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The AUKUS is an expansion of the UK-US, which originated from the Atlantic Charter before the World War II of 1941.
President Biden also highlights Australia as an ally for over 100 years, through WWI, WWII, the Korean War, and the Persian War, which indicate the new trilateral alliance the AUKUS is military and strategic.
There will be spherical partners, including France, Japan, and Taiwan.
here will be the Quad meeting on September 25 at D.C., Japanese Premier Suga will attend physically.
Taiwanese people are aware of the presence of Jau-Shieh Joseph Wu, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Koo Li-Hsiung, the Secretary-General of the National Security Council in the Monterey Talks. But few noticed Chou Mei-wu, former Navy vice admiral now the director-general of the Coast Guard Administration. And Sandra Oudkirk, the Director of ATI, Taipei.
Remarks by
President Biden, Prime Minister Morrison of Australia, and Prime Minister
Johnson of the United Kingdom Announcing the Creation of AUKUS The White House 20210915
PRIME
MINISTER MORRISON:
Well, good morning from Australia.
I’m very pleased to join two great friends
of freedom and of Australia: Prime Minister Johnson and President Biden.
Today, we join our nations in a next-generation partnership built on a strong foundation of proven trust.
We have always seen the world through a similar lens. We have always believed in a world that favors
freedom; that respects human dignity, the rule of
law, the independence of sovereign states, and the
peaceful fellowship of nations.
And while we’ve always looked to each other to do what we believe is right,
we have never left at — each other. Always together. Never alone.
Our world is becoming more complex, especially here in our region, the Indo-Pacific. This affects us all. The future of the
Indo-Pacific will impact all our futures.
To meet these challenges, to help deliver the security and stability our region
needs, we must now take our partnership to a new
level — a partnership that seeks to
engage, not to exclude; to contribute,
not take; and to enable and empower, not to
control or coerce.
And so, friends, AUKUS is born — a new enhanced trilateral security partnership between Australia,
the United Kingdom, and the United States.
AUKUS: a partnership where our
technology, our scientists, our industry, our defense forces are all working
together to deliver a safer and more secure region that ultimately benefits
all.
AUKUS will also enhance our contribution to our growing network of partnerships
in the Indo-Pacific region: ANZUS; our ASEAN friends; our bilateral
strategic partners, the Quad; Five Eyes countries; and, of course, our
dear Pacific family.
The first major initiative of AUKUS will be to deliver
a nuclear-powered submarine fleet for Australia. Over the next 18 months,
we will work together to seek to determine the best way forward to achieve this. This will include an intense examination of what
we need to do to exercise our nuclear stewardship responsibilities here in Australia.
We intend to build these submarines in Adelaide,
Australia, in close cooperation with the United Kingdom and the United States.
But let me be clear: Australia is not seeking to acquire nuclear weapons or
establish a civil nuclear capability. And
we will continue to meet all our nuclear non-proliferation
obligations.
Australia has a long history of defense cooperation with the United States
and the United Kingdom. For more than a century,
we have stood together for the course of peace and freedom, motivated by the beliefs
we share, sustained by the bonds of friendship we have forged, enabled by the sacrifice
of those who have gone before us, and inspired by our shared hope for those who
will follow us.
And so, today, friends, we recommit ourselves to this cause and a new AUKUS vision.
PRIME MINISTER
JOHNSON:
I’m delighted to join President Biden and Prime Minister Morrison to announce
that the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States are creating a new trilateral
defense partnership, known as AUKUS, with the aim of working hand in glove to preserve
security and stability in the Indo-Pacific.
We’re opening a new chapter in our friendship, and the first task of this
partnership will be to help Australia acquire a fleet
of nuclear-powered submarines, emphasizing, of course, that the submarines
in question will be powered by nuclear reactors, not
armed with nuclear weapons. And our work will be fully in line with our non-proliferation
obligations.
This will be one of the most complex and technically demanding projects in
the world, lasting for decades and requiring the most advanced technology. It will draw on the
expertise that the UK has acquired over generations, dating back to the launch
of the Royal Navy’s first nuclear submarine over 60 years ago; and together, with
the other opportunities from AUKUS, creating hundreds of highly skilled jobs across
the United Kingdom, including in Scotland, the north of England, and the Midlands,
taking forward this government’s driving purpose of leveling up across the whole
country.
We will have a new opportunity to reinforce Britain’s place at the leading
edge of science and technology, strengthening our national expertise. And perhaps most significantly, the UK, Australia,
and the U.S. will be joined even more closely together, reflecting the measure of
trust between us, the depth of our friendship, and the enduring strength of our
shared values of freedom and democracy.
