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Missiles, drones and warships the priority as Australia plans $32b defence boost

The bulk of the new spending, part of a A$330 billion decade-long budget, will only kick in after five years, and ultimately take defense spending to 2.4 percent of GDP by 2034 from just over 2 percent today.

Lewis Jackson (Reuters)
Sydney, Australia
Wed, April 17, 2024

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Missiles, drones and warships the priority as Australia plans $32b defence boost Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong, Defense Minister Richard Marles and Britain's Foreign Secretary David Cameron at Government House for the annual Australia-UK Ministerial Consultations (AUKMIN), in Adelaide, Australia March 22, 2024. (Reuters/AAP)

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ustralia will boost defence spending by A$50.3 billion ($32 billion) over the next decade and reshuffle its weapons programs to emphasise missiles, drones and warships as it looks to the possibility of a Pacific conflict between China and the US.

The bulk of the new spending, part of a A$330 billion decade-long budget, will only kick in after five years, and ultimately take defense spending to 2.4 percent of GDP by 2034 from just over 2 percent today.

Announced by Defense Minister Richard Marles on Wednesday, the new funding reflects new priorities, such as long-range missiles, that Australia believes are necessary in a world where a potential conflict between China and the United States could upend the region.

"The optimistic assumptions that guided defence planning after the end of the Cold War are long gone," Marles said in a speech at the national press club. "Our environment is characterised by the uncertainty and tensions of entrenched and increasing strategic competition between the United States and China."

Just over 40 percent, or up to A$145 billion, is set for the navy, including a beefed-up surface fleet, the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine program as well as other priorities such as the Ghost Shark undersea drone.

A fifth, or up to A$74 billion, will go toward missile-related programs, whose importance was flagged in a review last year. There will be new longer-range missiles for the air force and army, missile defence programs and domestic manufacturing of guided weapons, the review said.

Military bases across the country's north, where U.S. Marines are based for months of training and exercises each year, will be allocated up to A$18 billion for upgrades.

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