Alliances as Documents, Alliances as Games: Two Frameworks for Understanding Strategic Commitments

05/06/2026

By Robbin Laird

A useful analytical distinction has been drawn by Paul Bracken between how alliances are understood in political science and how they function in game theory. In political science, alliances are negotiated documents — formal texts that commit states to one another across a range of contingencies. In game theory, alliances do not exist as general artifacts at all; they resolve into a series of issue-specific calculations about whether, in any given scenario, a state’s incentive structure makes follow-through rational.

This is not merely an academic distinction. It maps directly onto some of the most consequential strategic questions of the current era: whether American commitments in Asia and Europe will hold under pressure, whether adversaries will test those commitments, and whether the architecture of deterrence is as robust as the treaty texts suggest.

The Political Science View: Alliances as Negotiated Documents

In the mainstream political science and international relations tradition, an alliance is above all a text. It is a formal agreement negotiated between sovereign states, committing each party to specified obligations toward the others. The North Atlantic Treaty’s Article 5, the ANZUS Treaty, the Mutual Defense Treaty with Japan, the Taiwan Relations Act, these are the touchstones of American alliance architecture, and they are understood primarily as documents whose credibility depends on whether the signatory will honor its written terms.

This framework has a number of important features.

First, the unit of analysis is the bilateral or multilateral relationship as a whole, the alliance is a general commitment that covers a range of contingencies under a single umbrella.

Second, credibility is understood in reputational and systemic terms: a state that fails to honor its alliance commitments pays a cost in prestige and reliability that ripples across all of its relationships, not just the specific one where the failure occurred.

This is the logic that made American credibility in Vietnam seem important to American credibility in Europe, the reasoning that alliance reliability is indivisible.

Third, alliances in this framework accumulate institutional weight over time. NATO is not merely a treaty; it is a headquarters, a command structure, decades of joint exercises, deep interoperability between forces, and a political community with its own internal legitimacy. That institutional weight makes the commitment more credible and exit more costly.

The political science framework is also the natural home of alliance management, the diplomatic work of maintaining the text, renewing commitments, negotiating burden-sharing, and managing the gap between what the treaty says and what the partners are actually capable of delivering. It is a framework suited to foreign ministries, to summit meetings, and to the declaratory layer of strategy.

The weakness of this framework is that it treats the document as the operative reality.

But as any practitioner knows — and as decades of strategic studies have confirmed — what states actually do in a crisis may bear little resemblance to what the treaty text requires.

The gap between commitment and capability, between declared policy and actual behavior, between the document and the decision is precisely where deterrence fails.

The Game Theory View: Alliances as Issue-Specific Equilibria

Game theory approaches alliances from an entirely different direction. Rather than asking whether a commitment exists in documentary form, it asks whether follow-through is rational in a given scenario. Alliances, in this framework, are not general artifacts. They are equilibrium outcomes in repeated strategic interactions, and their meaning is always issue-specific.

The foundational insight here runs from Schelling’s work on commitment and coercion through the formal deterrence literature of the 1980s and 1990s and into contemporary work on credibility and signaling. The key question is not whether a treaty exists but whether the patron has sufficient incentive to act at the moment of crisis, whether its payoffs in the specific game being played make intervention more attractive than non-intervention.

A treaty, in this framework, is at best a coordination device or a costly signal about underlying preferences. It does not solve the time-consistency problem: the question is always whether the commitment is credible at the moment of execution, not at the moment of signing.

This leads directly to the issue-specific character of alliances in game theory. Whether the United States would fight to defend Taiwan is a different game than whether it would fight to defend Estonia, which is different again from whether it would fight to defend the Philippines in the South China Sea.

Each scenario has a distinct payoff structure, a distinct escalation ladder, and a distinct set of domestic political constraints. The treaty text may be identical or similar across these cases but the game is not. An adversary that conducts a game-theoretic analysis does not simply ask whether an alliance exists; it asks whether, in this specific scenario, with these specific stakes, the ally’s incentives support follow-through.

The game theory framework also illuminates the logic of salami tactics, the incremental probing that characterizes Chinese pressure on Taiwan, Russian behavior in the Baltic littoral, and Iranian activity in the Gulf.

Each slice of the salami is a separate game. By keeping each individual provocation below the threshold where intervention appears rational, an adversary can progressively shift the strategic landscape without triggering the alliance response that a single large aggression might provoke. The treaty text applies in principle to every slice but the payoff calculation that makes intervention rational applies to none of them individually.

The Analytical Gap and Its Strategic Consequences

The gap between these two frameworks is the central vulnerability of contemporary deterrence. Alliance management in the political science sense — maintaining the document, renewing commitments, managing burden-sharing — is necessary but not sufficient. What it cannot do is guarantee that in any specific scenario the ally’s payoff structure supports intervention. And it is precisely the payoff structure, not the treaty text, that adversaries read.

This generates a distinction between two kinds of strategic work that are often conflated in policy discussions.

The first is maintaining the document, the diplomatic and political work of keeping alliance texts current, institutions functioning, and rhetoric aligned.

The second is shaping the game, ensuring that in each specific contingency, the structure of payoffs makes allied follow-through rational, credible, and militarily feasible.

The first kind of work happens at foreign ministries and summits. The second happens in posture decisions, force deployments, pre-positioning, interoperability investments, rules of engagement, and the architecture of combined operations.

The challenge is that the second kind of work is less visible and politically less tractable than the first. A summit communiqué reaffirming alliance commitments is comprehensible to publics and politicians. The decision to pre-position forces in ways that make intervention automatic rather than discretionary, to create what strategists call tripwires or what contemporary distributed operations theorists call engagement architectures — is harder to explain and harder to sustain politically.

Yet it is precisely this second kind of work that addresses the game-theoretic vulnerability that the first kind leaves open.

The kill web concept that has emerged in American military thinking over the past decade is, among other things, an attempt to address this problem in operational terms. A distributed, networked force architecture in which sensors, shooters, and decision nodes are spread across the battlespace in which engagement is not sequential but simultaneous, not centralized but dispersed changes the payoff calculation in specific scenarios in ways that a treaty text cannot.

It makes intervention less a matter of political decision and more a matter of operational reality. The architecture itself is the commitment mechanism.

Disaggregation as an Adversary Strategy

Understanding the gap between the two frameworks also clarifies a key feature of contemporary adversary strategy: the deliberate effort to disaggregate alliances by manipulating the game-theoretic calculation on specific issues.

China, Russia, and Iran each pursue versions of this strategy, though with different instruments and in different theaters. The common logic is to identify scenarios in which the ally’s payoff calculation makes intervention irrational, and to construct crises within those scenarios rather than across the broader alliance relationship. This is why Chinese pressure on Taiwan is calibrated below the threshold of obvious aggression, why Russian probing in the gray zone short of Article 5 has been a recurring pattern, and why Iranian activity in the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea has been conducted through proxies and deniable means rather than through direct military action. Each of these approaches is designed to exploit the gap between what the treaty says and what the game makes rational.

The implication is that allied strategy must address not only the diplomatic maintenance of the document but the active shaping of payoff structures across the full range of scenarios that adversaries might exploit. This requires a level of strategic granularity, a scenario-by-scenario analysis of where the game-theoretic vulnerabilities lie, that general alliance management frameworks do not naturally provide. It requires asking not just whether the alliance is healthy in the aggregate but whether, in each specific contingency, the structure of incentives supports the outcome that deterrence requires.

Toward an Integrated Framework

The political science and game theory frameworks address different layers of the same strategic problem. The political science framework is right that alliances are more than moment-by-moment calculations; the institutional weight of NATO, the history of American treaty commitments, and the reputational costs of abandonment are real strategic facts that shape the payoff calculations adversaries make. The game theory framework is right that treaty texts do not automatically generate credible commitments; the operative question is always whether the specific scenario makes intervention rational.

What Bracken’s distinction points toward is the need for a two-level approach to alliance strategy. At the macro level, the work is diplomatic: maintaining the document, renewing commitments, managing the political health of the alliance relationship. At the micro level, the work is operational: shaping the specific game in each contingency, ensuring that payoff structures support allied intervention, and designing force architectures that make commitments credible not just declaratorily but mechanically.

The failure mode of contemporary Western alliance management is to concentrate effort at the macro level while allowing the micro-level vulnerabilities to accumulate. Summits are held, communiqués are issued, burden-sharing debates are conducted while in specific scenarios in the Taiwan Strait, the Baltic littoral, and the South China Sea, the game-theoretic calculation remains ambiguous. Adversaries understand this asymmetry.

Addressing it is the central challenge of alliance strategy in the current era.

The distinction between alliances as documents and alliances as games is not merely analytical. It is the lens through which the most consequential strategic questions of the current moment must be read.

Whether deterrence holds in the Indo-Pacific, whether NATO’s eastern flank remains secure, whether gray zone aggression can be contained, all of these depend not on the health of the document alone but on whether, in each specific scenario, the game has been shaped to make the right outcome rational.