Only a handful of countries possess nuclear-powered submarines, and it is a momentous decision for any nation to acquire this formidable
capability and, perhaps, equally momentous, for any other state to come to its aid. But Australia is one of our oldest friends, a kindred nation and a fellow democracy, and a natural partner in this enterprise.
Now, the UK will embark on this project alongside our allies, making the world
safer and generating jobs across our United Kingdom.
Thank you. Over to you, Mr. President.
PRESIDENT BIDEN: Thank you, Boris. And I want to thank that fellow down under. Thank you very much, pal. Appreciate it, Mr. Prime Minister.
I’m honored today to be joined by two of America’s closest allies — Australia
and the United Kingdom — to launch a new phase of the trilateral security cooperation
among our countries.
As Prime Minister Morrison and Prime Minister Johnson said, I want to thank
you for this partnership, your vision as we embark together on this strategic mission.
Although Australia, the UK, and U.S. partnership — AUKUS — it sounds strange
with all these acronyms, but it’s a good one, AUKUS — our nations will update and
enhance our shared ability to take on the threats of the 21st century just as we
did in the 20th century: together.
Our nations and our brave fighting forces have stood
shoulder-to-shoulder for literally more than
100 years: through the trench fighting in World
War I, the island hopping of World War
II, during the frigid winters in Korea,
and the scorching heat of the Persian Gulf. The United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom
have long been faithful and capable partners, and we’re even closer today.
Today, we’re taking another historic step
to deepen and formalize cooperation among all three of our nations because we all
recognize the imperative of ensuring peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific over
the long term.
We need to be able to address both the
current strategic environment in the region and
how it may evolve. Because the future of each of our nations — and
indeed the world — depends on a free and open Indo-Pacific enduring and flourishing
in the decades ahead — ahead.
This is about investing in our greatest source of strength — our alliances
— and updating them to better meet the threats of today and tomorrow.
It’s about connecting America’s existing allies and partners in new ways and amplifying
our ability to collaborate, recognizing that there
is no regional divide separating the interests of our Atlantic and Pacific partners.
Indeed, this effort reflects a broader trend of key European countries playing
an extremely important role in the Indo-Pacific.
France, in particular, already has a substantial
Indo-Pacific presence and is a key partner and ally in strengthening the security
and prosperity of the region.
The United States looks forward to working closely
with France and other key countries as we go forward.
And finally, this initiative is about making sure that each of us has a modern
capability — the most modern capabilities we need — to maneuver and defend against
rapidly evolving threats.
AUKUS will bring together our sailors, our scientists,
and our industries to maintain and expand our edge in military capabilities
and critical technologies, such as cyber, artificial intelligence, quantum technologies,
and undersea domains.
You know, as a key project under AUKUS, we are launching consultations with
Australia’s acquisition of conventionally armed,
nuclear-powered submarines for its navy — conventionally armed.
I want to be exceedingly clear about this: We’re not talking
about nuclear-armed submarines. These
are conventionally armed submarines that are powered by nuclear reactors. This technology is
proven. It’s safe. And the United States and the UK have been operating
nuclear-powered submarines for decades.
I have asked Secretary Austin and the Department of Defense to lead this effort
for the U.S. government in close collaboration with the Department of Energy and
Department of State.
Our governments will now launch an 18-month consultation period to determine
every element of this program — from workforce, to training requirements, to production
timelines, to safeguards and nonproliferation measures, and to nuclear stewardship
and safety — to ensure full compliance with each of
our nation’s commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
We’ll all undertake this effort in a way that reflects the longstanding leadership
in global nonproliferation and rigorous verification standards, in partnership and
consultation with the International Atomic Energy Agency.
So, I want to thank the Prime Minister — Prime Minister Morrison and Prime
Minister Johnson for their friendship, but mostly important for their leadership
and partnership as we undertake this new phase of our security cooperation.
And the United States will also continue to work with ASEAN and the Quad,
as was stated earlier; our five treaty allies
and other close partners in the Indo-Pacific;
as well as allies and partners in Europe
and around the world to maintain a free and open Indo-Pacific, and build a future
of peace, opportunity for all the people of the region.
We’re joining together. Partnerships
are getting stronger. This is what we’re
about.
I want to thank you all. And I look
forward to seeing both of you in person very soon, I hope.
Thank you. Thank you.
5:12 P.M. EDT
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