Talisman Sabre exercises prepare Australia to join US war drive
A United States army unit “successfully sank a maritime target” on July 15, in the Northern Territory. It didn’t make headlines, but it should have, given the rulers’ war talk.
Reporting on Talisman Sabre, the biennial military exercises between the US and Australia, has been decidedly downbeat this July.
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Hiroshima and the continuing Illawarra peace movementJanet Parker: ‘Never again’ means never again for everyoneLabor must abandon AUKUS nowHowever, the US defence department hasn’t held back, describing the live fire exercise as “a significant milestone”. This is because the US army “successfully executed” its Typhon missile system, which proved it could “forward deploy long-range precision fires”.
Together with the Australian Defence Force (ADF), the US now has the ability to “execute command and control of a land-based maritime strike”. An ADF commanding officer also enthused about this “milestone” on July 22, saying it provides proof “that if we had a real situation we can plan and operate together”.
These bilateral war exercises, costing upwards of $100 million combined (Defence refuses to give the actual figure), take on a new focus in the context of the AUKUS military alliance, which is squarely aimed at China.
In the context........
