News

A group of bipartisan lawmakers sent a Monday letter to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth expressing support for the trilateral ...
Australia's defence minister woke up to a nightmare earlier this week - and it's one that has been looming ever since the ...
A “blueprint” for defence cooperation or an “affront” to Australian sovereignty? Expert opinion is mixed on the benefits and ...
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese welcomed comments by his British counterpart at the G7 that ...
Keir Starmer’s government, like those before it, is firmly behind the AUKUS pact. But there are some doubts the UK can ...
Increasing the number of nuclear powered submarines operated by Australia, Britain and the United States will make the Indo ...
A foreign policy expert has warned Australia and the United Kingdom could "never replicate" AUKUS without support from the ...
No American president since JFK has shown more commitment to space, and the alliance needs to be looking to new theaters.
Defence Minister Richard Marles has declined to say whether the government would be prepared to boost investment in the United States industrial base in order to secure nuclear submarines.
Labor’s national security team has steadfastly insisted that it has no plan B. This Pentagon review will stress test that formula.
On paper, Australia is the clear beneficiary of the Aukus agreement, worth £176bn ($239bn; A$368bn). The technology underpinning the pact belongs to the US, and the UK already has it, along with ...
PM Albanese told reporters that Aukus held "great advantages" for the US, Australia and Britain. Read more at ...