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Australia, UK Hail ‘Progress’ on Nuclear Subs Deal

An Australian Collins-class diesel-electric submarine in Sydney in 2016. France was in September 2021 dropped as the partner due to build their replacements. Photo: Peter Parks/AFP/Getty Images

Australia’s bid to acquire nuclear-powered submarines is making “significant progress,” the country said Thursday in a joint statement with Britain after a virtual summit between their leaders.

US and British experts are now in Australia to advise on the project — announced in September under a new Australia-Britain-US defense alliance, AUKUS — they said after talks between Prime Minister Scott Morrison and British leader Boris Johnson.

Australia says it plans to arm the submarines with conventional weapons but has yet to decide on the details of the program, including whether to opt for a fleet based on US or British nuclear-powered attack submarines.

“All three partners have made significant progress in their collective endeavor to provide the Royal Australian Navy with a conventional-armed nuclear-powered submarine capability at the earliest possible date,” Australia and Britain said.

“Leaders further welcomed the presence in Australia of UK and US officials to provide expert advice on the many facets of nuclear stewardship needed to operate a nuclear-powered submarine capability,” they said.

Forged at a time of growing Chinese influence in the Pacific region, the AUKUS alliance would make Australia the only non-nuclear weapons power with nuclear-powered submarines, capable of traveling long distances without surfacing.

Johnson and Morrison said they were committed to the three-nation defense alliance “as a cornerstone of their shared efforts to promote an open, inclusive and resilient Indo-Pacific.”

The secretly negotiated AUKUS deal infuriated France, which discovered at the last moment that its own diesel-electric submarine contract with Australia had been scrapped.

Australia and Britain said they were advancing in joint discussions with the United States on cyber capabilities, artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, and unspecified “additional undersea capabilities.”

A study released in December by the influential Australian Strategic Policy Institute said the nuclear-powered submarine program would cost more than $US80 billion and take decades to complete.

It said the vessels would offer a significant advantage in deterring aggression from China or elsewhere.

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