That is the work that matters, and it is the work that is hardest to see.

Note: This is the first of three articles. The next deals with Pax Silica. And the third deals with Pax Silica as a case study of the analytical perspective of this article. 

Australia and Pax Silica: The Quiet Foundations of a New Western Order?

05/05/2026

By Robbin Laird

Australia is unlikely to be the public face of Pax Silica, but it may prove to be one of its most consequential enabling powers. The emerging United States-led architecture suggests that the states best positioned to shape the next international order will not be limited to those building frontier AI systems. They will also include states that control the minerals, energy, logistics, and strategic geography on which the entire compute stack depends.

Architecture, Not Isolated Deals

The central insight animating the current strategic debate is that a series of apparently separate diplomatic and commercial moves now fit together as components of a coherent design. In this reading, the Abraham Accords provide the diplomatic chassis; Pax Silica and AI ‘factories’ supply the infrastructure layer; F-35 sales and regional security integration furnish the hard-power lock-in; and dollar-linked digital rails may yet become the monetary backbone of an AI-centered international order.

This framework matters for Australia because it shifts analysis away from a narrow conversation about trade policy or critical-minerals exports. It positions Canberra inside a larger American effort to organize trusted technology ecosystems among allies and partners—linking industrial policy, supply chains, defense alignment, and digital infrastructure into a single strategic system.

Where Australia Fits

Australia’s role in such an order is not to replicate Silicon Valley, Taiwan, or South Korea. Its real value lies deeper in the stack: critical minerals, reliable energy, secure geography, maritime access, and proximity to the Indo-Pacific theater where supply-chain resilience has become a strategic imperative rather than merely a commercial preference.

This makes Australia a foundational state in Pax Silica rather than a symbolic one. If the twenty-first century runs on compute, then compute still depends on the physical conditions that make chip production, data infrastructure, and trusted logistics possible—and Australia possesses several of those conditions in unusually concentrated form.

A Supplier of the Bottom Half of the Stack

One way to understand Australia’s contribution is to view it as a supplier of the bottom half of the AI stack. Pax Silica is not, in the narrow sense, only about semiconductors. It encompasses a larger system of cloud platforms, security ecosystems, critical-minerals processing, and the physical infrastructure required to operationalize American technological leadership.

Australia already sits near the center of that supporting system. It holds reserves of critical minerals essential across advanced manufacturing chains, possesses the land and energy potential relevant to large data and industrial facilities, and commands alliance relationships that make it a trusted node for long-horizon industrial commitments in ways that most other resource states cannot match.

The key policy question for Canberra is whether Australia remains a mere upstream extractor or uses the Pax Silica framework to move into processing, refining, energy-intensive industrial activity, and secure infrastructure. If Australia supplies ore while others capture processing, compute, and defense-industrial leverage, it will matter to the order without fully shaping it.

Australia as an Indo-Pacific Anchor

Pax Silica is best understood as a growing network of carefully selected states chosen for their place in the AI supply chain and their broader strategic relevance. In that context, Australia is an Indo-Pacific anchor: a state whose geography and alliance position allow it to connect the American technology order to maritime Asia and the wider Southern Hemisphere.

This role reaches well beyond minerals policy. Australia can contribute to secure undersea cable networks, trusted port and shipping corridors, energy supply for AI-related infrastructure, and the strategic depth that a coalition requires if it is to be resilient against disruption or coercion.

From this perspective, AUKUS, critical-minerals diplomacy, and participation in technology coalitions should not be treated as separate policy files. They are better understood as interlocking components of a common architecture in which economic security, defense strategy, and digital infrastructure increasingly reinforce one another.

What Developments Matter Most

Several developments stand out if this framework is taken seriously. First, Pax Silica itself signals that Washington is moving beyond ad hoc export controls or bilateral technology arrangements toward a more deliberate effort to organize a trusted compute ecosystem among allies. The December 2025 inaugural summit and declaration mark a structural shift in American economic-security diplomacy, not merely a rhetorical one.

Second, the emphasis on an American AI Export Program suggests that the United States now intends to export full-stack AI ecosystems rather than isolated equipment or software. This increases the strategic value of partners that can support the entire enabling environment around AI deployment—including energy, raw materials, cyber trust, land, and regional security.

Third, the creation of a Pax Silica Fund directed at critical minerals, processing capacity, and manufacturing upstream of semiconductors points directly to Australia’s opportunity set. If Canberra can align domestic approvals, infrastructure investment, and allied capital around a limited number of targeted projects, it could become structurally indispensable to the order in ways that go well beyond commodity export.

The Australian Risk

There is nonetheless a serious risk for Australia. A state can be essential to an architecture without being central to its decision-making, and resource suppliers have repeatedly discovered that strategic importance does not automatically translate into strategic agency.

The lesson for Canberra is that participation is not sufficient. Australia will need to convert alignment into leverage by securing downstream processing, long-term offtake arrangements, infrastructure investment, data and energy projects, and institutional influence within whatever Pax Silica becomes.

Otherwise, Australia may find itself in a familiar position: supplying the inputs while others define the rules, capture the margins, and shape the political logic of the system. The country would be inside the order, but not fully of it.

Why This Matters Strategically

The significance of Pax Silica is that it dissolves the boundary between industrial policy and alliance structure. The United States is building a world in which compute, defense cooperation, and digital finance reinforce one another as mutually supporting layers of order. In such a system, Australia matters because it is one of the few countries capable of supplying trust, resources, geography, and alliance durability simultaneously.

That combination gives Canberra a genuine opportunity to become more than a supportive ally. It can become one of the quiet foundations of the emerging order—but only if it acts with sufficient strategic discipline and foresight.

A Strategic Proposition for Canberra

The most useful Australian response is not rhetorical enthusiasm but selective statecraft. Canberra should identify a limited number of domains in which it can become structurally indispensable to a trusted technology coalition: critical-minerals processing, energy-to-compute infrastructure, secure maritime and digital corridors, and industrial projects that tie Australian capacity directly to allied demand.

That would place Australia precisely where it is strongest, not as the loudest advocate of Pax Silica, but as one of the states without which Pax Silica cannot function.

Bibliography

Atlantic Council / Ray, Trisha. “Three Elements Trump’s ‘Pax Silica’ Needs to Succeed.” Atlantic Council, April 2026. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/three-elements-trumps-pax-silica-needs-to-succeed/.

Bhandari, Konark. “India Signs the Pax Silica—A Counter to Pax Sinica?” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, March 3, 2026. https://carnegieendowment.org/posts/2026/03/india-signs-the-pax-silicaa-counter-to-pax-sinica.

Helberg, Jacob. “The Platforms of the New Era.” Address by the Under Secretary for Economic Affairs. U.S. Department of State, April 24, 2026. https://www.state.gov/releases/under-secretary-for-economic-affairs/2026/04/the-platforms-of-the-new-era.

International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). “US Critical-Minerals Diplomacy: From America-First Deals to Pax Silica.” January 29, 2026. https://www.iiss.org/online-analysis/online-analysis/2026/01/us-critical-minerals-diplomacy-from-america-first-deals-to-pax-silica/.

Lehmacher, Wolfgang. “Pax Silica, China and the US: The Supply Chain Power Play.” Supply Chain Digital, April 2026. https://supplychaindigital.com/news/pax-silica-explained-the-shift-no-supply-chain-can-ignore.

Real Instituto Elcano. “Pax Silica: Alliances, Frontier and Markets in the Geopolitics of the Chip.” January 14, 2026. https://www.realinstitutoelcano.org/en/analyses/pax-silica-alliances-frontier-and-markets-in-the-geopolitics-of-the-chip/.

Rondeaux, Candace. “The ‘Pax Silica’ Initiative Points to a New, Stratified World.” World Politics Review / New America, January 22, 2026. https://www.newamerica.org/planetary-politics/articles/the-pax-silica-initiative-points-to-a-new-stratified-world/.

U.S. Department of State. “Pax Silica.” Bureau of Economic, Energy, and Business Affairs, December 2025. https://www.state.gov/pax-silica.

U.S. Department of State. “Pax Silica Summit.” Office of the Spokesperson, December 13, 2025. https://www.state.gov/releases/office-of-the-spokesperson/2025/12/pax-silica-initiative.

The Interconnected Deals No One Is Calling a New World Order

The Questions as Part of Epochal Change

05/04/2026

In a recent piece I published on Defense.info, I argued that what changes most profoundly in a genuinely epochal transition is not the answers societies hold, but the questions they consider worth asking. The analyst who clings to the old question-space does not simply get wrong answers. He asks questions that are increasingly beside the point, technically competent, intellectually coherent, and operationally irrelevant.

Alexandra Brooks’ essay, “The Interconnected Deals No One Is Calling a New World Order,” is a striking demonstration of what it looks like when an analyst actually inhabits the new question-space rather than the old one.

