Indo-Pacific Security
Saturday, 19 April 2014
Sunday, 9 March 2014
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Gateway to the Indo-Pacific: Australian Defense Strategy and the Future of the U.S.-Australia Alliance
This report offers
an American perspective on the U.S.-Australia military alliance, as it stands
poised at the cusp of a new era. Located at the confluence of the Indian and
Pacific Oceans, Australia appears ideally positioned to act as gatekeeper to
the Indo-Pacific commons, keeping watch over increasingly contested waters and
fulfilling a central role in the preservation of crisis stability in Asia.
The report proceeds
in three parts. First, it examines the state of the U.S.-Australia military
alliance, detailing the geopolitical shifts currently underway in Australia’s
immediate neighborhood and outlining the extent to which these developments
signal the advent of a new era. The seismic nature of these changes has
engendered a vigorous strategic debate within Australia over the future of its
defense ties with the United States. The report provides a succinct overview of
ongoing debates and examines three different schools of thought in Australia: the Alliance Minimalist School, the Alliance Maximization School, and the Incrementalist School. Many of the
traditional assumptions at the heart of Australian strategic culture are in the
process of being overturned, and the U.S.-Australia alliance is increasingly
perceived as a bedrock for sustained regional stability.
Building on these
observations, the second section of the report details four manners in which
Australia could make greater contributions to regional security and deterrence.
These operational roles are categorized as follows:
Supportive Sanctuary: Capitalizing on its advantageous geographical position, strategic depth
and highly developed infrastructure, Australia can play an indispensable role
providing access, training opportunities, logistics and repair facilities to
support Allied military forces.
Indo-Pacific Watchtower: Australia’s unique
geography and decades of close intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR) cooperation with the United States provide the foundation for expanding its
role in reconnoitering the Indo-Pacific, space, and cyber domains.
Green Water Warden: Australia’s proximity to key Southeast Asian waterways and considerable
experience in the conduct of challenging amphibious and littoral operations
place it in an ideal position to work alongside Indonesia in safeguarding the
Sunda and Lombok Straits.
Peripheral Launchpad: Australia’s extended coastlines and position make it an ideal place
from which to conduct peripheral campaigns in the Indian Ocean, such as
maritime interception operations, in the event of conflict breaking out in the
western Pacific.
After examining each
role in depth, the report discusses how Australia’s new leadership can best
align the nation’s future defense capabilities with both its operational
environment and its emerging military strategy. It explores Australia’s current
airpower and submarine debates and argues in favor of longer-range air
capabilities, both manned and unmanned, as well as for Australia ideally to
acquire nuclear-powered submarines, unmanned underwater vehicles, and submarine
tenders. The third section concludes by stating that absent a greater degree of
funding and budgetary consistency on the part of the Australian government, the
U.S.-Australia alliance may fail to reach its considerable potential.
Available at: http://www.csbaonline.org/publications/2013/11/gateway-to-the-indo-pacific-australian-defense-strategy-and-the-future-of-the-australia-u-s-alliance-2/
Available at: http://www.csbaonline.org/publications/2013/11/gateway-to-the-indo-pacific-australian-defense-strategy-and-the-future-of-the-australia-u-s-alliance-2/
Saturday, 1 June 2013
Thursday, 7 March 2013
Arc of Crisis 2.0?
The National Interest just published my latest short opinion piece:
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/2013/03/07/arc-of-crisis-2-0/fom8
The article draws attention to the fact that the US’s recognition of the growing strategic import of the Indian Ocean is less of a novel phenomenon than one might at first think. It also briefly lays out some striking parallels in-between both Pakistan and Iran’s asymmetric naval strategies. In the face of such shared threats, New Delhi and Washington should seize the opportunity to focus on mitigating A2/AD threats in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea, and, in so doing, help favorably shape one of the world’s most dynamic maritime arenas.
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