This article itself is a summary of how the strategic thought of Australia (after the grievous imminent threat to it in WW2 i.e Japan that most shaped the downstream psyche) was first geared towards Indonesia in the post WW2 scenario, and how it has now transitioned to PRC in the last couple decades.
It has links to further articles within it to more subject matter for context for the interested reader/watcher of Australian defence, associated defence technology/acquisition and defence strategy in general....which I have also brought up in other threads (in context of Australia).
Submarines are a top-of-the-budget answer to a top-of-the-pile nightmare.
The argument for subs lies within the fundamental call on any nation: defend the realm and protect the currency (proving the oldest-profession status of strategists and economists in the state-building game).
Subs touch both bits of the realm–currency injunction: new boats to defend the borders cost a cornucopia ($89.7 billion is the current Attack-class price tag).
While economists reside in gloom, strategists dwell in horrors: dream up the worst possible scenario and then defend against it. Strategy wonks speak of low-probability, high-impact events.
To argue from first principles, submarines are what you have for the ultimate military nightmare—hostile forces coming to harm your territory. It has only happened once in the history of this Commonwealth, a high-impact moment that consumed all else. The 1942 experience is the existential fright that haunts Oz strategy.
(More at link)
@Joe Shearer @#comcom @Nein2.0 @Webslave @mrmoo @Test7 @Yoyo @ANMDT @Dante80 et al.
It has links to further articles within it to more subject matter for context for the interested reader/watcher of Australian defence, associated defence technology/acquisition and defence strategy in general....which I have also brought up in other threads (in context of Australia).
The strange submarine saga: strategy and nightmares | The Strategist
Submarines are a top-of-the-budget answer to a top-of-the-pile nightmare. The argument for subs lies within the fundamental call on any nation: defend the realm and protect the currency (proving the oldest-profession status of strategists and ...
www.aspistrategist.org.au
Submarines are a top-of-the-budget answer to a top-of-the-pile nightmare.
The argument for subs lies within the fundamental call on any nation: defend the realm and protect the currency (proving the oldest-profession status of strategists and economists in the state-building game).
Subs touch both bits of the realm–currency injunction: new boats to defend the borders cost a cornucopia ($89.7 billion is the current Attack-class price tag).
While economists reside in gloom, strategists dwell in horrors: dream up the worst possible scenario and then defend against it. Strategy wonks speak of low-probability, high-impact events.
To argue from first principles, submarines are what you have for the ultimate military nightmare—hostile forces coming to harm your territory. It has only happened once in the history of this Commonwealth, a high-impact moment that consumed all else. The 1942 experience is the existential fright that haunts Oz strategy.
(More at link)
@Joe Shearer @#comcom @Nein2.0 @Webslave @mrmoo @Test7 @Yoyo @ANMDT @Dante80 et al.