The United States will find a way to provide the nuclear-powered submarines promised to Australia as part of the AUKUS security pact despite the massive backlogs plaguing American shipbuilding yards, Deputy U.S. Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said Wednesday.
Campbell, who recently departed a role as President Joe Bidenâs âAsia czarâ to become the second-most senior U.S. diplomat, said it was âfair to sayâ American submarine production is hampered, but added that there was already a âsubstantial focusâ on the issue at the Pentagon.
Supply-chain issues have hamstrung production at American shipyards, but the billions of dollars of investments made by Canberra in the shipbuilding industry was helping fix that, he explained.
âAs is always the case, more money helps,â Campbell said at an event at the Center for a New American Security held to mark a year since the AUKUS submarine deal was unveiled. âAUKUS, in many respects, is a game changer. It is basically finding the way forward.âÂ
Campbell acknowledged the injection of Australian funds â though âvery generousâ â would not be enough on its own, and that ânew investmentsâ and ânew capabilitiesâ would be needed âto increase our ability both to service and also produce submarines.â
âBacklogs and bottlenecks have plagued a number of programs,â he said. âThere is a very serious endeavor underway to see what steps can be taken to not only to assist a program like AUKUS but, frankly, certain munitions which are central to American military purpose.â
Australia has earmarked a total of AU$368 billion, or about US$245 billion, over the next 30 years as part of the AUKUS pact, which is aimed at countering Chinaâs expansionism in the Indo-Pacific.
AUKUS pact
Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States unveiled the deal in March last year for the latter two nations to arm Australia with nuclear submarines over the coming decades under AUKUS.
As part of that, the United States committed to selling between three and five Virginia-class nuclear submarines, which use conventional weapons, to Canberra over the next decade in exchange for some US$3 billion of Australian investment in American shipyards.
But concerns have emerged in Australia that the United States may not be able to provide the submarines due to backlogs. Meanwhile, U.S. lawmakers, such as Sen. Bill Hagerty, a Republican from Tennessee, have pondered if the United States has submarines to spare.
A U.S. defense spending bill signed last month also cut funding for production of a Virginia-class sub, with Rep. Joe Courtney, a Democrat from Connecticut who co-chairs the AUKUS Working Group, saying the move could undercut plans to provide submarines to Australia.
âOne of the big questions with AUKUS was: Will it provide enough submarines to keep the US fleet at an adequate level and will it produce enough submarines to satisfy the three boats that we agreed to sell?â the lawmaker told Australiaâs Sydney Morning Herald.
Australian and U.S. officials, though, have maintained the submarines will be provided by the early 2030s, by which time Australia expects to begin producing its own submarines with British help.
Multilateralism
During Wednesdayâs event, Campbell also flagged the possibility of Japan and the Philippines joining AUKUS in some capacity, with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. visiting the White House on April 11.
âIt is true that there are other countries that have expressed an interest to participate, under the right circumstances,â he said. âI think you’ll hear that we have something to say about that next week.â
The No. 2 American diplomat said it was all part of a push by the United States to shift its Indo-Pacific alliances in a more multilateral direction, and away from a series of bilateral relationships.
âIt used to be that we had this âhub and spokeâ set of relationships between the United States and allies and partners,â Campbell said. âNow we’re creating ⦠a âlattice-fenceâ arrangement, with lots of intertwined overlapping interlocking engagements.â
Edited by Malcolm Foster.