Australia news live: Aukus nations to develop uncrewed undersea vehicles to protect cables; Hanson backs Taylor’s indexation plan

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The United States, Australia and Britain are developing high-tech payloads for uncrewed underseas vehicles under their trilateral security partnership, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth announced on Saturday.

As Agence France-Presse reports, Hegseth met his Australian and British counterparts on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, where they reviewed progress on the Aukus pact, aimed at bolstering their presence in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.

“Today, we’re pleased to announce the first AUKUS Pillar 2 signature project, focused on fielding advanced uncrewed undersea vehicles, or UUVs,” Hegseth told reporters at a briefing at the US embassy in Singapore.

“This signature project will deliver a suite of highly adaptable multi-mission UUV payloads designed to support undersea operations and maintain our collective advantage in the maritime domain.”

Aukus’s Pillar 1 focuses on Australia’s acquisition of conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines, while Pillar 2 pools the talents of each nation’s defence sector to develop advanced military capabilities.

The pact is framed as supporting a “free and open Indo-Pacific”, though it is widely viewed as a bulwark against a rising China, which strongly opposes it.

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has supported Angus Taylor’s plans to index Australia’s tax thresholds, telling Sky News “they just keep moving all the time”.

Hanson says she wants to have a look at tax policy ahead of the next election, proposing an “overhaul” to “make it a fairer system.”

Those people who work overtime do their 40 hours a week or 38 hours a week, they’re working overtime, they’re taxed to the hilt, and I think we need to overhaul the whole taxation system.

Taylor’s plan is designed to combat bracket creep, and will cost at least $22.5bn.

Hanson says she is not across the detail of Labor’s plans on negative gearing, capital gains tax and trusts, admitting she has been campaigning this week. Labor has already introduced the legislation for the budget changes.

Hanson says she’s concerned the government is including tax cuts in the legislation, calling it “a ploy by the Labor party” to wedge the opposition and minor parties.

Continuing that report from Agence France-Presse: British defence secretary John Healey said that the planned technology, a “range of cutting edge sensors and weapons systems” for underseas drones, “will rapidly give our forces the very most advanced battlefield technologies”.

The systems will be deployed on uncrewed underwater vessels, Healey added.

The protection of underwater infrastructure has been a major topic of discussion at Asia’s premier annual defence summit at a ingapore hotel.

“The seabed has become a major field of contest over the past 18 months,” Australia’s defence minister, Richard Marles, earlier told delegates.

We have witnessed a series of attacks against subsea critical infrastructure at a scale and frequency that is historically unprecedented.

There has been several incidents in the past two years of seabed cables being damaged by ships, both in the Baltic and around the Asian region.

Nearly all of Australia’s internet traffic flows through just 15 subsea cables, Canberra’s top diplomat pointed out.

Our ability to operate as a modern economy and a functioning state, all of it is critically dependent on infrastructure that is exposed, that cannot move.

As we’ve now seen demonstrated in the Baltic, [it] can be cut with an anchor in the middle of the night.

You can read more about Marles’s warning here, from reporter Ben Doherty:

The United States, Australia and Britain are developing high-tech payloads for uncrewed underseas vehicles under their trilateral security partnership, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth announced on Saturday.

As Agence France-Presse reports, Hegseth met his Australian and British counterparts on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, where they reviewed progress on the Aukus pact, aimed at bolstering their presence in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.

“Today, we’re pleased to announce the first AUKUS Pillar 2 signature project, focused on fielding advanced uncrewed undersea vehicles, or UUVs,” Hegseth told reporters at a briefing at the US embassy in Singapore.

“This signature project will deliver a suite of highly adaptable multi-mission UUV payloads designed to support undersea operations and maintain our collective advantage in the maritime domain.”

Aukus’s Pillar 1 focuses on Australia’s acquisition of conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines, while Pillar 2 pools the talents of each nation’s defence sector to develop advanced military capabilities.

The pact is framed as supporting a “free and open Indo-Pacific”, though it is widely viewed as a bulwark against a rising China, which strongly opposes it.

Hello, this is Luca Ittimani here, to take you through the day’s news as it unfolds on what is so far a sunny Sunday morning – in Sydney, at least.

Richard Marles has told a Singapore defence summit the “seabed is a battlefield”, as a new Aukus project was announced to protect undersea cables.

And Clare O’Neil will be speaking on the ABC’s Insiders program shortly, discussing Labor’s recent changes to the capital gains tax.

We’ll have more coming up – say tuned.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com