Syllabus: General Studies Paper 2
Context:
US President Joe Biden, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison launched the AUKUS security partnership in a joint virtual appearance. It will supplement Quad and ASEAN.
- The strategic implications of AUKUS for the geopolitics of the extended Indo-Pacific region in general, and the maritime domain in particular, are significant and multi-layered.
- This major policy decision comes just ahead of the first in-person Quad summit to be held in Washington and the annual United Nations (UN) General Assembly deliberations.
What is AUKUS?
- AUKUS will strive over the next 18 months to equip Australia with nuclear propulsion technology.
- As part of this, Australia will acquire nuclear-powered submarines with help from the UK and the US.
- So far, the United States has shared only with the United Kingdom under a decades-old arrangement put together in the face of the threat from the then Soviet Union.
- Australia’s nuclear-powered submarines, when they deploy, will be armed with conventional weapons only and not nuclear weapons
Rationale:
- The future of each involved nation and the world depends on a free and open Indo-Pacific.
- The strategic environment of the Indo-Pacific has been disturbed by China’s muscular assertiveness in the South China Sea in recent years.
- Beijing blatantly rejects international law, the UN Convention on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS), related to the maritime domain.
- The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy resorted to unilateral muscle-flexing to advance its own interpretation of historical territorial claims over disputed waters.
- Smaller Association of SouthEast Asian Nations (Asean) neighbours were intimidated by China.
- Also China has contested the “free and open Indo-Pacific” formulation of the global community.
Geopolitical significance of AUKUS
- United States: In the Pacific, the U.S. and others have been concerned about China’s actions in the South China Sea and its antipathy toward Japan, Taiwan and Australia.
- AUKUS is the first step that conveys the US resolve to punctuate the maritime domain in a manner that will not only protect Australia’s core security interests, but shape the regional strategic environment.
- Australia: Under the arrangement, Australia will build at least eight nuclear-powered submarines using U.S. expertise.
- A nuclear submarine has reach and stealth that is of a much higher order than a conventional diesel boat, and will be able to ensure a very high degree of sea-denial to any potential adversary.
- Barring the US, there is no other navy that has nuclear submarines in China’s proximity, and the inclusion of Australia into this category will inhibit the PLA Navy in a variety of ways.
- In the context of the AUKUS agreement, nuclear-powered submarines will give the Royal Australian Navy the capability to go into the South China Sea, where China is increasingly getting aggressive.
- Britain: The US said it was about ensuring peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific over the long term.
- Leaving the EU under Brexit has left Britain seeking to reassert its global position. Part of that has been an increased focus towards the Indo-Pacific.
- France: Australia told France it would end its contract with state majority-owned DCNS to build 12 of the world’s largest conventional submarines.
- The contract was worth tens of billions of dollars. France is furious and demanding explanations from Australia.
- A harsh legal battle over the contract appears inevitable.
- New Zealand: Australia’s neighbour New Zealand has been left out of the new alliance. It has a long-standing nuclear-free policy that includes a ban on nuclear-powered ships entering its ports.
- AUKUS leaves New Zealand out of a deal to share a range of information, including artificial intelligence, cyber and underwater defence capabilities.
- China: China has criticised the US for building “exclusionary blocs targeting and harming the interests of third parties”, and accused Washington of being in transgression of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT).
- The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, otherwise commonly known as the Non-Proliferation Treaty or NPT, is an international treaty with an objective to limit the escalation of a nuclear arms race and the technology related to it.
- The new alliance does not and will not supersede or outrank existing arrangements in the Indo-Pacific region such as the Quad, which the US and Australia form with India and Japan, and Asean, and that it will complement these groups and others.
- Japan, India, Australia and the U.S. already have a strategic dialogue known as ‘the Quad’.
- Quad nations have been consistent in upholding the principle of freedom of navigation, as contained in UNCLOS, at the political and diplomatic levels.
Advantages of nuclear propelled submarines
- Conventional diesel-engine submarines have batteries that keep and propel the vessel underwater. The life of these batteries can vary from a few hours to a few days.
- The newer Air-Independent Propulsion (AIP) submarines have additional fuel cells that allow them to stay underwater for longer and move faster than the conventional vessels.
- Both conventional and AIP subs need to come to the surface to recharge their batteries using the diesel engine.
- Nuclear-powered propulsion gives the submarine a near infinite capacity to stay dived. Since it is propelled by a nuclear-powered engine rather than by batteries, it does not have to emerge on the surface at all, except to replenish supplies for the crew.
- They are also able to move faster underwater than conventional submarines.
India’s nuclear-powered submarines
- India is among the six nations that have nuclear-powered submarines. The other five are the US, the UK, Russia, France and China.
- The first Indian nuclear submarine, the INS Arihant, was commissioned in 2016.
- The INS Arihant is now classified as a Strategic Strike Nuclear Submarine or SSBN, which means it is a nuclear-powered ballistic submarine.
- INS Arihant is important because it completes India’s nuclear triad, which means that the country has the capacity to launch nuclear missiles from land, aircraft, and submarine.
- A second Arihant-class submarine, INS Arighat, was secretly launched in 2017, and is likely to be commissioned soon.
The Hindustan Times Link:
https://www.hindustantimes.com/opinion/aukus-roils-the-indopacific-101631878164533.html