What about the RAAF in the AUKUS equation?
July 28, 2025
All the commentary about AUKUS is predicated on some kind of conflict with China over Taiwan. That is foolishness personified. But there is another factor that is even more bewildering. Both sides of the argument appear to have forgotten the existence of the RAAF.
Three nuclear-powered American submarines, some built in Britain, to be delivered somewhere in the 2050s at some unknown, eye-watering cost is an exercise that only an unbalanced Prime Minister who needed five additional secret ministries would have contemplated. And only agreed to by another PM determined not to be ‘wedged’ as being soft on defence; and with a Deputy hopelessly infatuated with America.
As it happens, I was commissioned by ASPI a couple of years ago to investigate the procurement of the RAAF’s major weaponry – the Hornets, the Super Hornets and the Growlers.
However, what follows is taken from public sources open to anyone with a computer. My essential conclusions are these:
- We have never been better able to defend Australia from the air in our entire existence.
- We could mount an attack on Chinese forces in a Taiwan battlespace that would not only deliver a powerful setback to the ‘enemy’, it would disable their weapons’ electronics in the process.
What more could a nuclear-powered submarine do?
We did not reach this excellent RAAF situation easily. There were plenty of political and bureaucratic squabbles along the way. But our RAAF’s fighting power now consists of:
- Twenty-four Super Hornets
- Seventy-two of the latest F-35s, the spearhead of the force, with 28 more to come.
- Eleven Growlers, based on a Super Hornet digital architecture, but with a purpose-built, penetrating warfare system. This allows it to go to a forward area of the air fight and from there to disable the enemy’s weaponry in the battle space. The Growler is a magnitude different from its deadly Super Hornet fighters. It doesn’t just protect itself and its accompanying aircraft, it controls the electronic warfare over the entire battlefield, including naval adversaries.
- Six Boeing Wedgetail early warning and control aircraft.
A full complement of support aircraft to refuel the attack force going and coming.
For the first time in our history, we could fight a battle – by ourselves – a great distance from our shores. We could give any attacker using conventional forces upgraded from World War II a very painful black eye…without America. And without spending an additional dollar.
China is our biggest trading partner. Without her, our economy doesn’t bear thinking about. So we are not going to provoke her as long as an Albanese-Wong Government is running the show. Should the baton pass to Richard Marles or Andrew Hastie that’s another matter.
America provokes China (and vice versa) because both want to be top dog. Since the advent of Trump, there’s not much of a choice between them. Maybe Xi Jinping lusts for Taiwan; we’ll see. Maybe he knows how to swallow a golf ball.
If we do decide to free up those untold AUKUS millions (billions), that leads naturally to the next question: how better could use them. Well, as the big bubble of the postwar boomers moves to their eternal rest, we could begin to repay the young people of today who have copped the housing shortage we never knew, the productivity we’ve denied them, and the notion that work is confined to some other place than home.
That’s if there’s anything left over from the horrors of the climate change that we bequeathed them.
The views expressed in this article may or may not reflect those of Pearls and Irritations.