{"id":67830,"date":"2021-10-13T06:00:32","date_gmt":"2021-10-12T19:00:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=67830"},"modified":"2021-10-12T16:33:02","modified_gmt":"2021-10-12T05:33:02","slug":"alliance-by-uber","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/alliance-by-uber\/","title":{"rendered":"Alliance by Uber?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/figure>\n

The multifaceted failure in Afghanistan and the AUKUS announcement have generated deep reflection in Australia and elsewhere on the reliability of foreign commitments made by the United States, and on the conditions attached to them. If a fresh equilibrium settles, it\u2019s likely that US land power in Eurasia will have dropped to levels not seen for decades. Air and cyber power now largely carry the stick of American coercive force globally, and a naval arms race is accelerating. The implications<\/a> are arresting for nations like Australia.<\/p>\n

Most of the mainstream discourse here and in the US places the strategic and political parameters of the Australia\u2013US alliance within the familiar frame of isolation versus engagement. In general, notwithstanding quibbles about fears of entrapment, hubris and strategic autonomy, Canberra views isolation as bad and engagement, good.<\/p>\n

For Washington, the discussion falls largely within a similar frame regarding the Australia\u2013US alliance and much of America\u2019s foreign policy commitments around the world. The White House is calculating the costs and benefits and looking at recalibrating US engagement with the world. But the broad position is that engagement is an indispensable component of US power and influence.<\/p>\n

You could spend a doctoral thesis trying to understand whether that frame captures enough of reality and still not come to a conclusion\u2014which I did, and didn\u2019t<\/a>. But viewed through the lens of developments in military technologies and concepts over decades, another framing is becoming visible.<\/p>\n

What if the age of networked digital information technologies has opened up a type of strategic third way? What if, by building and scaling the infrastructure that supports and delivers network effects, the US has been quietly building what I have dubbed\u2014borrowing from Albert-L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Barab\u00e1si<\/a>\u2014a \u2018web without a spider\u2019?<\/p>\n

What if this networked structure could release the US and allies from the strategic and political constraints implied by the isolation\u2013engagement frame: the tensions of entrapment and abandonment and so forth?<\/p>\n

At the same time, the US has dragged the rest of the world onto the digital turf on which Washington assumed<\/a> it had all the incumbent advantages. The advent of cognitive warfare<\/a> has demonstrated the naivety of that assumption, even as the digitisation of every aspect of our lives continues apace.<\/p>\n

Reading Barab\u00e1si\u2019s work on scale-free networks informed this thinking. The technical definition of the network effect is that with each node added, the overall value of the network increases exponentially. The political definition is a bit of an inside trade: by the time your competitors notice what you\u2019re doing, it\u2019s too late.<\/p>\n

The penny would drop later that network dynamics are expressed only sporadically in military affairs.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s the commercial digital tech sector, with substantial government seed funding, in which these effects have been deployed and exploited. Look at the growth-before-profit strategies of the likes of Amazon and Uber to understand how it works. Get really big as quickly as possible, make it too costly for others to establish a rival network and instead cultivate their preferential attachment to yours. Then sit back and watch the network effects kick in.<\/p>\n

Network effects and the digital information age go hand in glove. The same can be said of Australia\u2019s embrace of US digital products and services, and this applies equally to military and civilian domains. Silicon Valley platforms are at the heart of Australia\u2019s adoption<\/a> of surveillance capitalism. Californian big tech attitudes to big data, machine learning and automation have had a huge influence on Australia\u2019s digital landscape. Our legislative and regulatory settings have been similarly open-doored, with a few notable bumps along the way and one cautionary eye on Europe.<\/p>\n

Now, AUKUS further deepens and expands Australia\u2019s military integration with US systems technology, in line with longer geopolitical<\/a>\u00a0and technological interoperability trends.<\/p>\n

As the various implications of digital networks become more visible, however, how much have Australians been informed participants in the full meaning of this embrace? What would the answer mean for the social licence for this cluster of technologies, especially those working under the hood of a whole new way of managing a multi-faceted supply network of goods, services, parts, know-how and labour it takes to co-build a fleet of nuclear-powered attack submarines?<\/p>\n

In particular, and never stated, is the advent of automated mechanism design, or AMD, which underpins the way Australia\u2019s digital evangelists think the brave new economy should work. AMD offers almost every sector, from national security to health, education, insurance, finance and retail, the promise of optimisation and efficiency by shedding processual redundancies in favour of automated algorithmic functions.<\/p>\n

