Politics live: Australia always preferred secondhand Aukus submarines, defence secretary says | Australia news


Australia always preferred used submarines, defence secretary claims

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Australia’s preference was always to receive secondhand nuclear powered submarines under the Aukus deal, defence officials have revealed, prompting the Coalition to question if the original arrangement was “imposed” on the Albanese government.

The defence secretary, Meghan Quinn, was grilled at Senate estimates on Tuesday night about the announcement that Australia would buy three used Virginia-class submarines from the US rather than a combination of new and old vessels.

Under questioning from the shadow defence minister, James Paterson, Quinn said it was a “joint idea” from Australia and the US to rework the deal.

Pressed on which country proposed the alternative plan first, Quinn said:

double quotation markAustralia’s position is that we would have always … had a preference for three in-service (submarines).

A surprised Paterson asked why the Albanese government accepted the original deal if that wasn’t its preference.

double quotation markThey imposed a new submarine on us and said you must take a new submarine even if you want three in-service?

Quinn replied:

double quotation markThis is a joint exercise over many decades, working collaboratively with an alliance partner to deliver a capability which is significant and is very important for Australia’s national defence. So there are many reasons why three in-service (submarines) would be simpler, lower-cost through the training of staff, the sustainment arrangements, the maintenance requirements, and all of those considerations.

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Australian troops will be sent to Poland to train with Ukrainians

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Australian troops will be sent to Poland in coming weeks to train Ukrainian soldiers in the latest effort to support its fight against Russia’s illegal invasion.

Australian Defence Force personnel have since January 2023 been based in the UK helping to train Ukrainian soldiers in basic infantry tactics, leadership and military skills.

But in coming weeks, the ADF personnel will be shifted to Poland as part of a Norwegian-led operation, bringing Australian troops closer to the conflict zone.

Making the announcement last night, the defence minister, Richard Marles, said:

double quotation markAustralia is continuing to adapt our contributions to Ukraine to ensure our support remains practical, relevant, and aligned with their most urgent needs.

ADF personnel trained more than 3,650 Ukrainians in the UK under the so-called Operation Kudu.

Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, the Australian government has provided more than $1.7bn in support for Ukraine, including $1.5bn in military assistance.

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