Aircraft Carrier USS ‘Nimitz’ Sets Sail for Final Deployment
The nearly 50-year old USS Nimitz, the lead vessel of its class, departed from the Naval Air Station in San Diego for what is likely to be its final deployment....
By David Stringer (Bloomberg) Australia expects to soon announce more specifics of a plan to acquire nuclear-powered submarines under a security partnership with the U.S. and U.K., Defense Minister Peter Dutton said.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison in September announced the new defense alliance and moved to scrap a deal struck in 2016 with French shipbuilder Naval Group to build as many as 12 diesel-powered vessels, a project that had blown out to an estimated A$90 billion ($66 billion).
“We will have an announcement within the next couple of months about which boat we are going with, what we can do in the interim,” Dutton told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television Sunday. “Both the U.S. and the U.K. understand the timelines, they understand what is happening in the Indo-Pacific, and they are very, very willing partners.”
The partners had initially said work on the details and specifications could potentially take 18 months. Morrison’s government faces a national election that must by held by May.
Australia’s investment is intended to replace an aging fleet of Collins Class submarines. Dutton indicated Australia hoped to have its first nuclear-powered vessels before 2040, the current date by which they’re expected to be in service.
“We are going to acquire the capability much sooner than that,” Dutton said. “The arrangement that’s underway at the moment between the U.S. and U.K. has been incredibly productive.”© 2022 Bloomberg L.P.
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