Most of the commentary surrounding American engagement in the Middle East has continued to ask Cold War-derived and post-Cold War questions: Is this deal good for Israel’s qualitative military edge? Does the Abraham Accords framework hold? What does the Iran campaign mean for regional stability? Is Trump’s diplomatic style sustainable? These are not meaningless questions. But they are, increasingly, the wrong ones.

Brooks asks different questions entirely. She asks: What is the architectural logic that connects an arms deal, an AI chip sale, a stablecoin regulatory framework, and a normalization agreement? What is the institutional scaffolding being built, and for what purpose? Who is being embedded in what order, and on what terms?

Those are the questions the emerging strategic environment is actually posing.

From Kuhn to Kratsios

In my Defense.info piece, I drew on Thomas Kuhn’s analysis of paradigm shifts to make a specific point: a paradigm does not just answer questions, it generates them. It tells practitioners what phenomena deserve attention and what anomalies can be safely ignored. The deeper transformation in a genuine paradigm shift is not the replacement of one answer with a better one. It is the reorganization of the problem space itself.

Brooks’ essay demonstrates this reorganization in practice.

The question “Is the Abraham Accords framework holding?” belongs to one problem space — the post-Cold War framework of formal diplomatic normalization, state recognition, and multilateral institution-building. The question Brooks is asking — “Is the Abraham Accords framework functioning as the diplomatic chassis of a new U.S.-led technological order?” — belongs to an entirely different one.

The first question fits neatly into the inherited conceptual architecture of Middle East diplomacy as practiced since Oslo. The second question treats the Accords as something closer to what the Marshall Plan was: not an end state, but a binding mechanism. A framework for embedding willing partners in an American-anchored order before that order fully crystallizes.

Michael Kratsios, speaking at the India AI Impact Summit in 2026, provided what Brooks rightly identifies as the rhetorical DNA of this new architecture: “Real AI sovereignty means owning and using best-in-class technology for the benefit of your people… Complete technological self-containment is unrealistic for any country… America wants to help.” The syntax is almost identical to George Marshall’s 1947 Harvard address: the initiative must come from you; the United States provides the architecture.

The currency has shifted from dollars and industrial capacity to compute, chips, models, and data infrastructure. But the logic of structural embedding — making dependency attractive rather than imposed — is precisely the same.

The Epistemic Architecture of the New Order

Foucault’s concept of the episteme — the underlying structure that defines what can be known, said, and thought within a given epoch — is useful here in a way that is concrete rather than merely theoretical.

The episteme of the post-Cold War liberal international order made certain questions thinkable: How do we support democratization? How do we manage failed states? How do we sustain norm diffusion through multilateral institutions? It made other questions marginal or simply invisible. Questions about the strategic implications of AI infrastructure, about the geopolitical consequences of chip allocation policy, about the relationship between stablecoin regulatory frameworks and dollar primacy in a machine-age payment system — these did not register as primary strategic questions within the post-Cold War framework.

They are registering now. And Brooks is asking them.

Her analysis of Pax Silica is particularly useful as an illustration of this shift. The Pax Silica initiative, convened by Under Secretary of State Jacob Helberg in December 2025, is explicitly organized around what the post-Cold War framework could not even recognize as a strategic variable: control of the AI supply chain’s chokepoints — design, chip manufacturing, cloud platforms, security ecosystems. The question it poses is not “How do we build multilateral institutions for norm diffusion?” It is “How do we organize global technological infrastructure around American-controlled architectural nodes, and which partners do we embed in that architecture first?”

That is a genuinely new question. It belongs to a different episteme than the one that produced the post-Cold War liberal order’s analytical vocabulary.

The Security Spine and the Monetary Substrate

Brooks connects three elements that post-Cold War analysis would have treated as separate analytical domains: the security architecture (Iran containment, F-35 sales, integrated air defense), the technological infrastructure (Pax Silica, Nvidia chip deals, AI factories), and the monetary substrate (dollar-denominated stablecoins, the GENIUS Act, digital payment rails).

The post-Cold War framework kept these domains largely separate. Security analysts analyzed security. Economists analyzed monetary systems. Technology analysts analyzed technology. The institutional architecture of think tanks, government agencies, and academic disciplines reflected this separation.

What Brooks is identifying is that the emerging order is being built precisely at the intersection of these domains — and that the most important strategic questions are therefore questions about the architectural logic that connects them, not questions confined to any single domain.

The F-35 sale to Saudi Arabia, for instance, is not simply a security story about Israel’s qualitative military edge. It is a node in a broader architecture: a partner being brought fully inside the order — not just as an investment partner or AI customer, but as a peer defense partner. The chip sales to Gulf AI factories are not simply technology or business stories. They are the material basis of Pax Silica alignment: hardware policy as geopolitical signal. And the stablecoin framework is not simply a financial regulation story. It is, as Treasury Secretary Bessent’s framing suggests, Bretton Woods for the machine age — a preemptive move to hard-wire dollar primacy into the infrastructure of AI-driven digital payments before that infrastructure is set.

The new question-space demands analysis that moves across these domains, tracing the architectural logic rather than analyzing each node in isolation.

The Indo-Pacific Parallel

In my Defense.info piece, I identified the Indo-Pacific theater as the most consequential arena in which the transition between question-spaces is being worked out. The questions that organized U.S. strategy in the Pacific for the first generation after the Cold War, about access, forward presence, and conventional deterrence of a relatively linear Chinese military threat, are being overtaken by a different problem space shaped by anti-access/area-denial capabilities, precision strike proliferation, and the challenge of sustaining allied cohesion across a dispersed theater.

Brooks’ analysis of the Middle East suggests a parallel transformation, though its logic is somewhat different. In the Indo-Pacific, the new question-space is primarily organized around military and operational challenges. In the Middle East, the new question-space is organized around the architecture of a new order being actively constructed — the Abraham Accords as diplomatic chassis, Pax Silica as technological nervous system, stablecoin rails as monetary substrate.

The two theaters are connected. The same AI infrastructure questions that are reshaping Indo-Pacific strategy about the integration of commercial and military technology, about the strategic implications of chip allocation, about the relationship between technological leadership and alliance coherence — are central to what is being built in the Gulf. The difference is that in the Middle East, the construction is more explicit and the architectural logic more visible.

What the New Questions Demand

My argument in the Defense.info piece was that the task for strategic analysts in an age of epochal transition is not simply to find better answers to the questions the previous era posed. It is to develop the conceptual discipline to inhabit the new question-space, to ask, with rigor and without nostalgia, what the emerging strategic environment is actually demanding.

Brooks’ essay demonstrates what that discipline looks like in practice. It does not ask whether Trump’s diplomatic style is sustainable. It asks what architecture is being built under the noise of his style. It does not ask whether any single deal is good or bad on its own terms. It asks what system the deals collectively constitute. It does not treat the Abraham Accords, Pax Silica, chip sales, and stablecoin regulation as separate phenomena to be analyzed in separate analytical silos. It asks what the connective logic is.

These are the questions the new strategic environment is actually posing.

The countries that shape the emerging order, as Brooks observes, will not be the ones who waited to understand it. The same is true of analysts. The organizations, institutions, and individuals who will produce strategically useful analysis in the period ahead are not the ones who answer the old questions most competently. They are the ones who recognize that the question-space itself has shifted and who have the intellectual discipline to ask the questions the new reality is actually demanding.

That recognition is not comfortable. As I argued in my Defense.info piece, institutions built around the old question-space resist it. Professional incentives favor incremental refinement over genuine reconceptualization. The analyst who says “we are asking the wrong questions” is always at risk of being dismissed as a philosopher when what the institution wants is an operator.

But the history of strategic failure is largely a history of institutions that answered the old questions very well while the operational reality had already moved on.

Brooks is asking the new questions. That is the more important point about her essay, not whether every element of her analysis is settled or her conclusions definitive, but that she has correctly identified the problem space the emerging environment is actually presenting.

That is where the analytical work of this moment has to begin.

The Interconnected Deals No One Is Calling a New World Order

Japan’s Strategic Pivot: How Sanae Takaichi Is Reshaping the Indo-Pacific Alliance Architecture

05/03/2026

By Robbin Laird

Something has changed in Japanese strategic culture, and the world has been slow to notice.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s first female prime minister, holder of a commanding two-thirds supermajority in the Diet, and a politician who came of age studying American power in Washington, is executing a transformation of Japan’s defense posture and alliance relationships that is as consequential as anything Tokyo has attempted since the postwar constitutional settlement. Her visits to Washington in March 2026 and to Australia in early May mark not ceremonial diplomacy but the operational expression of a new strategic logic.

Japan is no longer content to be the defended partner. It is moving, deliberately and at speed, to become a co-architect of Indo-Pacific order.

Understanding what Takaichi is doing requires appreciating the context in which she arrived. For decades, Japan’s pacifist constitution and its political culture of defensive minimalism constrained Tokyo’s strategic role to that of a high-quality but essentially passive partner within the U.S. alliance. As Alan Dupont has observed in The Australian, the Self-Defence Force operated under suffocating legal constraints, a military so bound by civilian law that tanks heading to repel a hypothetical invasion would have had to stop at red lights. Constitutional restrictions created real doubts about Japan’s willingness or ability to defend itself, let alone contribute to collective security across the wider Indo-Pacific.