Think Uber, but for everything.<\/p>\n

AMD is replacing, in a staged way, the institutional and contractual negotiation of business with automated auction markets. AMD lives and dies on data, and the massive streams each consumer now emits are sucked up and transformed into the profiles and scores which are its lifeblood. The same goes for industry and every business therein. When somebody refers to the \u2018digital economy\u2019, this is what they mean, whether they realise it or not.<\/p>\n

Experimenting with, predicting and manipulating business through designer markets is what AMD is about<\/a>. The platforms are its field of economic dreams. Markets that can be geared to specified ends are all the rage in Nobel-prize-winning economics, and the digital age has unleashed these experiments in market design at scale. People who are still using the term \u2018free markets\u2019, and the various defences thereof, have some contorting and, one suspects, some reading<\/a> to do.<\/p>\n

The digital infrastructure we share with the US, the automated mechanisms driving the digital economy and presiding over increasingly large portions of trade, business and resource allocation, might mean we already stand outside the frame in which meaningful discourse about isolation versus engagement is still viable. It seems fair, given demonstrable trends in the commercial civilian economy, to ask if AUKUS might be envisioned by some in Washington as an experiment in a subscriber model of strategic security.<\/p>\n

A scary question for scholars of the Australia\u2013US alliance: what do \u2018mateship\u2019 and a \u2018shared vision\u2019 mean under these conditions? What does shared history, the field of shared human action, mean if economic and defence interests are relegated to bids in an automated blind auction? As Jathan Sadowski<\/a> explains, subscribers in the digital economy don\u2019t own things. They rent them. Permanently. The platform wins.<\/p>\n

The idea\u2014which has risen again in commentary on AUKUS and on the US withdrawal from Afghanistan and what it means for American power\u2014that Australia\u2019s strategic horizons still fall somewhere inside a conversation about the US government\u2019s appetite for engagement has become stupefyingly redundant when one considers the emerging techno-politics of the digital economy as currently conceived.<\/p>\n

One benefit of studying digital transformation in military affairs is in seeing that the same \u2018Uberisation\u2019<\/a> dynamics also weighed heavily on the US experience in the Middle East and Central Asia. Resource optimisation was largely what Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had in mind when he appointed Arthur K. Cebrowski, the doyen of network-centric warfare, to the Office of Force Transformation in October 2001 and took the US military to war in Afghanistan.<\/p>\n

Narrow optimisation functions, whatever they are applied to but especially when they hop across contexts, are dangerous. With AUKUS, Australia\u2019s military, industries, businesses and society have taken a giant step into unknown digital territory.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

The multifaceted failure in Afghanistan and the AUKUS announcement have generated deep reflection in Australia and elsewhere on the reliability of foreign commitments made by the United States, and on the conditions attached to them. …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1020,"featured_media":67836,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[3111,2047,332],"class_list":["post-67830","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-aukus","tag-australia-us-relations","tag-technology"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nAlliance by Uber? | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/alliance-by-uber\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Alliance by Uber? | The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The multifaceted failure in Afghanistan and the AUKUS announcement have generated deep reflection in Australia and elsewhere on the reliability of foreign commitments made by the United States, and on the conditions attached to them. ...\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/alliance-by-uber\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/ASPI.org\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2021-10-12T19:00:32+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2021-10-12T05:33:02+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/20210720army8518511_041-1-e1634016682420.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"900\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"600\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Zac Rogers\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:creator\" content=\"@ASPI_org\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@ASPI_org\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"Zac Rogers\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"6 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/\",\"name\":\"The Strategist\",\"description\":\"ASPI's analysis and commentary site\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":\"required name=search_term_string\"}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-AU\"},{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-AU\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/alliance-by-uber\/#primaryimage\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/20210720army8518511_041-1-e1634016682420.jpg\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/20210720army8518511_041-1-e1634016682420.jpg\",\"width\":900,\"height\":600,\"caption\":\"Australian and United States special operations force personnel from the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force, board a United States Army MH-60M Black Hawk helicopter from 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, for a free-fall parachute training activity at RAAF Base Tindal near Katherine in the Northern Territory, as part of force integration training in preparation for Exercise Talisman Sabre 2021. *** Local Caption *** Australian and United States military personnel are taking part in Exercise Talisman Sabre in Queensland from 14 to 31 July 2021. 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