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Australia Mulls Japan Submarines Under China’s Cautious Gaze - Bloomberg
Australia is considering buying top-secret technology from Japan to build a fleet of new generation submarines, a move that would risk reigniting diplomatic tensions with China only recently smoothed over.
China and Japan are competing to build their domestic arms industries, and for China the export of Japanese military technology is particularly sensitive given their wartime history and territorial disputes. Choosing Japan to play a role in the multi-billion dollar submarine project could prompt a stern response from Australia’s biggest trading partner.
Australian Defense Minister David Johnston has confirmed “unsolicited proposals” to build the submarines had been received from Japan, Germany, Sweden and France, with a decision on the replacement of the country’s aging diesel-powered submarines expected by March. Alongside Australia, countries such as Vietnam and India are expanding their submarine fleets as China seeks greater military clout in the Pacific.
“The government’s preference seems to be the Japanese, but there are still lots of hurdles,” said Mark Thomson, a defense economics analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. “Japan hasn’t exported sensitive military technology before and while a deal would mean ties between two close U.S. allies would strengthen, it would be seen in China as a dark cloud.”
Australia needs to replace its six Collins-class diesel electric submarines by 2026, according to Johnston, who is looking for a cheaper option after scrapping the previous Labor government’s plan to build 12 submarines locally, which Thomson estimated would cost around A$36 billion ($29.6 billion). He hasn’t ruled out any options on where the craft, designed to better help Australia patrol the Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean, will be built.
Australia is considering buying top-secret technology from Japan to build a fleet of new generation submarines, a move that would risk reigniting diplomatic tensions with China only recently smoothed over.
China and Japan are competing to build their domestic arms industries, and for China the export of Japanese military technology is particularly sensitive given their wartime history and territorial disputes. Choosing Japan to play a role in the multi-billion dollar submarine project could prompt a stern response from Australia’s biggest trading partner.
Australian Defense Minister David Johnston has confirmed “unsolicited proposals” to build the submarines had been received from Japan, Germany, Sweden and France, with a decision on the replacement of the country’s aging diesel-powered submarines expected by March. Alongside Australia, countries such as Vietnam and India are expanding their submarine fleets as China seeks greater military clout in the Pacific.
“The government’s preference seems to be the Japanese, but there are still lots of hurdles,” said Mark Thomson, a defense economics analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. “Japan hasn’t exported sensitive military technology before and while a deal would mean ties between two close U.S. allies would strengthen, it would be seen in China as a dark cloud.”
Australia needs to replace its six Collins-class diesel electric submarines by 2026, according to Johnston, who is looking for a cheaper option after scrapping the previous Labor government’s plan to build 12 submarines locally, which Thomson estimated would cost around A$36 billion ($29.6 billion). He hasn’t ruled out any options on where the craft, designed to better help Australia patrol the Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean, will be built.