That era is ending.

From Defense Client to Strategic Partner

Takaichi’s political mandate is extraordinary by Japanese standards. Her coalition’s crushing electoral victory in February 2026 delivered the parliamentary leverage to do what generations of Japanese leaders could not: fundamentally recalibrate Japan’s security posture. Her government is committed to raising defense spending toward two percent of GDP by 2027, fielding counterstrike capabilities, expanding defense exports, and clarifying the legal status of the Self-Defence Forces.

These are not incremental adjustments. They represent a structural break with postwar strategic culture.

The most visible expression of this break is Japan’s hypersonic enterprise. Japan’s role in the hypersonic domain is no longer peripheral. The Hyper Velocity Gliding Projectile (HVGP), an indigenous boost-glide system developed with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, moves Japan from missile-defense client to co-producer of prompt strike. With roughly 769 million dollars earmarked in the latest defense budget for HVGP development, a Block 1 range of approximately 500 kilometers already deployable, and planning documents projecting stretch variants toward 3,000 kilometers by the 2030 timeframe,

Japan is fielding a genuine first-island-chain strike capability. HVGP batteries deployed along Japan’s southwestern islands, potentially transportable by sea or by JASDF C-2 transports as ATLA has demonstrated, create a continuous hypersonic threat envelope along the approaches PLA Navy forces must traverse to break into the wider Pacific.

Equally significant is the defensive dimension. Tokyo’s cooperation with Northrop Grumman on the Glide Phase Interceptor (GPI) embeds Japan inside the leading edge of U.S. hypersonic defense technology, tying its future Aegis and missile-defense architectures directly into the evolving American hypersonic defense layer. This dual track, offensive HVGP and Hypersonic Cruise Missile paired with defensive GPI, means Japan is now a partner at both ends of the kill chain. Alliance integration by design, not drift.

A hypersonic defense layer built around Japanese-hosted, co-developed interceptors combined with HBTSS-class sensors, MQ-4C Triton ISR, and F-35 sensor fusion is far more credible than any architecture the United States could sustain alone across three oceanic basins.

Converting Gulf Shock into a China Strategy

Takaichi’s Washington visit in March 2026 demonstrated the sophistication of Japanese strategic statecraft under new management. The visit unfolded under the shadow of Iranian operations disrupting Hormuz and oil markets in crisis. Japan remains heavily dependent on Middle Eastern crude and LNG transiting precisely those threatened chokepoints. For Washington, the moment offered an opportunity to press on burden-sharing. For Tokyo, it presented a dilemma, domestic politics make Middle Eastern military entanglement deeply unpopular, but also an instrument.

Japan reached for capital and capability rather than combat forces. The summit produced pledges of large-scale Japanese investment into U.S. power generation, hydrocarbons, LNG infrastructure, and advanced nuclear projects, not routine commercial deals but long-term commitments structured to knit Japanese capital and technology into the physical backbone of American energy and industrial capacity.

Tokyo and Washington are in effect building an energy-industrial compact. The deeper the integration of U.S. and Japanese energy, industrial, and technology ecosystems, the higher the political and economic cost to Washington of any retreat or accommodation with Beijing at Tokyo’s expense. Gulf shock became the political justification in Tokyo for large-ticket diversification, and in Washington for welcoming a deeper Japanese presence in strategic sectors. In practice, these arrangements lay down infrastructure, supply relationships, and financial ties whose significance will matter most not in the Strait of Hormuz, but in the Taiwan Strait and across the first island chain.

Three concrete deterrence effects flow from this approach.

  • First, it reduces both societies’ vulnerability to energy and commodity shocks, denying adversaries the temptation to pursue war-by-strangulation through embargo or disruption.
  • Second, it strengthens the material foundation for sustained defense spending by ensuring that shocks elsewhere do not choke domestic economies at the moment they need to sustain forward posture.
  • Third, it embeds the alliance in a network of shared physical assets, ports, terminals, grids, reactors, factories, that create political constituencies and sunk costs on both sides of the Pacific. That is not a soft form of alliance cohesion. It is structural.

The Embedded Logistics Imperative and Australia

Takaichi’s arrival in Australia at the end of April 2026 carries the same underlying logic into a different geography. The analytical framework of embedded logistics, moving beyond coordination toward genuine industrial integration among allied nations, finds its most promising application in precisely the kind of Japan-Australia-United States triangular relationship that is now becoming possible.

The traditional model of allied defense cooperation operates through discrete national programs with occasional coordination. Each nation maintains separate supply chains, independent manufacturing facilities, and nationally bounded logistics networks that occasionally intersect through formal agreements. That model proves increasingly inadequate when confronting adversaries who can exploit seams between allied systems and the vulnerability of geographically concentrated industrial capacity.

Japan’s accelerated focus on dual-use technologies, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, space capabilities, semiconductors, advanced sensing and communication, provides concrete foundations for building genuinely integrated networks. Australia’s geographic position, its emerging industrial relationships with Northeast Asian partners, and its specific operational requirements in the northern approaches create natural integration points. Australian-based production facilities jointly invested by the United States, Japan, and South Korea for common weapons systems and ammunition would create genuinely shared industrial assets, enhancing collective capability while strengthening individual national positions. Autonomous maritime systems represent an obvious candidate given Australian geographic requirements, Japanese maritime priorities, and American distributed operations concepts.

The Mogami frigate contract, the agreement to jointly build eleven frigates for the Royal Australian Navy, signals the direction of travel. As Alan Dupont noted in his assessment of the Takaichi visit for The Australian, the real significance of the Mogami contract lies in the precedent and template it provides for shared industrial production. If delivered on time and on budget, it could be transformative: not just a procurement arrangement but proof of concept for the kind of trilateral industrial integration that embedded logistics requires.

Japan’s Takaichi government mandate provides parliamentary leverage for defense industrial cooperation with limited obstruction, while its explicit dual-use technology focus creates natural integration points with both Australian and American capabilities, potentially providing pathways into AUKUS Pillar 2 shared supply chains.

The Geometry of Indo-Pacific Deterrence

What Takaichi is assembling, through Washington and now through Canberra, is a strategic architecture suited to the fundamental challenge of the Indo-Pacific: the tyranny of distance and the compression of decision timelines that hypersonic weapons impose.

The Pacific is not the Atlantic. Operating at continental scale across three oceanic basins requires allied militaries to think in terms of strategic triangles and quadrangles, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Australia, and to populate those geometries with distributed capabilities rather than concentrating mass at a few exquisite launch points.

Japan’s HVGP and Hypersonic Cruise Missile units, movable by sea or air as ATLA has demonstrated, are natural contributions to that force design. They are mobile spearheads that can operate as part of a distributed blanket of combat clusters across the Western Pacific, complicating Chinese planning by multiplying the number of launch points and axes of approach.

From Beijing’s perspective, the trajectory is unwelcome on multiple dimensions. China has experimented with multi-domain coercion against Japan, banning seafood, discouraging tourism, imposing export restrictions on rare earths and dual-use items following Takaichi’s remarks about Taiwan. Beijing’s consul general in Osaka went so far as to issue what amounted to a personal threat against the Prime Minister. Takaichi has not bent.

The deeper Chinese problem is structural: a Japan that deploys HVGP batteries specifically designed to engage carrier battle groups, that co-develops glide-phase interceptors with the United States, that knits its industrial and energy base into the American economy, and that anchors a trilateral logistics framework with Australia, cannot be peeled away from Washington through economic pressure or rhetorical intimidation. The more Tokyo deepens the compact, the higher the cost to Beijing of any strategy premised on separating economic from security ties.

There are real risks in the path Japan is choosing. Conventional counterforce capabilities that can threaten high-value mainland assets, a 3,000-kilometer HVGP under allied ISR and targeting is not merely a local anti-ship weapon, interact with nuclear thresholds in ways that demand explicit alliance-level conversation about escalation control.  A Japan that can plausibly blunt a portion of Chinese hypersonic salvos is less likely to feel compelled to escalate early in a crisis, but the architecture being built pushes into territory where conventional systems can do things that only nuclear weapons could do in the past.

Managing those thresholds requires the kind of sustained strategic dialogue that Washington and Tokyo are only beginning to institutionalize.

The Meaning of the Moment

Takaichi’s diplomatic circuit, Washington, Canberra, is not a tour. It is the operational rollout of a coherent strategic vision.

Japan under her leadership is converting political mandate into material alliance weight: hypersonic strike from the first island chain, glide-phase defense inside a C5ISR speed-of-light architecture, energy-industrial integration with the American economy, embedded logistics with Australia as a geographic foundation for shared production capacity. Each element reinforces the others. Together they constitute something qualitatively different from the Japan that existed even five years ago.

