Australia's Leading Freedom of Information Expert Rex Patrick on Australia's Squandering of $368 Billion on the American Military Industrial Complex
Michael West Media
The Defence Department has outdone itself with the AUKUS submarine project. In Paul Keatingโs words, โitโs the worst deal in all historyโ. Thatโs not just because of the staggering $386 billion price tag, but because of the form the program is to take. Former submarinerย Rex Patrickย looks at the most astonishingly irrational part of the announcement.
Our senior Defence bureaucrats, both uniformed and civilian, have a remarkable but unexplainable knack when it comes to acquiring new equipment. When simplicity confronts them, they always find some way to make it complex. In the face of something manageable, theyโll always find a way to make it unmanageable. SNAFU is the order of the day.
But, for Defence, itโs all OK โ the admirals, air marshals, generals and top level public servants are immune from the consequences of failed procurement โ no matter how big the disaster. No-oneโs ever been fired from Defence for stuffing up an equipment purchase; after all, the wasted money is not theirs, itโs mine and yours.
Looking at the AUKUS plan, which some are now labelling USUKA [pronounced โyou suckerโ] after Paul Keating called it โthe worst deal in all history,โ Australia will initially acquire three second-hand but proven and highly capable Virginia Class submarines, but then jump off that safe pathway to a high-risk program involving a country that has a track record of being late, and over budget, on its past and current submarine programs.
Itโs just reckless.
Virginia submarines, what we could do
The Virginia Class nuclear attack submarine is sea proven but also an evolving design. Itโs even fitted with the combat system and weapons that we already have on our Collins Class submarines, or will acquire.
AUKUS is a bad deal. It comes at eye-watering cost, has huge opportunity costs and effectively puts all our Defence eggs in one basket.
Itโs not going to deliver a capability within an even remotely sensible time frame either to help deter, let alone fight in, the very conflict Defence purports we need it for.
But if I put that aside and just went along with the whole thing, Iโd advise that we could, and should, buy three US built Virginia Class submarines and then build our own, effectively providing the third Virginia shipyard (there are two shipyards in the US, both struggling with capacity).
Thatโs of benefit to us, and to the US, who would enjoy a surge build capability through us.โ
But instead, we will pay to increase US industrial capability and then turn to the British.
Not a shadow of its old self
โRule Britannia, Britannia rules the waves. Britons never, never, never shall be slaves.โ Itโs a song derived from a 1730s poem.
But like the billowing gowns and petticoats that were worn over dome-shaped panniers by women of the 1730s, โRule Britanniaโ is no longer in fashion.
The Royal Navy is not even a shadow of its old self. The French Navy and Spanish Armada outnumber Royal Navy frigates and destroyers 32 to 18. Admiral Horatio Nelson would be turning in his grave.
And to make matters worse, the โgreatโ left โGreat Britainโ soon after Brexit.
(Not so) Astute submarines
Back to the topic at hand, Britainโs recent submarine projects have been project management cluster fiascos.
The Royal Navyโs current Astute class nuclear-powered attack submarine program was approved by the British Government in 1997. Three boats were to be built for ยฃ2.6 billion, with the first boat to be in service in 2005. The first boat went in the water five years late, in 2010, and the first three boats blew out in cost by ยฃ1.9 billion. And by the way, the UK contracted the US submarine company, General Dynamics Electric Boat, to help them sort out some โissuesโ within the Astute project in 2004.
Starting with approval for a fourth boat in 2007, the program has grown to seven boats all up. The last four โBatch IIโ boats were supposed to cost ยฃ5.7B but are now expected to total ยฃ6.7 billion. The latest boat, HMS Anson, was delivered 25 months late.
Dreadnought submarines
The parallel Dreadnought nuclear ballistic missile submarine is on track. On track to be late and over budget.
The Ministry of Defence established its Future Submarine Integrated Project Team in October 2007. The initial approval of the program was in May 2011, with an estimated cost for four submarines of between ยฃ11 and ยฃ14 billion. The first submarine was intended to be in service in 2028.
The most recent cost estimate for the four ballistic missile platforms is ยฃ31 billion. Bizarrely, as the program has advanced, less seems to be known about the in-service date. No-one is saying when the first boat will arrive, other than โsome time in the 2030s.โ
Refits and retirements
The first of the Royal Navyโs current nuclear ballistic missile submarines, HMS Vanguard, has just come out of refit. The refit was programmed for three years and was to cost around ยฃ200 million. It took seven long years and around ยฃ500 million. Nearly one quarter of Vanguardโs service life will have been spent in dock undergoing repairs and maintenance.
Earlier this year, a public scandal erupted when it was revealed that the lead contractor had concealed broken bolts in the submarineโs reactor compartment.
In terms of programmatic failure, even more disturbing is the state of dismantling retired Royal Navy nuclear submarines.
The first ever British nuclear-powered submarine, HMS Dreadnought, entered service 60 years ago and served for 17 years. For the last 43 years, itโs been sitting alongside a wharf in the UK. Itโs not been dismantled. But neither have any of the other 21 retired Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarines.
Itโs a national disgrace. The National Audit Office examined the issue in 2019 and estimated that the cost of maintaining these retired submarines alongside various docks had exceeded ยฃ500 million, and the total cost of dismantling the retired and in-service submarines would likely exceed ยฃ7.5 billion. Perhaps this will be covered by the AUKUS overheads.
Nuclear disaster
The state of Britainโs submarine enterprise is nothing short of a disaster. And yet the Australian Department of Defence thinks that for the next fifty years, maybe longer, we should hitch ourselves to the clapped out wagon that is Britainโs submarine construction industrial base.
Paul Keating had it right about the AUKUS strategic architecture. Instead of moving forward with focus on a relevant local team like the QUAD (Australian, India, Japan and the United States), weโre committing to a subordinate role with our US ally and an Anglosphere arrangement thatโs a hangover from the former, now almost forgotten, British empire.
Yet itโs all โkeep calm and carry onโ in the Australian Department of Defence. They have no need to worry because all the bigwigs will have retired and moved onto highly paid consultancies and โthink tanksโ before the proverbial hits the fan.
Pretty much the same goes for the few, timid, politicians whoโve signed off on all this, a gargantuan splurge of taxpayersโ dollars, because theyโre all fearful they might be accused of being โweak on defenceโ if they donโt swallow the Departmentโs nuclear Kool Aid.
I guess Iโll just keep going to bed each night worrying about the Defence of Australia. Not about some country invading us, but by how much of my money, and your money, the Departmentโs going to waste tomorrow, next week, next year and for decades to come.
Rex Patrick is a former Senator for South Australia and earlier a submariner in the armed forces. Best known as an anti-corruption and transparency crusader -ย www.transparencywarrior.com.au.