US, UK and Australia Defence Chiefs Convene in Washington to Relaunch AUKUS Commitments
Trilateral meeting reaffirms support for nuclear submarine programme, stepping up Indo-Pacific security cooperation amid global tensions
Defence and foreign-policy leaders from the United States, United Kingdom and Australia met in Washington this week in a high-stakes gathering aimed at reinvigorating the AUKUS security partnership — signalling renewed momentum for nuclear-submarine delivery and joint defence collaboration across the Indo-Pacific.
At the meeting, senior ministers pledged to accelerate AUKUS implementation following a US-led review earlier this year.
The pact — originally forged in 2021 — is designed to provide Australia with nuclear-powered attack submarines and to strengthen trilateral co-operation on advanced capabilities including hypersonics, cyber, and undersea capacity.
The review had generated uncertainty about AUKUS’s future; Washington’s clear reaffirmation now aims to dispel doubts and restore confidence.
Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and UK Defence Secretary John Healey underlined their shared goal of enhancing deterrence and preserving stability across the region.
Among the concrete commitments discussed were plans for expanded submarine maintenance and rotational basing, development of supply-chain infrastructure, and intensifying co-development of cutting-edge military technologies.
The UK–Australia branch of AUKUS also drew fresh support, building on a 50-year bilateral treaty signed in July.
That agreement — known as the Geelong Treaty — commits London and Canberra to jointly design, build, operate, and sustain the future SSN-AUKUS class of submarines, signalling long-term industrial and strategic alignment.
One focal point of the renewed effort is Australia’s readiness to host US-built Virginia-class submarines by 2027. Officials acknowledged the challenge of scaling up local infrastructure, workforce training, and logistics; still, they expressed “confidence” in meeting the timeline.
Additional steps include enhanced integration for missile development, drone and undersea vehicle deployment, and expanded cooperation across critical supply chains for defence-related minerals and technologies.
Analysts say the Washington meeting represents a decisive moment for AUKUS: by reconnecting US, UK and Australian leadership around shared strategic aims, the alliance aims to transition from planning and review into active implementation — potentially reshaping defence dynamics across the Indo-Pacific as tensions rise in regions such as the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.
With this renewed momentum, AUKUS appears poised to emerge not merely as a long-term ambition, but as a tangible pillar of regional security and deterrence policy for the three allied democracies.