The question for both Washington and Canberra is whether their bureaucratic and political cultures can match the pace Tokyo is setting. Embedded logistics and genuine trilateral integration require defense organizations capable of articulating not just immediate requirements but potential future needs across scenarios, and governments willing to make long-term capital commitments into shared industrial assets. The PICHTR-PACT model, which has already demonstrated how to connect Japanese dual-use technology companies with U.S. defense contracting opportunities, offers a proven mechanism for industrial-level coordination. Scaling it to comprehensive logistics enterprises requires corresponding governmental commitment: standing trilateral working groups, shared planning processes, coordinated investment frameworks.

When historians assess this period, the missile trails over the Gulf and the congressional debates will rightly command attention. But they may also note that in the same window, Japan was quietly rearranging the foundations of the Indo-Pacific alliance.

If deterrence holds in the Taiwan Strait later in this decade and holding it is the central task of alliance management in the region, it will owe something not only to new missiles on Japanese islands and strike-capable ships at sea, but also to LNG terminals, advanced reactors, shared frigate production lines, and autonomous maritime systems whose development was accelerated by a new Japanese Prime Minister who understood, from the moment she arrived in Washington and then in Canberra, that the measure of allied credibility is not communiqués but compacts of mutual material dependence.

Sanae Takaichi is building thosecompacts. Brick by brick, factory by factory, missile by missile.

Bibliography

Dupont, Alan. “A New Japanese Era Offers Australia a Vital Opportunity with Visit by Leader Sanae Takaichi.” The Australian, April 27, 2026. https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/a-new-japanese-era-offers-australia-a-vital-opportunity-with-visit-by-leader-sanae-takaichi/news-story/6d403fd475dce04b.

Laird, Robbin. “Japan’s Defense Transformation and the Embedded Logistics Imperative: A Trilateral Opportunity for Industrial Integration.” Second Line of Defense, March 5, 2026. https://sldinfo.com/2026/03/japans-defense-transformation-and-the-embedded-logistics-imperative-a-trilateral-opportunity-for-industrial-integration/.

Laird, Robbin. “The Japanese Prime Minister’s Washington Visit: Converting Gulf Shock into a China Strategy.” Second Line of Defense, March 26, 2026. https://sldinfo.com/2026/03/the-japanese-prime-ministers-washington-visit-converting-gulf-shock-into-a-china-strategy/.

Second Line of Defense. “The Speed of Alliance: Japan’s HVGP and Glide-Phase Defense with the U.S.” Second Line of Defense, April 6, 2026. https://sldinfo.com/2026/04/the-speed-of-alliance-japans-hvgp-and-glide-phase-defense-with-the-u-s/.

Lessons in Military Transformation: From the RMA to the Drone Wars

05/02/2026

The book Lessons in Military Transformation: From the RMA to the Drone Wars analyzes military transformation as it is actually experienced by operational forces rather than as it is described in policy documents, tracing the evolution of air and maritime power from the Revolution in Military Affairs era to today’s drone, hypersonic, and kill‑web battlespace. It presents transformation as an “unfinished revolution” in which concepts, technologies, and organizations continually co‑evolve under the pressure of adversary adaptation, institutional friction, and resource constraints, rather than arriving at a stable end state.

The analysis is grounded in extensive field work with squadrons, ships, and commands, treating pilots, maintainers, and commanders as the key innovators who turn briefed concepts into usable combat capability. This practitioner focus frames frontline units as “lead users” whose experimentation at the edge drives real change, in contrast to top‑down efforts centered in national capitals. Conceptually organized sections examine the RMA and its successors, airpower transformation in practice, platforms as catalysts of change, training and joint force development, and the implications of emerging technologies such as drones and hypersonic weapons.

A central theme is the reconceptualization of platforms as network nodes. The F‑35 is treated less as a traditional fighter and more as an information hub within a distributed kill web, demanding a cognitive shift from platform‑centric engagements to managing information flows and orchestrating effects across coalitions. The MV‑22 Osprey similarly becomes a key enabler of distributed expeditionary operations once its range and speed are fully exploited, illustrating how practitioners often discover the most consequential uses of new systems.

The book contrasts “crisis management,” which aims to restore stability after disruption, with “chaos management,” which assumes persistent turbulence driven by technological acceleration and peer competition. Case studies such as the evolution of Second Marine Aircraft Wing toward Indo‑Pacific operations, large‑scale exercises, European airpower modernization, and the U.S. Coast Guard’s role in strategic competition show how different forces adapt to contested, fluid environments. In its conclusion, the work argues that strategic judgment now centers on managing successive, overlapping transformations recognizing patterns in practitioner experience, technology, and adversary behavior early enough to adapt institutions and training before crises force rapid, reactive change.

Speartooth Comes to America: What the C2 Robotics LUUV Sale Tells Us About the Future of Undersea Mass

By Robbin Laird

In August 2025, the U.S. Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Division Newport, issued a sole-source solicitation for three C2 Robotics “Speartooth” Large Uncrewed Underwater Vessels, 11-metre variant. The justification was blunt: Speartooth was the only autonomous underwater vehicle that met Navy design, size, and mission requirements for long-range, stealthy undersea delivery of ordnance and other kinetic effects. The customer was not named in C2 Robotics’ public announcements about its first international export sale. But the procurement record speaks clearly enough.

This is not a minor acquisition footnote. It is a signal that a different logic for undersea force design is now maturing, one that the United States Navy, at least at the operational level, is beginning to take seriously. Understanding why requires stepping back from the specifics of the Speartooth platform and engaging with the broader strategic argument that has been building across the drone wars, from the Black Sea to the Western Pacific.

The Lesson the Drone Wars Have Already Delivered

In Lessons from the Drone Wars: Maritime Autonomous Systems and Maritime Operations, I argued that Ukraine’s experience has already rewritten the foundational equation of modern warfare. The argument is not merely about drones as a technology. It is about what happens when a smaller, less-resourced combatant makes a deliberate strategic choice to invest in affordable, distributed, attritable systems rather than in exquisite, high-cost platforms that can only be acquired in small numbers.

The evidence is striking. Operation Spider Web, executed on June 1, 2025, deployed 117 low-cost explosive drones across five Russian airbases spanning 4,300 kilometers, destroying 41 aircraft worth approximately seven billion dollars at an equipment cost that would register as rounding error in a traditional defence procurement budget. The operation did not succeed because the drones were technologically superior. It succeeded because Ukraine had built a production ecosystem capable of generating mass, scaling from 1,000 drones annually to 4.5 million, while simultaneously developing the operational concepts to employ that mass intelligently.

Below the surface, a parallel story unfolded. Ukraine’s Sub Sea Baby underwater strike drone successfully penetrated the defended harbor at Novorossiysk and demonstrated the ability to hit a Kilo-class submarine moored inside a Russian port. That success was not simply a platform achievement. It was the product of an operational concept that first suppressed Russian ISR architecture before executing the strike, a lesson that translates directly to any navy contemplating undersea autonomous operations in a contested environment.

The core lesson I drew from both campaigns is captured in what I call the tension between “intelligent mass” and “exquisite scarcity.” Western militaries have spent decades optimizing for peak performance per hull, per aircraft, per submarine. The drone wars have demonstrated that in a protracted, high-intensity conflict, that equation breaks down. What matters is not the single most capable platform but the ability to generate and sustain enough force across enough vectors to deny the adversary decisive advantage.

Speartooth and the Industrial Philosophy That Made It

Against that backdrop, the Speartooth LUUV is not primarily a story about an impressive piece of Australian engineering. It is a story about an industrial and design philosophy that takes the lessons of the drone wars seriously and applies them to the undersea domain.

C2 Robotics built Speartooth from the outset as a platform for undersea mass. Several choices flow from that intent. First, the vehicle is payload-agnostic, designed as an undersea truck that can carry sensors, weapons, communications relay packages, or seabed warfare tools without requiring a full redesign of the platform. Second, it exploits the absence of a human crew to optimize hull volume and energy budgets for range, endurance, and payload rather than for habitability. Third, and most consequentially from an industrial perspective, Speartooth leans heavily on commercial electric-vehicle style components and manufacturing approaches, targeting a unit cost in the hundreds of thousands to low millions of dollars at scale.

That cost discipline is what makes mass possible. It is also what distinguishes Speartooth structurally from the trajectory of the U.S. Navy’s Orca Extra-Large Unmanned Underwater Vehicle program. Orca was conceived with ambition: a large, highly capable autonomous submarine with substantial modular payload capacity for missions including minelaying. Yet independent assessments from the Government Accountability Office documented cost growth of at least 64 percent over original estimates and delays of more than three years, with roughly $242 million in additional costs on top of an already ambitious baseline. The culprit was familiar: the program moved into fabrication before resolving key technology risks and before demonstrating that the industrial base could reliably produce the design.

Orca remains a valuable learning vehicle for autonomy, power management, and undersea system integration. But it is not a model for generating the kind of undersea mass that a serious Indo-Pacific conflict would demand. Boutique systems, however technically impressive, do not change the force balance when they can only be fielded in single digits.

