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OPV contract awarded to L3

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In another example of ongoing progress in the national shipbuilding enterprise, Lurssen Australia, the prime contractor for the design and build of 12 new...

With or without China?

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By Richard McGregor* When Southeast Asian leaders gathered for a recent summit with Australia in Sydney, many of their diplomats had a question for their...

How to react to Chinese challenge to RAN ship?

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By Euan Graham How should we react to news reports that China challenged Australian warships in the course of transiting the South China Sea, on...

Taiwan submarine force a step closer

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World naval developments April 2018 By Norman Friedman* Early in April the Administration announced that it had approved a marketing license allowing U.S. companies to sell...

British intervention in the Baltic: 1800-1801

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Jason Lancaster: In 1801, it seemed as if Britain had made the entire world her enemy. Her allies had dropped by the wayside, Spain had swapped sides and allied with France, Austria was defeated, and Russia, under Tsar Paul, schemed to divide Europe between itself and France. Three coalitions formed against Republican France had already collapsed, leaving Britain friendless and alone. Yet, Britain fought on, alone.

A sovereign defence industry for Australia

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Brendan Nicholson: International defence companies have been warned that seeking a share of the $200 billion to be spent upgrading the Australian Defence Force will require a much greater commitment than simply obtaining an Australian business number. Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne used a speech at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (April 2018) to launch Australia’s first Defence Industrial Capability Plan, which he described as a blueprint to create the maximum alignment between defence needs and defence industry.

Defend the ‘rules-based order’ in Asia at any cost?

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By Hugh White* It is good to see Ben Schreer and Nick Bisley set out so clearly the questions that lie unanswered at the heart of Australia’s foreign policy today (Article is here..) They ask whether we’re really serious about defending Asia’s status quo—the ‘rules-based order’—by opposing China’s bid for regional hegemony in East Asia, and if so what are we willing to do about it? These questions have been evaded for too long

The last sortie of the German High Sea Fleet – April 1918

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By James Goldrick* 23 April 2018 marks the centenary of the British raid on the German held ports of Zeebrugge and Ostend on the Belgian...

Maritime scholarships for women

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End of financial year funding available: women's leadership development Women & Leadership Australia is administering a national initiative to support the development of female leaders...

Three hard questions of US maritime strategy

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By Frank T. Goertner* From the White House to the Pentagon, the message is clear. The world of 21st Century great power competition has arrived, and it is distinctly different from the one today’s U.S. national security enterprise was designed to confront. Now is the time for every agency, department, and service in the executive branch to ask itself hard questions and consider decisive change.