United States launches review of the AUKUS submarine deal
The Pentagon is undertaking a review of AUKUS, and the news set the hares running in Australia, with opponents of AUKUS encouraged by the appearance of doubts in the Trump administration.
It follows US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth telling Australia to increase defence spending by tens of billions of dollars.
The Prime Minister will be heading to the G7 in Canada where it's anticipated he will meet President Donald Trump.
Sarah Ferguson spoke to Defence Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, and former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.
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9 News
an hour ago
- 9 News
Expert says Australia's 'chronically over-budget' warship project should be scrapped
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here Chronically over-budget, significantly delayed and lacking firepower - that's the expert assessment of a major warship project they say should be scrapped. The Hunter Class frigate project is already seven years behind schedule and many billions of dollars more expensive than initially anticipated. In 2018, British company BAE Systems won a $35 billion tender to build nine frigates, or $3.8 billion each, with the first scheduled to be in service by 2027. Australia's next Hunter-class frigates will be based on this British design. (Nine) By 2020 the price tag had blown out to $45 billion or $5 billion a piece, and Defence is now estimating it will cost $27 billion to build just frigates, or $9 billion each, with the first to be in service by 2034 - seven years late. BAE Systems is the company that will build Australia's AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines. Strategic Analysis Australia director Michael Shoebridge said the Hunter Class project was the "high point of decadence" in Defence decision-making. He said Defence adjusted the original BAE British design with a series of add-ons, including different combat and radar systems - which made it massively more expensive. "That frigate program is beyond scandalous - It's entered ludicrous mode for a wasteful use of taxpayer money and a very slow, small contribution to Australian military power," Shoebridge said. Australia's next Hunter-class frigates will be based on this British design. (Nine) He said the Hunter had just 32 missiles, which was a third of the weaponry of the Chinese cruiser that circumnavigated Australia in March. "We're in a very dangerous world and a very dangerous period in the world, and waiting to the mid-2030s and into the 2040s for three frigates for this amount of money, makes no sense. "We could go to the Japanese or the South Koreans and get a properly armed cruiser much faster than BAE is delivering this program." Defence analyst Dr Marcus Hellyer was equally scathing of the Hunter frigate, saying Navy's adjustments to the design had not only significantly increased its cost, but the frigate's weight, taking it from 8000 tonnes to more than 10,000 tonnes, making it slower. "It is monstrously expensive," Hellyer said. "And I would say, if you're in a hole, stop digging. "The government itself has decided it can't wait for the Hunter Class frigate, so it has kicked off a new frigate program and it is considering a competition between a German design and a Japanese design. "So the government itself has pretty much said we need to do something different - in a sense, they're halfway there already." Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy said the Hunter frigate project would not be cut despite its problems. "I wish I had a time machine to go back to 2016 and avoid the mistakes that the Coalition government made, but we've moved on," Conroy said. "We've got the project on track. Steel is being cut right now, we've signed the contract, there are about 2500 people working on this project right now. "The fastest way of delivering new capability for the Royal Australian Navy, is following through on this, building this project, now that we've fixed up many of the mistakes the Coalition government made." navy Australia defence national CONTACT US Auto news:Is this the next Subaru WRX? Mysterious performance car teased.

The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
PM's meeting with Trump in doubt as Middle East conflict escalates
Canberra/Nadi: Anthony Albanese's first face-to-face meeting with US President Donald Trump risks being derailed as Israeli strikes on Iran seize global attention ahead of a G7 summit in Canada. Albanese told Australians to avoid the region and pointed to new government advice not to travel to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories as Iran prepared retaliatory strikes. Speaking in Fiji on Friday before heading to the United States and Canada, the prime minister warned of Iran's nuclear program, but called for a diplomatic solution. 'We, of course, are very conscious of the threat that Iran becoming a nuclear state would represent to peace and security in the region,' Albanese said on Friday. 'We want to see these issues resolved through dialogue, and the United States has been playing an important role there.' Despite weeks of commentary about possible talks with Trump on tariffs and defence, a Trump-Albanese meeting had not been formally secured when the prime minister departed on Friday. Trump has not yet confirmed meetings with any world leaders at the G7, which begins on June 15, but Australia was confident it would secure an informal conversation on the sidelines or a bilateral meeting in Canada. Two Australian government sources familiar with planning for the trip said Australia had for several days contemplated if an Israel-Iran war, which had been foreshadowed for some time, might force Trump to skip the G7 meeting entirely. Trump is also managing a heated domestic row, which he has been widely accused of stoking, over protests in Los Angeles.

Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
PM's meeting with Trump in doubt as Middle East conflict escalates
Canberra/Nadi: Anthony Albanese's first face-to-face meeting with US President Donald Trump risks being derailed as Israeli strikes on Iran seize global attention ahead of a G7 summit in Canada. Albanese told Australians to avoid the region and pointed to new government advice not to travel to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories as Iran prepared retaliatory strikes. Speaking in Fiji on Friday before heading to the United States and Canada, the prime minister warned of Iran's nuclear program, but called for a diplomatic solution. 'We, of course, are very conscious of the threat that Iran becoming a nuclear state would represent to peace and security in the region,' Albanese said on Friday. 'We want to see these issues resolved through dialogue, and the United States has been playing an important role there.' Despite weeks of commentary about possible talks with Trump on tariffs and defence, a Trump-Albanese meeting had not been formally secured when the prime minister departed on Friday. Trump has not yet confirmed meetings with any world leaders at the G7, which begins on June 15, but Australia was confident it would secure an informal conversation on the sidelines or a bilateral meeting in Canada. Two Australian government sources familiar with planning for the trip said Australia had for several days contemplated if an Israel-Iran war, which had been foreshadowed for some time, might force Trump to skip the G7 meeting entirely. Trump is also managing a heated domestic row, which he has been widely accused of stoking, over protests in Los Angeles.