C2 has made a strategic virtue of that contrast. Smaller platform, fewer grandiose promises, ruthless focus on what can actually be built, afforded, and sustained in real industrial conditions. The NUWC Division Newport procurement of three Speartooth hulls suggests that at least some corners of the U.S. Navy have absorbed that argument.

The Australian Ecosystem Behind the Platform

The Speartooth sale to the U.S. also needs to be read in the context of what Australia is building. The April 2026 National Defence Strategy confirmed Speartooth as part of the Australian Defence Force force structure, not a developmental experiment, but an operational system. That endorsement matters because it reflects accumulated operational experience. Speartooth has been trialled in demanding environments including exercises such as Talisman Sabre and the Maritime Big Play autonomous warfare series. C2 and potential customers have real-world data on how the platform behaves under operationally representative conditions.

Speartooth does not sit alone in Australia’s undersea portfolio. Anduril’s Ghost Shark, a larger Extra-Large Autonomous Underwater Vehicle developed with the Defence Science and Technology Group and the Royal Australian Navy, is moving into serial production with plans for dozens of vehicles and a program value around 1.7 billion Australian dollars. Ghost Shark is designed for the most demanding deep-penetration missions where range, payload capacity, and survivability require a larger, more complex and capable platform.

The relationship between Ghost Shark and Speartooth is not competition. It is layering. Ghost Shark for the most demanding missions. Speartooth for presence, persistent ISR, seabed warfare, and networked roles where higher numbers and lower unit cost matter more than peak per-hull capability. Beneath both, smaller UUVs for mine countermeasures, harbour defence, and distributed sensing. This is the portfolio logic that serious undersea force design now requires, not a single exquisite answer but a tiered architecture calibrated to the range of operational problems.

Australia is not merely acquiring platforms. It is building an ecosystem: industrial capacity, operational experience, regulatory and export frameworks, and accumulated doctrine that could give it a durable position in the emerging global market for pragmatic maritime autonomous systems. The Speartooth export sale to the United States, if that is indeed what the NUWC solicitation represents,  is evidence that the ecosystem is already producing internationally credible results.

What the U.S. Acquisition Signals

The significance of the NUWC procurement is not merely transactional. It reflects a recognition, at the operational requirements level, that no domestically available LUUV design met the specific combination of range, stealthiness, size, and kinetic delivery capability that the Navy needed. That is a remarkable statement about the current state of U.S. undersea autonomous systems development and a pointed commentary on what years of investment in higher-complexity, higher-cost XLUUV programs have not yet delivered at the LUUV tier.

It also signals something about the strategic logic of allied industrial cooperation that goes beyond traditional foreign military sales. Speartooth was developed with Australian Defence collaboration and has been validated through Australian exercises and operational integration. When the U.S. Navy buys it, it is not simply purchasing a platform. It is accessing accumulated operational learning, an industrial supply chain designed for contested logistics conditions, and a design philosophy specifically calibrated for the kind of attritable undersea mass that the Indo-Pacific demands.

That is precisely the kind of allied interdependence that sound AUKUS industrial cooperation should be generating,not just interoperability at the platform level but genuine cross-pollination of design philosophy, operational concept, and industrial practice.

Undersea Mass and the Strategic Argument Ahead

The broader argument embedded in the Speartooth story connects directly to what I have been developing across the Lessons from the Drone Wars  and in The Age of Chaos. The strategic competition with China in the Indo-Pacific is not a competition that will be decided by which side fields the most capable individual platform. It will be decided by which side can generate and sustain force across enough vectors, at enough scale, and with enough operational resilience to deny the adversary the ability to concentrate and exploit advantage.

In the undersea domain, that means mass, genuinely attritable mass that can be produced in dispersed industrial facilities, transported in standard containers, supported with commercially available components, and replaced when lost without triggering a capability crisis. Speartooth is designed for exactly that condition. Its commercial component strategy, its containerised logistics footprint, its modular payload architecture, all of these flow from a clear-eyed assessment of what undersea operations under sustained contested conditions actually require.

The August 2025 NUWC solicitation is three hulls. That is a beginning, not a solution. But it represents something more important than its modest numbers suggest: a concrete acknowledgment, grounded in operational requirements, that the logic of intelligent mass is now being applied to the undersea domain, and that an Australian company has built the platform that embodies that logic most credibly at this moment.

The drone wars taught us that affordability, manufacturability, and operational simplicity at scale can generate strategic effects that exquisite complexity cannot. Speartooth is undersea warfare’s answer to that lesson. The U.S. Navy, it appears, is beginning to listen.

Bibliography

“After $885 Million, GAO Warns It’s ‘Unclear’ If Navy’s Major UUV Program Will Become Program of Record.” Breaking Defense. June 10, 2025. https://breakingdefense.com/2025/06/after-885-million-gao-warns-its-unclear-if-navys-major-uuv-program-will-become-program-of-record/.

“C2 Robotics Exports Speartooth LUUV.” Australian Defence Magazine. October 30, 2025. https://www.australiandefence.com.au/news/news/c2-robotics-exports-speartooth-luuv.

“C2 Robotics Wins Export Sales for Speartooth UUV.” Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter. October 31, 2025. https://asiapacificdefencereporter.com/c2-robotics-wins-export-sales-for-speartooth-uuv/.

C2 Robotics. “Examining the True Force-Mass Potential of Large Uncrewed Underwater Vessels.” C2 Robotics, November 10, 2025. https://c2robotics.com.au/examining-the-true-force-mass-potential-of-large-uncrewed-underwater-vessels/.

C2 Robotics. “Media Release: C2 Robotics Secures Export Sales of Its Speartooth Large Uncrewed Underwater Vessel.” Media release, November 10, 2025. https://c2robotics.com.au/media-release-c2-robotics-secures-export-sales-of-its-speartooth-large-uncrewed-underwater-vessel/.

C2 Robotics. “Media Release: 2026 National Defence Strategy Confirms C2 Robotics’ Speartooth as Part of ADF Force Structure.” Media release, April 15, 2026. https://c2robotics.com.au/media-release-2026-national-defence-strategy-confirms-c2-robotics-speartooth-as-part-of-adf-force-structure/.

“First Ghost Shark Extra Large AUV Delivered to Australian Navy.” Breaking Defense. November 2, 2025. https://breakingdefense.com/2025/11/first-ghost-shark-extra-large-auv-delivered-to-australian-navy/.

“Ghost Shark – Mission Zero.” Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator (ASCA), Australian Government. August 11, 2025. https://www.asca.gov.au/activities/missions/ghost-shark-mission-zero.

“Orca Submarine Is Yet Another Case of the Navy Spending a Fortune on a Robot That Still Isn’t Ready.” Task & Purpose. October 11, 2022. https://taskandpurpose.com/news/navy-orca-unmanned-submarine-problems/.

“US Navy’s Orca XLUUV 64% Over Budget, 3 Years Late.” Naval News. September 28, 2022. https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2022/09/us-navys-orca-xluuv-64-over-budget-3-years-late/.

U.S. Government Accountability Office. GAO: Navy’s XLUUV Undersea Minelayer $242M Over Budget, 3 Years Behind Schedule. September 27, 2022. https://news.usni.org/2022/09/28/gao-navys-xluuv-undersea-minelayer-242m-over-budget-3-years-behind-schedule.

 

The Autonomous Revolution: How Australia Could Transform Defense Through Maritime Robotics

From Prototypes to Operational Realities: Australia’s Maritime Autonomous Systems Unit and the Tasks That Cannot Wait

From Prototypes to Operational Realities: Australia’s Maritime Autonomous Systems Unit and the Tasks That Cannot Wait

05/01/2026

By Robbin Laird

Australia’s Maritime Autonomous Systems Unit, the MASU, stands at an inflection point. The period of experimentation and prototype evaluation that has defined the past several years of Australian engagement with unmanned maritime systems must now give way to something harder to achieve and more consequential: operational delivery.

The pressure is not abstract. Australia faces a significant hull gap as its surface combatant fleet ages and new vessels remain years from delivery. The AUKUS pathway toward nuclear‑powered submarines promises transformative capability but on a timeline measured in decades. In the meantime, the strategic environment is not waiting.

The question is whether MASU will rise to meet it as an operational command with real mission responsibilities, or remain primarily a niche capability and development cell within Navy’s bureaucracy.

In a wide‑ranging conversation, defence analyst Marcus Hellyer, Head of Research at Strategic Analysis Australia and former Senior Analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, engaged with these questions directly. What emerged was both a frank assessment of where Australia currently stands and a practical agenda for what MASU should be doing right now.

The Bolt‑Action Rifle Principle

The instinct to treat maritime autonomous systems as precursors to some future perfected capability waiting until doctrine is fully developed, until the optimal platform arrives, until the concept of operations is airtight is precisely the trap Hellyer wants to avoid.

