France鈥檚 Thales defence group offices聽聽in France, the Netherlands and Spain, with聽prosecutors pursuing charges related to corruption, attempts to influence foreign officials and money laundering. Binoy Kampmark 谤别辫辞谤迟蝉.听
weapons
Anti-war and Palestine solidarity activists marched on the 2023 Indo-Pacific Naval Expo to protest the military-industrial complex and Richard Marles' enthusiastic support for it. Peter Boyle reports.
AUKUS鈥檚 next phase, or 鈥渟econd pillar鈥,聽focuses on technology sharing of聽鈥渁dvanced capabilities鈥,聽a major aspect being artificial intelligence. Matilda Byrne investigates the development of聽autonomous weapons聽technologies.
Richard Marles has stated that the Defence Strategic Review recommended a 鈥渟eamless鈥 defence industrial base between Australia, the United States and Britain. Michelle Fahy reports.
A group of alumni and friends attended the University of Queensland Senate meeting to challenge the university鈥檚 involvement with the weapons corporation, Boeing. Kerry Smith reports.
Peace campaigners argue that engineering firms should instead be awarded grants to manufacture聽components for the climate transition.聽Pip Hinman reports.
Peace activists in Australia should be demanding that Australia's Prime Minister listen to the just requests of the Ukrainian people and government, argues Federico Fuentes.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged his government鈥檚 support to the United States war alliance and the new 鈥渢ransformed鈥 North Atlantic Treaty Organization. William Briggs reports.
Global military spending rose last year to more than US$2.8 trillion, an average of more than $8.1 billion every day, according to聽the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Kerry Smith reports.
Protesters held a small but vocal protest outside a US Chamber of Commerce in Australia luncheon in February. Kerry Smith reports.
Who isn鈥檛 disgusted by the obscene wealth of the oligarchs who support a war-making tyrant like Vladimir Putin? Peter Boyle argues we should be equally sickened by our 'own'.
Federal ministers have been brazenly beating the war drums in the latest round of verbal aggression against China,聽escalating聽the government鈥檚 anti-China propaganda to a dangerous new level, argues Peter Boyle.
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