Australian PM launches billion dollar defence plan to counter China in Indo-Pacific region

PM Scott Morrison announced on Wednesday that the Australian government will invest 270 billion dollars in a 10-year defence plan to ensure open trade in the Indo-Pacific region and to thwart China’s aggressive conduct against its neighbours.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Wednesday launched 270 billion Australian dollar 10-year defence plan.

Announcing the plan, Morrison said that tensions over territorial claims are rising across the Indo-Pacific region and referred to the recent dispute between India and China, the tension in the South China Sea, and the East China Sea. Under the plan, Australia will invest in land, sea and air-based long-range and hypersonic strike missiles.
“The Indo-Pacific is the epicentre of rising strategic competition. Our region will not only shape our future, increasingly though, but it is also the focus of the dominant global contest of our age,” he said.

“Tensions over territorial claims are rising across the Indo-Pacific region, as we have seen recently on the disputed border between India and China, and the South China Sea, and the East China Sea. The risk of miscalculation and even conflict is heightening,” he added.

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Australia has also announced its largest-ever investment in its cybersecurity capabilities with a new an Australian dollar 1.35 billion investment over the next decade to enhance capabilities and assistance provided to Australia

“It will include funding of $1.35 billion over the next decade to enhance the cybersecurity capabilities and assistance provided to Australians through the Australian Signals Directorate, represented here today and of course also the Australian Cyber Security Centre,” Morrison said.

This comes two-week after Australia announced that government as well as the private sector, has been hit by a major cyberattack by a “state-based actor”. Australian officials believed that China was behind the cyberattack.

Morrison asserted that it is not just China and the United States that will determine that Indo Pacific stays on a path for free and open trade.

“Japan, India, the Republic of Korea, the countries of South-East Asia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and the Pacific all have agency, choices to make, parts to play and of course, so does Australia

The prime minister said that an updated 10-year funding model will enable the defence to deliver the strategy and the complex capabilities it requires to keep the country safe.

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