1. Introduction: war on the horizon?
A risk of Sino-US war during the next decade appears increasingly plausible. If a major conflict does occur, initial hostilities seem likely to begin on or proximate to Taiwan[1]. Until perhaps two years ago, an apparently inconsistent policy conveyed by President Biden puzzled some observers.[2] Even so, his conduct was coherent when viewed as a legacy of opaque US intentions embodied in the substance of the U.S. Taiwan Relations Act [3] and a lengthy strategy of strategic ambiguity.[4] This has changed. Hard power calculations now fill apprehensive debates on Taiwan and the relative decline of American military superiority over the Peoples’ Republic of China (PRC).
One prominent Australian Sinologist holds a firm view of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) / State intentions. Dr Kevin Rudd, now Australian Ambassador to the U.S., believes President Xi is likely to move on Taiwan between the late 2020s and early 2030s.[5] CCP dogma and President Xi’s uncompromising conduct to date suggest Dr Rudd holds the accurate view.[6] If there is war, it appears very likely the US will expect the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and much of its US-sourced equipment to accompany American and probably other states’ forces into a major regional conflict. In Professor White’s view ‘Washington would expect Australia to contribute the full range of our air and naval forces to the maximum extent of our capability.’[7]
This unequivocal conclusion regarding Canberra’s obligations as perceived in Washington is not an isolated opinion. In July of 2022 the Chair of the US ‘Joint Chiefs of Staff’ made a similar point as clearly as his position permitted.[8] Some months earlier, then Australian Defence Minister Peter Dutton put an emphatically similar view, apparently without the perception of a costly electoral or party backlash.[9] His successor Richard Marles reportedly holds a different opinion. In the context of AUKUS responsibilities he strongly denied any such quid pro quo in return for the prospective transfer of several ‘Virginia’ class submarines to Australia.[10]
His was a curious claim, as it was difficult to see how the Marles / Labor government position could have been acceptable in Washington. The US Navy and its allies in Congress and the Senate will resist parting with any of their submarines as surface ships become increasingly vulnerable. And due to practical limits in industrial capacity, the US remains notoriously short of submarines needed for putative operations against Communist China.[11] Hence Washington’s quiescence in response to Mr Marles’s statement appeared confusing. One of two hypotheses is likely to explain the matter.
Ministers within governments of most US allies will occasionally assert their state’s sovereign prerogatives where the target audience is a domestic one. These statements may be a response to declining popular confidence in security; or where a sufficiently influential or sizeable cohort is ambivalent or vocally hostile towards the Great Power ally. In Mr Marles’s example, his remarks probably carried a performative or theatrical purpose amid echoes of dissent. In other words, it is plausible to suggest that the Labor government had implicitly accepted its citizens’ future presence on a north-east Asian battlefield. The public task of a Minister for Defence is sometimes to save face in an expedient manner, rather than utter words that are literally true.
An alternative hypothesis which explains unruffled American confidence may be cloaked in diplomatic subterfuge. The Biden Administration may have no intention of transferring any submarines to Australia for the rational reasons stated above. Instead, US diplomats may have contrived Canberra’s commitment to a major war, knowing our government’s position will not alter when a few nuclear-powered submarines do not change hands. By that point the US military outlay on expanded air, sea, land, cyber and/or space facilities within Australia is likely to have elevated the importance of Washington’s strategic reliance on its junior ally. At that moment Canberra politicians will hold few genuine choices. They will then taste the bitter fruits of a failure in maritime defence before settling for a familiar obligation: expanded reliance on US prerogatives at American direction.[12]
AUKUS has altered political and military relations between the allies. Should one consider the immense sums involved, the agreement has also influenced the economic relationship between Australia and the US.[13] In an incisive if unflattering assessment Sam Roggeveen pointed out that advocates are keen to refer to AUKUS as a technology sharing agreement rather than a security agreement.[14] This is of course literally true, but the supporters’ claim is somewhat disingenuous. Transfer of sensitive military technology is a highly political matter. One consequence is the heightened difficulty for Canberra in resisting involvement in a Sino-US war in which its Virginia class or (if they are built) SSN AUKUS submarines are despatched to operations near China. As Roggeveen put it, ‘…it is a perverse aspect of defence policy that once a capability exists, it will to some degree determine policy.’[15]
Another of Roggeveen’s key concerns is that the US is not seriously contesting the Chinese intention to assert hegemony in Asia.[16] Relations will nonetheless become closer between the RAN and the US Pacific Fleet, and the US and Australian defence bureaucracies. Unsurprisingly, the PRC capacity to inflict harm on Australia is vastly greater.[17] Roggeveen’s overall conclusion is that AUKUS supplies risks and costs to Australia; while economic, military and political benefits flow to Washington.
Putting to one side the durable political support for ANZUS in Canberra, the extent and nature of presumptive involvement in a major war in Asia is much less clear. Should international tensions rise, various divisions on Canberra’s Capital Hill may stoke simmering incoherence across the benches. The resulting confusion during a crisis could easily distract executive government in a moment of stressful choices. In that sombre light, it seems timely to give fresh thought to security pacts and the ANZUS treaty in particular.[18]