{"id":70853,"date":"2022-03-01T14:30:10","date_gmt":"2022-03-01T03:30:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=70853"},"modified":"2022-03-09T11:40:05","modified_gmt":"2022-03-09T00:40:05","slug":"australian-spike-missiles-could-have-helped-ukraine-but-theyre-not-even-being-built-yet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/australian-spike-missiles-could-have-helped-ukraine-but-theyre-not-even-being-built-yet\/","title":{"rendered":"Australian Spike missiles could have helped Ukraine, but they\u2019re not even being built yet"},"content":{"rendered":"
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When the United States offered to evacuate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky<\/a> two days after Russia launched its unprovoked invasion of his country, he replied<\/a>, \u2018The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride.\u2019<\/p>\n

Many of the fence-sitting Western democracies have now agreed to provide that ammunition, including Germany, which has abandoned<\/a> its ludicrous position that it was somehow legitimate<\/a> to sell weapons to Middle Eastern autocracies but not to a neighbouring democracy that is fighting for its life.<\/p>\n

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has also stated<\/a> that Australia will now provide weapons and not merely non-lethal assistance. Australia is \u2018working through\u2019 the details of that contribution with its partners.<\/p>\n

But working through the options will likely show how woefully unprepared Australia is to defend itself, let alone help others.<\/p>\n

At first blush, donations of the Javelin shoulder-fired anti-tank missile would seem to be a good choice. The US has been providing them to Ukraine, which has been putting them to use. So much so that Saint Javelin<\/a> is becoming a symbol of the Ukrainians\u2019 determined resistance.<\/p>\n

The Australian Army has used Javelins since at least 2003 when the special forces employed<\/a> them in Iraq. In October 2020, the US approved<\/a> the sale of a further 200 Javelins to Australia.<\/p>\n

But the footage<\/a> posted<\/a> on social media showing burning armoured vehicles across Ukraine suggests that Australia could provide all 200 and it would only meet a few hours\u2019 consumption\u2014and leave few here for our army.<\/p>\n

That\u2019s been one of the key lessons from recent armed conflict; the consumption of guided weapons is huge and maintaining the flow to troops is crucial to success.<\/p>\n

But it doesn\u2019t appear that the Australian Department of Defence has learned that lesson if the recent history of its (non-)acquisition of the Spike missile is anything to go by.<\/p>\n

In August 2018 the government announced<\/a> it had selected the Spike LR2 (the long-range version) to arm the army\u2019s Boxer combat reconnaissance vehicles and that it would be built here. Spike, produced by Israeli company Rafael, is in a similar class of weapon to the Javelin, but in addition to the man-portable version it also has longer range variants that can be installed on vehicles, helicopters, drones and even small warships.<\/p>\n

Three and a half years later, where are we? Can we supply Spike missiles from an Australian production line to the beleaguered Ukrainians (putting aside the separate and rather sensitive question of whether Israel would<\/a> allow<\/a> it)? Unfortunately, no. Not only are missiles not coming off an Australian production line, but Rafael and its local partner Varley Rafael Australia haven\u2019t even received a contract to start production.<\/p>\n

Defence officials have said that Rafael\u2019s technical data was inadequate to allow Defence to certify the missile, so Varley Rafael Australia has been engaged<\/a> to \u2018support technical certification of Spike\u2019. Let\u2019s unpack that. Spike variants<\/a> have been in service since the 1980s and the long-range version sought by Australia has been around for more than a decade. Not only is Spike in service with 36 nations, it\u2019s manufactured under licence in several countries. These include advanced industrial nations such as Germany<\/a> that have very mature engineering, production and technical certification processes.<\/p>\n

So, we have to conclude either that a mature missile that is being produced by technologically advanced countries such as Israel and Germany somehow has terrible technical documentation or that Defence\u2019s Capability Acquisition and Sustainment Group has such uniquely high technical certification requirements that they greatly exceed those of other demanding users and producers. Since the former appears unlikely, one can only conclude that the latter is the case.<\/p>\n

We should also recall that since that 2018 announcement, the government released its 2020 defence strategic update which assessed that the Australian Defence Force needed more offensive firepower and, perhaps most importantly, we could no longer rely on 10 years of warning to acquire that firepower to prepare for regional conflict involving Australia. The update also announced that \u2018Defence will increase the range and quantity of the weapon stocks it holds. Funding has also been allocated for exploring and potentially implementing additional measures, including the development of sovereign manufacturing capabilities for advanced guided weapons.\u2019<\/p>\n

In March last year, the government announced<\/a> that it would actually establish a sovereign guided weapons enterprise. A billion dollars has been allocated to set it up, in addition to the planned $100 billion<\/a> acquisition of guided weapons systems themselves. And in August the government reiterated<\/a> the need for a sovereign industry to enhance defence self-reliance.<\/p>\n

But despite the government\u2019s statements of urgency and intent, Defence has still not started production of a mature, state-of-the-art weapon that the government announced it would acquire years ago and whose producer is willing to make here.<\/p>\n

Certainly, it\u2019s unfortunate that this means the Australian government has missed the opportunity to provide St Spike to Ukraine, but we should be even more concerned about Defence\u2019s unwillingness to grasp the opportunity to boost its own capability. It\u2019s possible that Defence is thinking there\u2019s no rush to get Spike into service since local production of the Boxers won\u2019t even start until next year (that is, more than five years after the government gave approval<\/a> to acquire them, and four defence ministers ago).<\/p>\n

But since locally produced variants of Spike could also be used by the army\u2019s new Apache<\/a> attack helicopters, installed<\/a> on the army\u2019s new Hawkei protected vehicles or even integrated into autonomous vehicles, aircraft and vessels<\/a>, it seems like greater imagination and urgency are warranted. Who knows, we might even put containers of the 30-kilometre range \u2018non line of sight\u2019 version on the navy\u2019s new 1,800-tonne offshore patrol vessels<\/a>, which are being launched virtually unarmed<\/a>. Or we can wait until the first Hunter-class frigate arrives sometime around 2034 for our next increase in maritime capability.<\/p>\n

The common response to the Russian invasion across the board\u2014from world leaders to displaced Ukrainians streaming across the Polish border\u2014is the statement, \u2018I never thought it could happen here.\u2019 But in a world of hostile, unaccountable and virtually irrational autocrats, it\u2019s time for the Department of Defence to recognise that it actually could happen here, to us or to one of our regional friends. It needs to break out of its peacetime mentality where time is free and seeking the perfect trumps actually delivering the goods. Instead, it must do everything it possibly can to urgently acquire lethal warfighting capabilities.<\/p>\n

Editors\u2019 note: Last year, Rafael Australia Pty Ltd provided ASPI with funding to host a workshop on implementing Australia\u2019s sovereign guided weapons enterprise.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

When the United States offered to evacuate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky two days after Russia launched its unprovoked invasion of his country, he replied, \u2018The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride.\u2019 Many …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":767,"featured_media":70862,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[488,268,520,435,714],"class_list":["post-70853","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-australian-army","tag-missile","tag-self-reliance","tag-sovereignty","tag-ukraine","dinkus-russia-ukraine-war"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nAustralian Spike missiles could have helped Ukraine, but they\u2019re not even being built yet | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" 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