ofĀ AUKUS over a 30ā40 year timeframe āunbalancesā the Australian Defence Force and ādenies opportunities to strengthen more relevant defensive and non-aggressive capabilities, and to pursue a more independent approach in a multi-polar worldā.Ā Ā Ā
APSF said in its on AUKUS that it is not in Britain, or Australiaās, interests to be part of a āChina containment strategyā.
also wants an independent review into AUKUS. It said when former PM Scott Morrison announced AUKUS in 2021, Laborās front bench āspent less than 24 hoursā considering the deal and it was pushed through caucus and their National Conference.
Former Labor Senator Doug Cameron, a national patron of Labor Against War, said: āAustralians spend more time and due diligence reviewing the purchase of a television, or a car, than the Labor front bench spent kicking the tyres on AUKUS.
āWith Donald Trumpās Pentagon announcing a review, itās high time the Labor government had the courage to initiate an independent review to ensure the Australian people arenāt being taken to the cleaners while dragged into US war planning.ā
Marcus Strom, Labor Against War national convenor, said Albanese āneeds to show some backboneā and ālet Trump know Australians wonāt bear the costs of the Pentagonās war plans against Chinaā.
[This article was updated on June 16.]