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Call for Australia to consider fleet of long-range bombers

April 29, 2026

Wednesday 29 April 2026
Matthew Knott and Brittany Busch
The Age


 Australia should consider buying a fleet of ultra-modern, long-range bomber  aircraft from the United States to ensure the nation can strike far from its  shores even if the AUKUS submarine pact hits a hurdle, shadow defence  minister James Paterson has argued.
 
 Paterson said that while he was an AUKUS ''true believer'', the plan to  acquire a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines carried ''enormous risks'',  meaning contingency planning was needed to ensure Australia was not left  exposed.
 
 ''We are doing the public a disservice just by saying everything is fine,''  Paterson said in a speech to the National Press Club yesterday. ''I think we  do need to make changes so that we can deliver AUKUS.'' Paterson's first  major speech
 
 NATAGE A010 since taking on the portfolio came as the government announced a  surprise new secretary for the Department of Defence and a British  parliamentary inquiry issued a bracing wake-up call about the potential for  AUKUS to run into major problems.
 
 Paterson called for the federal government to be more upfront with the public  about the rising risk of war in the Indo-Pacific to help make the case for a  substantial increase in defence spending.
 
 ''If the Australian public knew how likely conflict is in our own region in  the near future, and how illprepared we were for it, they would be marching  in the streets demanding higher defence spending,'' he said.
 
 Paterson said he did not agree with AUKUS critics who say the US will fail to  deliver on its promise to sell three Virginia-class submarines to Australia,  or that there were easy ways to purchase submarines ''off the shelf''.
 
 ''There is no special aisle at Aldi where you can just pick up a submarine on  a dry dock that was built without an order, just hoping for a buyer,'' he  said.
 
 But he acknowledged there were ''serious obstacles'' standing in the way of  acquiring nuclear-powered submarines, including workforce and infrastructure  delays.
 
 A British parliamentary inquiry released this week found ''cracks are already  beginning to show'' when it comes to AUKUS funding, warning of ''potentially  severe consequences'' for the UK and Australia's plan to design and build a  new model of nuclear-powered submarine known as SSN-AUKUS.
 
 Paterson said he was not surprised by the warnings coming out of the UK or  the US, and given the risks, Australia needed contingencies for potential  capability gaps.
 
 ''We need to be able to say that we will have those alternative capabilities  to rely on should events get out of our control,'' the senator said.
 
 He called for the government to ''consider other supplementary capabilities  that could deliver a similar long-range, stealth strike capability'' to the  defence force. Paterson nominated the B-21 bomber as one stopgap option,  noting it was scheduled to enter service next year with the US Air Force.
 
 ''Its reported cost, while not cheap, is more affordable than a nuclear  submarine. It also requires a much smaller crew to operate,'' he said.
 
 ''Its reported range is impressive. It can carry a significant payload.''  Defence Minister Richard Marles yesterday announced that Meghan Quinn would  become the next secretary of the Department of Defence.
 
 Quinn, who has led the Department of Industry, Science and Resources since  2022, had been mentioned as a contender for the role, but her appointment  came as a surprise because of her lack of experience in the defence field.

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