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HomeNewsWorldAustralia, New Zealand assert AUKUS pact will enhance security amid strategic challenges

Australia, New Zealand assert AUKUS pact will enhance security amid strategic challenges

Australia and New Zealand leaders view AUKUS as crucial for regional security amid heightened tensions. New Zealand seeks to join the pact's technology-sharing efforts.

August 16, 2024 / 18:59 IST

Facing their most perilous security landscape since World War II, Australia and New Zealand's leaders today hailed the AUKUS pact as a crucial bulwark against growing regional threats.

The trilateral defence partnership between the United States, Australia, and Britain, they asserted, would significantly enhance security and stability in the region.

New Zealand is not a party to the defence pact between the United States, Australia and Britain but has been looking to explore a potential collaboration on "pillar two" of the agreement that focuses on shared military technology.

The "pillar two" of the AUKUS pact is separate from the first pillar designed to deliver nuclear-powered submarines to Australia.

"We share very much common values and we share common objectives, and it is not surprising we will look at any opportunity for including New Zealand in pillar two," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in a media briefing with his New Zealand counterpart, Christopher Luxon.

The U.S. has said the door was open for New Zealand to engage on AUKUS.

The comments came after the U.S. State Department on Thursday said Australia, Britain and the U.S. now have comparable export-control regimes, a significant step needed to facilitate technology sharing on AUKUS.

Security ties with Australia, New Zealand's only formal defence ally, would remain close, Luxon said.

"Our intention is to say we want to be fully interoperable with Australia's defence forces," Luxon said. Both nations signed a deal last year to help improve the capability and readiness of military personnel.

A joint statement released after a meeting between Albanese and Luxon in Canberra said they had committed to "working in lockstep like never before to ensure our nations' security and prosperity".

The prime ministers said they had "grave concern about dangerous, destabilising and provocative behaviour in the South China Sea" and underscored the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.

Both leaders highlighted threats from cyber intrusions and said they would consider hacks as an armed attack if that threatened the territorial integrity, political independence or security of either nation.

(Inputs From Reuters)

Moneycontrol News
first published: Aug 16, 2024 06:59 pm

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