
The Avalon air show 鈥 a celebration of aeronautical militarism in the southern hemisphere which has been postponed because of the pandemic 鈥 .
Also known as the Australian International Airshow and Aerospace and Defence Exposition, Avalon2023 to 鈥渟howcase鈥 much in the 鈥渄ynamic world of aviation, aerospace and space, new materials, fuels and ways of flying鈥.
The program features both a specialist dimension and complimentary conferences 鈥渙pen to any accredited Trade Visitor鈥.
The specialist aspect will feature presentations from, among others, the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Australian International Aerospace Congress, Australian Association for Unscrewed Systems, Australian Industry Defence Network and the Australian Airports Association.
This military bonanza unfolds on February 28. Defence minister Richard 鈥淐all me Deputy Prime Minister鈥 Marles has tooted his justifications for more hardware, more military merchandise and more engagement with the defence industry.
His to the Avalon 2023 Defence and Industry Dinner revealed a boyish credulity, typical in so many who lead that portfolio. Air forces, he noted, 鈥渁re the coolest part of any military鈥. Trying to amuse, he called Top Gun Maverick 鈥渁n important and insightful documentary鈥.
Marles then got down to the business of frightening Australians and delighting the military-industrial mandarins.
Australia, he said, faced 鈥渢he most challenging and complex set of strategic circumstances we鈥檝e seen since the Second World War鈥. The 鈥済lobal rules-based order鈥 had been placed 鈥渦nder immense pressure鈥, largely due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
鈥淭he post-Cold War era 鈥 a period of democratic expansion and unprecedented integration of global trade and investment 鈥 is now over.鈥
The speechwriter had evidently gone to sleep in drafting such words. The post-Cold War era has been marked by brutal invasions and interventions (Iraq and Libya to name two), supposedly by the rules-abiding types in Washington, London and Canberra.
The Russian invasion was an imposition of will by a larger state on a smaller neighbour, using 鈥減ower and might鈥, just as the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 came from the same stable of thought.
Marles鈥 speech then followed a familiar pattern. First, call out the Russians. Then highlight the Oriental Armed Scourge to the north. 鈥淚n the Indo-Pacific, China is driving the largest conventional military build-up we鈥檝e seen anywhere in the world since the Second World War. And much of this build-up is opaque.鈥
Australia鈥檚 security, assured by its remote location and geography, could no longer be taken for granted. 鈥淭oday we face a range of threats 鈥斅爄ncluding longer-range missiles and hypersonics and cyber-attacks 鈥斅爓hich render our geographic advantages far less relevant,鈥 Marles said.
The enemy could do damage from afar, causing harm 鈥渨ithout ever having to enter our territorial waters or our air space鈥.
It was therefore important to place Australian defence on the footing of 鈥渂eing able to hold any potential adversaries at risk much further from our shores鈥.
This was a rather devious way of laying the ground for more cash and larger budgets, ignoring the clear point that Australia has no enemies but, as Washington鈥檚 obedient deputy, wishes to make them.
One particular product is meant to take centre stage: The Australian Defence Force is lagging in the department of murderous drone technology and one promises to be unveiled at Avalon.
As by the ABC: 鈥淭he unscrewed air system has been developed by BAE Systems Australia and is designed to be stored in shipping containers.鈥 The device is allegedly capable of carrying a lethal payload in excess of 100 kilograms.
Australia鈥檚 Chief of Air Force, Air Marshal Robert Chipman, has made no secret of for low-cost killer drones.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a proliferation of low-cost drones and loitering munitions delivering both ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] and fires to great effect,鈥 he told a Melbourne audience of foreign air force chiefs and senior officials. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 replace the roles of contemporary combat aircraft, but they might serve as a useful complement.鈥
With that in mind, the RAAF was 鈥渃onsidering the potential of low-cost drones that bring mass to our air combat system, and we鈥檙e considering what new measures are necessary to defend against them鈥.
Such views thrilled the war-mongering offices at The Australian, which satisfaction that Australia鈥檚 military policy was finally 鈥渕oving in the right direction鈥.
Chipman has been particularly busy in the lead-up to the Avalon Airshow, walking the tightrope of defence propaganda.聽Self-praise and capability must be balanced against the聽fear of achievement on the part of an adversary.
In an with the Australian Financial Review on February 22, Chipman revealed the RAAF had also joined the hysteria about targeting high-altitude surveillance balloons. He also defended the merits of the F-35 fighter jet, praising their pilots as having 鈥渞etained an edge over drones or other unscrewed platforms despite advances in technology鈥.
China, however, is causing jitters in the area of hypersonic missiles, capable of delivering a warhead at five times the speed of sound with extreme manoeuvrability. 鈥淚 think China is in front when it comes to hypersonics 鈥 and that is something we are actively working to address,鈥 Chipman said.
[Binoy Kampmark currently lectures at RMIT University.]