He reached for a durable analogy: the bolt‑action rifle. If you look at a bolt‑action rifle as a prototype of some perfect firearm arriving thirty or forty years down the track, you miss the utility it offers right now in its own context. It kills people perfectly well.

The same logic applies to maritime autonomous systems today. We know what Bluebottle USVs can do. We have seen them conduct fisheries surveillance operations. We have a good picture of their reliability from company testing and exercises such as Autonomous Warrior. The question is not whether these systems are ready for something; they are. The question is what that something should be.

The answer lies not in the systems themselves but in the operational problems Australia already has and can already see coming. Learning by doing, iterating against real mission requirements, generating real data, these are the activities of an operational command, not a purely developmental one.

The Hull Gap as Strategic Opportunity

The Australian shipbuilding program’s well‑documented delivery challenges create an opportunity to reframe the hull gap. Rather than treating the absence of new surface combatants as simply a problem to be managed, the question becomes: how can maritime autonomous systems help bridge that gap operationally over the coming decade?

The common objection that the vast distances of the Indo‑Pacific make Australian autonomous systems irrelevant compared to the compact operating environment of Ukraine’s Black Sea campaign does not hold up to scrutiny. Industry is already producing relatively small autonomous systems with strategically relevant reach: sufficient, in principle and depending on payload and configuration, to operate from Australia into the northern archipelago, from Guam to the Philippines, from the Philippines toward Taiwan. The geometry is no longer prohibitive.

This reframing also changes how to think about what MASU should prioritize. Extending reach into the first island chain, managing water space to Australia’s north, building comprehensive port security for facilities that will eventually host nuclear‑powered submarines, these are not science fiction. They are near‑term operational requirements that autonomous systems, fielded thoughtfully and connected to real CONOPS, can begin addressing now.

Protecting the Submarines Before They Arrive

Hellyer’s sharpest observation concerned what he sees as the most underappreciated vulnerability in the AUKUS submarine pathway. He is not particularly worried about whether Australia eventually acquires and crews nuclear‑powered submarines; that will happen. Nor is he losing sleep over the prospect that technological advances will suddenly make submarines transparent to detection, vessels operating at the speeds and depths modern submarines achieve remain profoundly difficult to find.

What concerns him deeply is survivability in port and during transit to open water. Submarines often spend the majority of their operational lives in port or in dry dock. HMAS Stirling, Australia’s primary naval base near Perth, will become the home of some of the most valuable and strategically consequential vessels in the Australian Defence Force. The question of how to defend that base against the full range of threats that will exist when those vessels arrive and that already exist today demands urgent attention.

The threat picture is layered and diverse. Long‑range ballistic missiles can reach Australian ports. Autonomous surface and underwater vehicles, potentially carrying small missiles or drone payloads, can be launched from considerable distances. Container ships, as Hellyer and I discussed, can serve as covert launch platforms, a pattern with both Iranian activities and World War II precedent. Short‑range drones do not need long range if the platform carrying them does. In a plausible worst‑case scenario, a high‑value submarine damaged or destroyed by a very low‑cost drone, launched from a long‑range unmanned platform, would represent a catastrophic return‑on‑investment failure.

The response architecture, layered air defence, counter‑drone systems, underwater barrier operations, surface surveillance networks, is not futuristic. It is anticipatable and buildable now. And HMAS Stirling offers a ready‑made development environment. Whatever defensive architecture Australia learns to build around Stirling can subsequently be applied offensively to bottle up adversary forces at strategic chokepoints. The skills and the mesh networks transfer.

The ISR Grid as Foundation

Hellyer’s specific operational suggestion, deploying thin‑line sonar arrays on Bluebottle USVs and potentially on larger UUVs such as Speartooth and Ghost Shark, points toward a broader architectural principle. For relatively modest investment, Australia could begin placing large numbers of underwater sensors across the approaches to its major ports and along the transit corridors its submarines will need to use. These systems could form the beginning of a defensive anti‑submarine warfare barrier.

But the value of this activity extends beyond its immediate tactical purpose. Every sensor network of this kind generates data, and the task of collecting, distributing, and acting on that data whether through USV‑to‑USV relay, USV‑to‑aircraft handoff, or satellite distribution builds exactly the mesh‑networking competency that more advanced future systems will require. It almost does not matter precisely how the data flows are resolved in early iterations. What matters is that the force learns to resolve them, because that learning is the foundation upon which future capability is built.

Fleet Mix: Not a Capital Ship

One of the more important conceptual points to emerge from the conversation concerns the fundamental difference in how to think about autonomous maritime systems compared to capital ships. A capital ship is designed to do everything itself. It is an integrated weapons and sensor platform. An autonomous maritime systems fleet is optimized differently: multiple specialized platforms, each contributing different capabilities, working together toward a combined effect.

Hellyer raised the cautionary example of Triton as a warning about what happens when autonomous systems are asked to replicate everything a traditional exquisite manned platform can do. The result is predictable: development takes as long, costs as much, and produces as few units. The whole point of the autonomous systems revolution, its promise of intelligent mass over exquisite scarcity, is lost.

Mine Countermeasures, Amphibious Support, and the Full Mission Set

The conversation identified three immediate mission sets for MASU that extend well beyond the Ukrainian‑inspired port‑strike scenario that dominates public discussion.

First, underwater barrier operations to protect submarine transit corridors and deny adversary UUVs the ability to lay mines in approaches to Australian ports.

Second, comprehensive port security, including defence against drone swarms, autonomous surface vessels, and other asymmetric threats, which carries commercial value as well as military utility. The threat to merchant shipping approaching Australian ports is real and does not require state‑level adversaries to materialize.

Third, and perhaps most overlooked: mine countermeasures. As Hellyer noted candidly, Australia, like most Western nations, has allowed its mine countermeasure capability to atrophy significantly.

The most effective response to a mine threat is to prevent mines from being laid in the first place, and autonomous systems operating persistent barrier patrols around port approaches offer a practical mechanism for doing exactly that. The Offshore Patrol Vessels already in service, integrated with USV and UUV capabilities, represent an existing asset combination that could deliver this mission without waiting for new procurement.

The 2023 Defence Strategic Review and the subsequent National Defence Strategy have directed the Australian Army towards a more explicitly amphibious and littoral operational focus. Maritime USVs have obvious roles in amphibious operations: sanitizing landing zones, conducting ISR in contested littoral environments, providing persistent surveillance of the operational space ahead of landing forces. Given the deep operational relationship between the Australian Defence Force and the United States Marine Corps, this is an area where coordinated development could produce capabilities valuable to both forces.

Strategic Rear Defence and the Alliance Value Proposition

The conversation closed with a point that deserves more prominent attention in Australian strategic discourse. Japan, South Korea, and the United States increasingly regard Australia as a strategic rear area, a secure base from which to sustain and regenerate forces operating in the western Pacific. That strategic value is only as durable as Australia’s ability to actually defend its ports, its logistics nodes, and its maritime approaches.

A robust MASU, one genuinely delivering operational effects rather than conducting perpetual prototype evaluation, is therefore not merely an Australian defence capability. It is a contribution to allied deterrence, a demonstration that the strategic rear is credibly defended, and potentially a model for collaborative capability development that partners could invest in and contribute to. The alliance value proposition runs in both directions.

Hellyer noted that real progress is being made in Australian thinking about autonomous systems after years of what he considered excessive caution. The investments are real. The conceptual advances are real. But the gaps remain, and the timeline pressure is intensifying. The adversarial autonomous systems that might threaten Australian ports are not waiting for MASU’s concept of operations to mature. A large UUV capable of travelling from the northern approaches to Australia to its major ports is essentially a question of battery volume, platform size, and design choices, rather than a distant technological fantasy.

Conclusion: Focus on Real‑World Mission Requirements

MASU should be focused on real mission requirements: port security, submarine transit protection, barrier ASW operations, mine countermeasure support, and amphibious ISR requirements. The Maritime Border Command already demonstrates what this looks like: an operational force using Australian‑built systems to deliver real‑world surveillance effects.

The bolt‑action rifle is not a prototype of the machine gun. It is a weapon that kills people effectively right now. Australia’s maritime autonomous systems are not prototypes of some future fleet. They are capable systems that can begin delivering operational effects today, against threats that are already evident, in defence of infrastructure that cannot afford to wait.

Marcus Hellyer is Head of Research at Strategic Analysis Australia and former Senior Analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. He is the author of multiple editions of The Cost of Defence and holds a Master’s and PhD in History and the History of Science from the University of California, San Diego, as well as a Master’s in Strategic Studies.

Australia’s Maritime Autonomous Systems Unit: From Kill Chain to Kill Web at Sea

The Interconnected Deals No One Is Calling a New World Order

04/30/2026

By: Alexandra Brooks

On May 13, 2025, President Donald Trump stood before Saudi ministers, Gulf investors, and technology executives at the King Abdulaziz International Conference Center in Riyadh and delivered what may be remembered as one of the defining foreign policy speeches of the decade. The event was written off as another investment forum; the speech was something else entirely.

