PPRuNe Forums - View Single Post - The South China Sea's Gathering Storm
View Single Post
Old 1st Apr 2021, 14:02
  #827 (permalink)  
etudiant
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 1,352
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Originally Posted by ORAC
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/a...reat-kdqcc500b

Australia to Build Domestic Missiles to Counter Chinese Threat

Scott Morrison, the prime minister, has announced Australia is to build its own missiles to allay fears that it would quickly run out of munitions in a regional conflict — probably against China. The A$1 billion (£550 million) project was unveiled on the 100th anniversary of the Royal Australian Air Force. The funds will be fast-tracked to create a military manufacturing industry.

The government expects to spend A$100 billion on defence over the next 20 years. At present it buys missiles from US, European and Israeli manufacturers, through long supply chains that are vulnerable to disruption.

Morrison said a new facility could produce weapons within three years. He emphasised that Australia must meet its own needs in a changing environment but did not mention China’s militarisation of local seas. “It is imperative we now proceed with the creation of a sovereign guided-weapons capability as a priority,” Morrison said. A “strategic partner” for the project will be chosen this year.

Michael Shoebridge, a director at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, a think tank, said that China’s aggression and the vulnerability of global supply chains exposed by the coronavirus were a concern for Australia. Its most pressing need was for long-range anti-ship missiles, he said.

If China moved to
take control of Taiwan, Australia would need a lot of missiles quickly and could not rely on importing them in time, he added.....
Why Australia would need a lot of missiles if China takes control of Taiwan is not clear.
Afaik, the US as well as Australia have accepted that China includes Taiwan, under the 'one country, two systems' formula.
Admittedly, the 'two systems' concept was abrogated in Hong Kong with minimal respect for the treaty returning it to Chinese rule, so Taiwan is visibly vulnerable.
Still, Taiwan is nowhere near as susceptible to the kind of salami reincorporation tactics as was Hong Kong, so any Chinese action would have to be overtly military and thus messy.
But absent recognition of Taiwan as an independent country, where is the basis for military action?
etudiant is offline