A bipartisan group of US politicians has written to Biden to defend the AUKUS pact and insist American shipyards are up to the task of providing Australia with a stopgap supply of nuclear-powered submarines.
A bipartisan group of United States politicians has written to President Joe Biden to strongly defend the AUKUS pact and insist American shipyards are up to the task of providing Australia with a stopgap supply of nuclear-powered submarines before the retirement of the ageing Collins-class fleet.warning the AUKUS pact risked pushing America’s industrial base to “breaking point”.
In their counter-letter to Biden, sent on Tuesday, the House members hail AUKUS as “a multi-decade and multi-generational effort – one that is worth embarking on for the security of our nation and that of our allies in the Indo-Pacific”. The House members note America’s submarine manufacturing industry has been strained by the COVID-19 pandemic but argue it could expand to meet both the US and Australia’s needs.“While it is essential to maintain a minimum of two submarines a year for the United States to meet our national security requirements, we are supportive of expanding the industrial base to meet AUKUS expectations,” they write.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has urged the Albanese government to buy two Virginia-class submarines off-the-shelf from Connecticut as an interim solution, but leading US political and military figures have warned American shipyards are already running at full capacity. , said on Twitter: “I’m proud to support AUKUS, the United States’ historic military agreement with the UK and Australia.
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