US to Help Australia Manufacture Guided Missiles by 2025

 

Canberra: In a move to counter growing Chinese presence in the Indo-Pacific, the United States will expand its military industrial base by helping Australia manufacture guided missiles and rockets for both countries within two years, the allies announced  as they ramped up defence cooperation.

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The new cooperation on guided weapon production follows a trilateral partnership announcement in March that will see Britain provide Australia with a fleet of eight submarines powered by US nuclear technology.

The greater integration of US and Australian militaries was announced after annual talks between US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken and their Australian counterparts, Defence Minister Richard Marles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong.

They agreed to cooperate on Australia producing Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems by 2025, a communique said.

US companies Raytheon and Lockheed Martin established an Australian enterprise to build such weapons last year. That followed the drain on Western countries’ munitions caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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Austin said the move on missiles would strengthen the two allies’ defence industrial base and technological edge.

“We’re racing to accelerate Australia’s priority access to munitions through a streamlined acquisition process,” Austin told reporters in Brisbane, Australia.

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Marles welcomed US support to achieve Australian missile production within two years.

“We are really pleased with the steps that we are taking in respect of establishing a guided weapons and explosive ordnance enterprise in this country,” Marles said.

The two governments also agreed to upgrade joint military facilities in Australia and to increase US nuclear submarine visits as the United States increases its focus on the South Pacific. The region came to the forefront of the US competition with China for influence last year, when Beijing signed a security pact with Solomon Islands and raised the prospect of a Chinese naval base being established there.

Austin became the first US defence secretary to visit Papua New Guinea and Blinken visited New Zealand and Tonga before they arrived in Australia.

The July 29  meeting was overshadowed by the loss of an Australian Army helicopter with four air crew late July 28, during military exercises with the US off the north-eastern coast of Australia. The US, Australian and Canadian militaries are taking part in the search for potential survivors near Whitsunday Islands off the Queensland state coast.

Austin and Marles travelled to north Queensland  to inspect Talisman Sabre, a biennial military exercise between the two countries that this year includes 13 nations and more than 30,000 military personnel.

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