Australia unveils plan for largest navy buildup since World War II

The Royal Australian Navy Adelaide-class guided-missile frigate HMAS Darwin FFG 04 and the Royal Australian navy Anzac-class frigate HMAS Perth FFH 157 are pierside at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam during Rim of the Pacific RIMPAC on July 2, 2012. PHOTO/COURTESY: CNN
Australia on Tuesday announced
plans to build its largest navy since World War II, allocating more than $35
billion (approx. Ksh.5.1 trillion) for the defense project over the next 10 years, in a move analysts said
pointed to heightened tensions with China in the Indo-Pacific.
According to a government
statement, the plans will see the Royal Australian Navy boost its fleet of
major surface warships to 26 in total after an independent review led by a
retired US Navy admiral found “the current and planned surface combatant fleet
is not appropriate for the strategic environment we face.”
“A strong Australia relies on
a strong navy, one that is equipped to conduct diplomacy in our region, deter
potential adversaries, and defend our national interests when called,”
Australian Chief of Navy Vice Adm. Mark Hammond said in the statement.
“The size, lethality and
capabilities of the future surface combatant fleet ensures that our navy is
equipped to meet the evolving strategic challenges of our region.”
The plan to bolster the fleet
includes 20 destroyers and frigates, and six Large Optionally Crewed Surface
Vessels (LOSVs), that can operate with sailors aboard or independently as
drones.
Those surface vessels will
join a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines Australia plans to build under the
AUKUS pact with the United States and the United Kingdom, the first three of
which are expected to be delivered early next decade.
The independent review noted
Australia had “the oldest fleet Navy has operated in its history,” according to
the government statement.
And analysts said the security
environment in the region – where rival China has built up the world’s largest
navy and is asserting its territorial claims in disputed waters – meant
Australia had to act.
Collin Koh, research fellow at
the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, said increasing
the Australian fleet’s size “is essential if there’s a need for capacity to
match the growing set of mission requirements, especially projecting presence
across the Indo-Pacific.”
While there is no mention of
China in the buildup plan, the review commission said the future surface fleet
needed the ability “to support critical activities, including patrolling our
northern approaches, close escort and theatre sea lift missions.”
And analysts pointed to
possible threats from China.
“It probably signals how
concerned both the government and defense are about our strategic
circumstances,” Jennifer Parker, adjunct fellow in naval studies at UNSW
Canberra, said in an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).
“There are many saying that
for the period of the latter 2020s, we are entering a period of risk in the
Indo-Pacific and that’s generated by China’s increased aggression in both the
South China Sea and Northeast Asia,” she said.
Upon completion in the
mid-2040s, the naval buildup would yield a fleet with the country’s three
current Hobart-class guided-missile destroyers, which will get upgrades to
their air defense and strike systems; six new Hunter-class frigates with
anti-submarine warfare as well as strike capabilities; 11 new general purpose
frigates for air defense, strike and escort duties; and six of the new LOSVs,
which would each have 32 Vertical Launching System (VLS) cells for missiles.
An additional 25 smaller
vessels will be used for offshore patrol and maritime security duties, the
government said.
Noting the urgency to improve
the country’s surface fleet, the government said the first of the 11 general
purpose frigates would be built on an existing design imported from Japan,
South Korea, Germany or Spain, with work later transitioning to an Australian
shipyard.
In the ABC interview, Parker
noted that there was a “period of risk” for Australia in the plan, in that some
older ships will be retired before new ones come online.
John Bradford, Council on
Foreign Relations international affairs fellow, said Australia would need to be
steadfast in sticking with the plan.
“The plan is realistic so long
as the Australian government sustains its commitment to this effort,” said
Bradford, who added that the first of the Hunter-class frigates, which he
called the “premier system” in the plan, will not join the fleet until 2032.
Opposition lawmaker Andrew
Hastie, shadow minister for defense, criticized the buildup’s timeline.
“We won’t see a ship in the
water until 2031, assuming this plan stays to timeline. It does not meet the
urgent strategic challenges posed by this dangerous world,” Hastie told reporters.
Analysts said when the ships
do come online, they will need sailors to crew them, something that’s not
guaranteed.
“Even with high levels of
automation found on these planned new build ships, what about crewing? Will
(the navy) face a manpower challenge in manning this expanded fleet?” Koh
asked.
But the government said the
buildup “requires a minimal increase to crew complement due to a
rationalization of crew sizes and an increased reliance on technology and
automation.”
In its announcement Tuesday,
the government also touted the economic benefits of the buildup.
“This investment provides a
clear pathway for the shipbuilding industry and workforce in South Australia
and Western Australia,” the release said.
Pat Conroy, minister for
defense industry, said shipbuilding would create 3,700 jobs in the next 10 years
and thousands more down the line.
However, the opposition Greens
party called the plan a “multi-billion-dollar mistake” driven by local
political concerns to protect shipbuilding jobs – and political ones.
“No matter how many times Defence leadership fails, both
overcharging and underdelivering, they keep their jobs and get rewarded with
billions more public dollars,” Greens defense spokesperson Sen. David
Shoebridge said in a statement.
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