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US Republicans urge more funding for submarines in light of AUKUS deal

Published 07/27/2023, 02:20 PM
Updated 07/27/2023, 02:25 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Virginia-class attack submarine USS Hawaii (SSN 776) passes by Diamond Head crater on Oahu in Hawaii while transiting to Pearl Harbor in this July 23, 2009 handout photo obtained by Reuters July 6, 2017.     Mass Communication Specialist 2nd c
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By Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Twenty-five U.S. Republican lawmakers urged President Joe Biden on Thursday to increase funding for the country's submarine fleet, citing the recent three-nation AUKUS project to supply Australia with nuclear-powered submarines and concern about China's increasing military might.

"We support the vision of the Australia-United Kingdom-United States (AUKUS) partnership and its potential to change the strategic landscape in the Indo-Pacific. The AUKUS agreement is vitally important, but we must simultaneously protect U.S. national security," the lawmakers said in a letter.

They said the plan to sell three attack submarines to Australia would "unacceptably weaken" the U.S. fleet without a clear plan to replace them.

The letter was led by Senators Roger Wicker, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

They said Biden should make an "AUKUS-specific" spending request along with a multi-year plan to increase U.S. submarine production to a minimum of 2.5 Virginia-class attack submarines per year, compared with the 1.2 such submarines currently being produced.

The Virginia class submarines were designed by General Dynamics (NYSE:GD) Electric Boat and Huntington Ingalls (NYSE:HII) Industries.

The multi-stage AUKUS project announced in March is planned to culminate in the late 2030s and early 2040s with British and Australian production and operation of a new submarine class - SSN-AUKUS - and include "cutting edge" U.S. technologies.

Before that, in the early 2030s, the United States is supposed to sell Australia three U.S. Virginia class nuclear-powered submarines, with an option for Australia to buy two more.

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Big questions remain, however, over issues including U.S. curbs on the extensive technology sharing needed and how long it will take to deliver the Virginia-class submarines, given limited U.S. production capacity, even as the perceived threat posed by China that inspired the project mounts.

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