AUKUS
Which I what I said a couple of posts up they will be entitled to a rumored 200 million exit payment. They will also be entiltled to payments of any provable losses they incured, but they will be required to pay back any payments they recieved for work not carrierd. Compensation will be hundreds of millions and not billions or 10's of billions as many french media are saying
Australia's decision to cancel a French nuclear submarines deal will not change France's strategy in Indo-Pacific region, President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday.
Macron told a news conference the deal cancellation would have a relatively limited impact on France, concerning a few hundred jobs.
Macron told a news conference the deal cancellation would have a relatively limited impact on France, concerning a few hundred jobs.
France's Indo-Pacific strategy is as pertinent to Australia as it was in Indo-China & the South Paciifc in 1940. It could go either way, friend or foe?
Yes - back on thread.
Aviators and submariners share a lot in common.
Use of sophisticated and expensive machines to travel through media where they don't really belong.
Aviators and submariners share a lot in common.
Use of sophisticated and expensive machines to travel through media where they don't really belong.
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Thread Starter
https://thediplomat.com/2021/10/chin...ker-mentality/
China’s AUKUS Response Highlights Beijing’s Bunker Mentality
Beijing seems completely unwilling – or unable – to consider its own actions might be feeding the “China containment” push.
Beijing is in overdrive to respond to the news that Australia will build nuclear-powered submarines, thanks to technology being shared by the United States and the United Kingdom. No event since China’s 2016 loss to the Philippines in an international arbitration case over disputed waters in the South China Sea has evoked such a howl from Chinese officialdom.….
Initially, China’s response was characterized by statements calling AUKUS “extremely irresponsible.” A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said that the pact “seriously undermines regional peace and intensifies the arms race.” The reaction was, diplomatically speaking, strong but measured.
But the language from China’s official news outlets devolved into insults, threats, contempt, and disparagement.……
China’s AUKUS Response Highlights Beijing’s Bunker Mentality
Beijing seems completely unwilling – or unable – to consider its own actions might be feeding the “China containment” push.
Beijing is in overdrive to respond to the news that Australia will build nuclear-powered submarines, thanks to technology being shared by the United States and the United Kingdom. No event since China’s 2016 loss to the Philippines in an international arbitration case over disputed waters in the South China Sea has evoked such a howl from Chinese officialdom.….
Initially, China’s response was characterized by statements calling AUKUS “extremely irresponsible.” A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said that the pact “seriously undermines regional peace and intensifies the arms race.” The reaction was, diplomatically speaking, strong but measured.
But the language from China’s official news outlets devolved into insults, threats, contempt, and disparagement.……
Which I would consider as a good sign that this strategy does absolutely not suit them. On the other hand one might wonder why? They do not really expect to be attacked by Australia right out of the Blue I would assume!? Then, what is their worry?!
I suspect they're worried that the Australians are only the first in line - if the US started selling SSN's to Japan, S Korea and maybe India it would make the PLA (N) look a bit .. exposed - all that money in surface ships.........

Perhaps other aspects of the pact such as a coordinated strategy to exclude them from telecommunications systems and action to prevent their acquisition of companies working in advanced AI, semiconductors and other sensitive technologies. Until AUKAS they probably assumed that this would go largely unchallenged.
Pity that they have no V/STOL aircraft to go on the twp LHDs with ski jumps.
Kono Taro, who has a commanding lead in polls to head Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party and succeed the outgoing Suga Yoshihide as prime minister, expressed support for building nuclear-powered (not nuclear-armed) submarines this week. While being questioned alongside other candidates in a televised forum, he called the development of nuclear submarines a “very important” capability for Japan.
There was rumors that one of the british aircraft carriers would be one deployment to the horn of africa, assume Dijbouti, but with aukus it might be more practical to do it to sydney. That might give us a some impetus to buy some or convert some the existing order to F-35bs to fly off the UK and possibly reverse the mods on one of the a Canberra to fly F-35's
Last edited by rattman; 1st Oct 2021 at 21:48.
In other news the guardian has got the letter, under FOI, that was sent to NG on the 15th. They dont show the whole letter
https://www.theguardian.com/australi...deal-cancelled
But the director general of the Future Submarine Program – Royal Australian Navy Commodore Craig Bourke – added a caveat about the government not yet granting authorisation to proceed.
He told Naval Group: “The matters addressed in this correspondence do not provide any authorisation to continue work or for the reimbursement of that work under CWS1 [Core Work Scope 1], other than in accordance with References A, B and C.”
Reference B means the submarine design contract, but references A and C were blacked out by the FOI decision maker, apparently to protect “trade secrets or commercially valuable information”.
He told Naval Group: “The matters addressed in this correspondence do not provide any authorisation to continue work or for the reimbursement of that work under CWS1 [Core Work Scope 1], other than in accordance with References A, B and C.”
Reference B means the submarine design contract, but references A and C were blacked out by the FOI decision maker, apparently to protect “trade secrets or commercially valuable information”.
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Brizzle
Posts: 161
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I can confirm XX engineering milestone has been achieved and ZZ activity has been completed. This letter does not address future project, legal or commercial aspects which will be the subject of further correspondance from the relevant parties.
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Brizzle
Posts: 161
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
The original decision was influenced by politics and naturally produced a clusterf*ck. The new one will do the same, but for time being it puts Scotty from Marketing ahead on the national security/defence (as well as economic management) polls. The upcoming federal election will be fought by the coalition on the: "Would you really trust Labor and Albanese with the nation's defence, security and finances?"
PS for those who don't know the major differences between a diesel and nuclear powered sub. The nuclear one only needs fueling every 30 years, can stay submerged indefinitely, only restricted by food and maintenance, can maintain its top speed under water indefinitely, including cruising between operational areas submerged. Vs the diesel with about 80 days cruising range at low speed (less than half) surfaced or snorkeling to conserve fuel, limited underwater cruising speed and time and generally smaller and poorer crew accommodation, all limiting its combat service time and effective ability.
Last edited by 43Inches; 2nd Oct 2021 at 09:35.
A really good comparison to how bad Australia's submarine policies have been is vs the US. LA Class attack subs have been in service since the 1970s, with one from the 70s and a majority from the 1980s still in service. The cost per unit was around $950million each in 1990. Australia went for the Collins class in 1990 at a cost of around $800 mil per unit, and they are saying they are obsolete after only being in service since 1996, the last one joining the RAN in 2003. We were then going to buy a retrograde diesel submarine from the French that would have had the same issues and problems of the Collins class at a cost per unit of around $3 billion, which is roughly the same cost as the current VA class in the USN.
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 265
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
We were then going to buy a retrograde diesel submarine from the French that would have had the same issues and problems of the Collins class at a cost per unit of around $3 billion, which is roughly the same cost as the current VA class in the USN.
What an awesome deal.
Signed by the same Prime Minister who said that running optic fibre to Australians was too expensive… copper was the way to go.
Noted. Except that $90B divided by 12 is $7.5B each.
What an awesome deal.
What an awesome deal.
Abbott made the 'least worse' call when he chose an off-the-shelf Japanese diesel electric boat.