Sydney - Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Wednesday that
Australia needed more naval power to protect the country's borders in
response to a military build up in the Asia Pacific region.
'We must as a matter of priority start to rebuild those skills'
deficits in our Navy,' Rudd told reporters when asked to clarify his
warning Tuesday that there was an arms race in the region and
Australia needed to beef up its defence force in response.
The prime minister told a meeting of old soldiers that in the Asia
Pacific 'we see a substantial arms' build-up over time.'
He described the region as 'still characterized by a number of
unresolved flash points arising from unsettled territorial disputes.'
Rudd was criticized by opposition Liberal Party defence spokesman
Nick Minchin for calling for an arms build up but not pledging any
new money to pay for it.
In May, the Rudd government increased defence spending by 3 per
cent.
'If Mr Rudd is serious in what he says, they should adopt the
coalition policy of committing to a fourth air-warfare destroyer,
they should stop their procrastination and get on with that
decision,' Minchin said.
The Australian National University's Hugh White agreed with Rudd
about militarization.
'We've got to remember that for the last four or five decades
we've lived in a region of remarkable peace where the major powers
have all been getting on very well,' said White, a former senior
official in the Defence Department.
'You've got to ask yourself why are countries like China building
up their armed forces as quickly as they are and I think the key
reason is that we're seeing emerging, intensifying strategic
competition between the US and China for primacy, and I don't think
we can just assume the US will come out on top of that.'
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