For more than a century, Australia has followed the same defence policy: dependence on a great power. This was first the United Kingdom and then the United States.
Without properly considering other options, successive federal governments have intensified this policy with the AUKUS agreement and locked Australia into dependency on the US for decades to come.
A more imaginative and innovative government would have investigated different ways to achieve a strong and independent national defense policy.
One that, for instance, didn’t require Australia to surrender its sovereignty to a foreign power. Nor require the acquisition of fabulously expensive nuclear-powered submarines and the building of overpriced, under-gunned surface warships, such as the Hunter frigates.
In fact, in an age of rapidly improving uncrewed systems, Australia does not need any crewed warships or submarines at all.
Instead, Australia should lean into a military philosophy that I describe in my upcoming book, The Big Fix: Rebuilding Australia’s National Security. This is known as the “strategic defensive.”
What is the strategic defensive?
The strategic defensive is a method of waging war employed throughout history, although the term’s use only dates to the early 19th century. It doesn’t require a state to defeat its attacker. Rather, the state must deny the aggressor the ability to achieve their objectives.
The strategic defensive best suits “status quo states” like Australia. The people of status quo states are happy with what they have. Their needs can be met without recourse to intimidation or violence. These states also tend to be militarily weak relative to potential aggressors, and aren’t aggressors themselves.
In short, if war eventuates, Australia’s only goal is to prevent a change to the status quo. In this way, strategic defensive would suit very well as the intellectual foundation of Australia’s security policy.
Strong reasons for a strategic defensive approach
There are also sound military and technological reasons why Australia should frame its security around the strategic defensive.
First, defense is the naturally stronger position in war, compared to attack.
It is harder to capture ground (including sea and airspace) than it is to hold it. All aggressors must attack into the unknown, bringing their support with them. Defenders, by contrast, can fall back onto a known space and the provisions it can supply.

Military thinkers generally agree that to succeed in war, an attacker needs a three-to-one strength advantage over the defender.
And the wide water moat surrounding the Australian continent greatly complicates and increases the cost of any aggressor’s effort to harm us.
Australia could also use weapons now available to enhance the inherent power of being the defending side. Its task needs only to be making any attack prohibitively expensive, in terms of equipment and human life.
Long-range strike missiles and drones, combined with sensors, provide the defending nation with the opportunity to create a lethal killing zone around it. This is what China has done in the East and South China Seas.
Australia can do the same by integrating missiles, drones and uncrewed maritime vessels with a sensor network linked to a command-control-targeting system.
Missiles and drones are a better buy when compared to the nuclear-powered submarines Australia hopes to acquire from the United States, as well as the warships – including more submarines – the government plans to build in the Osborn and Henderson shipyards.
And most importantly, they are available now.
A smarter strategy
A defensive network also makes strategic sense for Australia, unlike the planned AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines. Australia has no need to operate in distant waters, such as those off the coast of China.
In addition, Australia can afford so few vessels that their deterrence effect is not credible. Missiles and drones are vastly cheaper, meaning Australia can buy them in the thousands.
Australia is making the mistake of focusing on the platform – expensive ships and planes – rather than the effect needed: the destruction of a potential enemy with swarms of weapons.
In fact, the age of large crewed warships, both on and below the sea, is coming to an end. Long-range strike technology means the sea can now be controlled from the land. Rapidly improving sensors make it impossible for attackers to hide on, below or above the surface of the ocean.
A better bet would be for Australia to invest in uncrewed surface and sub-surface maritime vessels to patrol its approaches, as well as large numbers of land-based launchers and missiles.
For a small power such as Australia, investing in this makes more sense than a small, bespoke number of extremely expensive and vulnerable warships.
It’s not too late to rethink
It is clear Australian leaders have decided to intensify Australia’s dependence on the US rather than seeking to create a military capable of securing the nation on our own.
The cost is nigh-on ruinous in terms of not just money, but also the entanglement in foreign-led wars and potential reputational loss.
Perhaps worst of all, the nation is making itself into a target – possibly a nuclear target – if war between the US and China was to eventuate.
This need not have been the outcome of the government’s recent defence reviews. But it’s not too late to rethink.
By adopting a different military philosophy as the guide for its security decision-making, Australia could manage its security largely on its own. This only requires leaders with a willingness to think differently.
Albert Palazzo is adjunct professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at UNSW Canberra, UNSW Sydney
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Why not have both. Why not start building subs in Australia now. Build body and framework then join as needed. Long term strategy. In meantime invest in missiles short range by the thousands and long rage by the hundreds. Then look at cruise missile options to see what can be made locally and best suits our needs. Unmanned ships and subs need to be more reliable to be a viable option. Unmanned vessels need to have top notch security to be able to stop hackers getting control of system. Long term offensive strategy and short term defensive strategy can compliment each other. Just have to achieve the right balance.
Why not have both. Why not start building subs in Australia now. Build body and framework then join as needed. Long term strategy. In meantime invest in missiles short range by the thousands and long rage by the hundreds. Then look at cruise missile options to see what can be made locally and bestsuits our needs. Unmanned ships and subs need to be more reliable to be a viable option. Unmanned vessels need to have top notch security to be able to stop hackers getting control of system. Long term offensive stategy and short term defensive strategy can compliment each other. Just have to achieve the right balance.
I agree.
Fundamentally though…..why the F would China want to invade, occupy and annex Australia?
Commercially then…… overpriced and overpriced defense deals define western imperialistic foreign policy.
It is time Europe and Australia unshackle themselves from being pawns of UK+US foreign policy.
Has China ever declared military hostility towards Australia? No! Then, why keep following Americans in saying “deterring China”? Is it 5 eyes stupidity or arrogance or racism or all of them?
Australia 🇦🇺 🪃 must be the most stupid country in the 🌎 whole world it can not make any simple military decisions all I can see is that australia will be king hit with warfare with China and australia will never wake up again with FREEDOM TO BAD 👎 I SUPPOSE IT WAS MEANT TO BE HAAAAAA HAAAAAAA HAAAAAAAA A COUNTRY OF MENTAL ROBOTS 🧠🧠🧠🧠🧠🧠🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖
By the time Australia gets its subs from the US, probably around 2050, they’ll be obsolete.
By that time the Aussies will have been fed up with waiting. No way they get any subs. They will still be using the Collins. US has lost its manufacturing and supply chains. But they haven’t lost their talk. So they will easily convince the gullible Aussies to wait.
It’s not about subs, it’s about nukes.
Leftover Man
abracadabra. Now you see a sub now you don’t. Where is it? Up your A. Can you smell it? Open defecate. At least the aussies are gullible and who lost everything to china by bringing in spies and IP theieves, but they still buy china’s toilets.
Before then it will be Brit & US boats with an increasing number of Aussie crews.
Wishful thinking from an incel lol
The Aussie crews are gophers. You get my slippers. The one with the furry fur. Yes sir. Three bags full sir. Anything for Aukus Sir.