In a single address, Trump warned Iran that its window for diplomacy was closing, announced a 142-billion-dollar arms deal with Saudi Arabia, name‑checked Nvidia’s Jensen Huang and deals with Amazon, Oracle, AMD, and Qualcomm, and repeated his dream that Saudi Arabia would join the Abraham Accords. He sketched a Middle East that would “export technology, not terrorism.”

This piece argues that the continued engagement in the Middle East is not a series of isolated deals but the architecture of a new global order: the Abraham Accords as a Marshall Plan–style framework, Pax Silica and Nvidia‑backed AI “factories” as the infrastructure layer, and a dollar‑to‑digital system as the financial backbone. The strategy, taken together, is to embed partner states in an American‑led AI order, echoing how U.S. postwar initiatives like the Marshall Plan and related institutions underwrote Western Europe’s integration into the Bretton Woods order.

From George Marshall to Michael Kratsios

In June 1947, Secretary of State George Marshall delivered a commencement address at Harvard that reshaped the postwar world. The logic was simple but profound: political stability and peace depended on economic health, and economic health in a shattered Europe required support from American architecture: capital, institutional frameworks, and supply chains. The crucial line is often overlooked: “The initiative, I think, must come from Europe. The role of this country should consist of friendly aid in the drafting of a European program.” The United States would lay the foundation; others would build on it.

The Marshall Plan did two things at once. It rebuilt allies. And it embedded them in an American‑led economic order, anchored by the Bretton Woods institutions and a dollar‑denominated financial system. The genius was that neither outcome required overt coercion. The deal was genuinely attractive. The dependency was structural rather than imposed. It laid the foundations for what Europeans themselves turned into the largest single market in the world and the most durable peace project in modern history: the European Union.

Bretton Woods and the Marshall Plan are best understood as twin pillars of the postwar U.S.‑led order: the first supplied the monetary and institutional architecture, negotiated in 1944; the second, launched in 1948, supplied the capital and political scaffolding that allowed Western Europe to operate inside it.

Now read Michael Kratsios in 2026, Trump’s former director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, speaking at the India AI Impact Summit; “Real AI sovereignty means owning and using best-in-class technology for the benefit of your people, and charting your national destiny in the midst of global transformations. It does not mean waiting to participate in an AI-enabled global market until you have tried and failed to build full self-sufficiency. Complete technological self-containment is unrealistic for any country, because the AI stack is incredibly complex. But strategic autonomy alongside rapid AI adoption is achievable, and it is a necessity for independent nations. America wants to help.” 

The Kratsios doctrine is already being operationalized. The American AI Export Program, which formally launched its first Call for Proposals on April 1, 2026, is designed—at least in ambition—to do for AI what the Marshall Plan did for Western Europe’s postwar recovery: turn American capabilities and templates into an exportable architecture for rebuilding key systems and binding willing partners into a U.S.‑anchored economic and technological order.

The American AI Export Program organizes consortia of U.S. firms to bring full‑stack AI solutions abroad — hardware optimized for AI, data pipelines and labeling, models, cybersecurity, and applications — rather than isolated products. In return, these consortia receive prioritized export licensing, diplomatic advocacy with foreign governments, and expedited federal financing channels.

The rhetorical DNA is the same almost 80 years later: the initiative comes from you; America provides the architecture. The currency has simply shifted from dollars and factories to compute, chips, models, and data infrastructure. The Marshall Plan paved the way for Western Europe to rebuild and to lock itself into the Bretton Woods architecture, turning American capital, rules, and institutions into the scaffolding of its recovery. The emerging American AI Export Program is the institutional bridge between that logic and today’s reality — a Marshall Plan for compute that packages U.S. capabilities into an exportable stack and embeds partner countries in an American AI order. In that sense, it is already rebuilding the world — starting with the Middle East — into a Pax Silica order.

The Diplomatic Chassis: Abraham Accords

When the Trump administration brokered normalization agreements between Israel and four Arab states, the Accords were ignored as nothing more than words on paper. Yet, beyond the diplomatic achievements themselves, the economic and technological dimension have been largely ignored. Israeli cybersecurity firms began collaborating with Emirati financial institutions. Agricultural technologies developed in the Negev found applications in Gulf states confronting similar water scarcity. The Accords were not just about security architecture against Tehran; they were about “positioning for an era when innovation, not oil, would define regional power.”

The Abraham Accords established a template: transactional normalization where the real currency was not only diplomatic recognition but economic and technological integration — what one analyst has viewed the evolution to the silicon handshake,” peace through partnership through innovation. Critically, Iran served as the negative space that made the coalition coherent: the shared threat that gave disparate nations a common reason to align. As Anton Chekhov once remarked: “Love, friendship and respect do not unite people as much as common hatred for something.”

The Infrastructure Layer: Pax Silica and AI “Factories”

In December 2025, Under Secretary of State Jacob Helberg convened the first Pax Silica Summit in Washington, D.C. It is a curated, and growing, network of states chosen for their positions in the AI supply chain: chipmakers, cloud hosts, data hubs, and regional security partners. The declaration was explicit: “If the twentieth century ran on oil and steel, the twenty-first century runs on compute.”

Pax Silica is an attempt to reorganize global technological infrastructure around American‑controlled chokepoints — design, chip manufacturing, cloud platforms, security ecosystems — and in doing so to redefine alignment, sovereignty, and dependence in the AI age.

Abraham Accords states like the UAE, Qatar, and Israel emerged as founding Pax Silica partners. The Accords supplied the geopolitical skeleton; Pax Silica is laying the technological nervous system over it. What began as diplomatic normalization is evolving into a network of AI “factories,” data centers, and secure digital corridors stretching from the Mediterranean to the Gulf.

Seen against this backdrop, the 2025 Nvidia deals in the Gulf look less like opportunistic business and more like the material basis of the order. In May 2025, Nvidia and Saudi AI firm Humain announced a strategic partnership under which Nvidia would supply more than 18,000 of its top‑tier Blackwell‑class chips to power new “AI factories” in the kingdom. In parallel, the United States moved toward approving large‑scale Nvidia sales to the UAE, including a multiyear arrangement for high‑end AI chips subject to export controls and allocation between Emirati and U.S. cloud providers. Washington treated the Gulf as a destination for frontier AI infrastructure, while steering China toward constrained, export‑compliant chips or China‑specific variants.

AI hardware policy, in other words, became a tool of geopolitical alignment.

In March 2026, Washington put a financing mechanism behind the Pax Silica declaration. The State Department announced the Pax Silica Fund — $250 million in foreign assistance designed not as traditional grant aid but as a catalyst for private and sovereign capital estimated at more than a trillion dollars in assets under management among trusted partners. The Fund was explicitly framed as part of Secretary Rubio’s “Trade Not Aid” doctrine, targeting critical minerals, processing capacity, and manufacturing assets upstream of semiconductors.

The Security Lock‑In: Iran, Saudi, and the F‑35

Saudi Arabia has long been the missing piece of the Abraham Accords — courted, interested, but always conditional. Mohammed bin Salman’s conditions were never purely about Israel. They were about Iran. In the Saudi calculus, normalization with Israel was only possible once the regional threat that made such a move politically costly at home had been neutralized.

The war in Iran could be the catalyst for that neutralization, though it is too early to tell. Much to the American President’s dismay. On March 27, 2026, at the Future Investment Initiative summit in Miami, President Trump told Saudi delegates and Gulf executives that the conditions had been met. For nearly five decades, he said, Iran had been “the bully of the Middle East,” but now it was “on the run.” He recounted years of conversations in which the Crown Prince had responded to Abraham Accords overtures with a list of prerequisites. Turning to Yasir Al‑Rumayyan, the head of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, he made the ask public: “I hope you’re going to be getting into the Abraham Accords finally. Will you please go back and explain? It’s time now.”

The Miami speech also revealed something subtler than a simple pivot away from Europe. Trump’s frustration with NATO’s response to the Iran conflict was explicit — “you learn who your friends are,” he told the room. Yet he did not call for NATO’s dissolution, and he went out of his way to praise Turkey, a NATO member, echoing language from his earlier Riyadh remarks in 2025. The signal was not a clean break from Europe toward the Gulf. It was a reweighting inside an existing architecture: Gulf partners, Israel, and select European states becoming the critical nodes of a new AI‑and‑defense order.

Greece is a key test case in how this strategy scales beyond the Middle East. Athens is a Pax Silica signatory, has moved aggressively into American AI partnerships including deep engagement with OpenAI, and sits inside both NATO and the emerging compute architecture. Its relations with Turkey remain fraught — yet both countries are being courted, through different channels, as nodes in the new order. If the Abraham Accords model is a template for technological and security integration rather than a purely Middle Eastern diplomatic instrument (as signaled in the Miami Speech by President Trump), Greece and Turkey together may represent exactly the kind of bridging path Europe needs: ways into Pax Silica that do not require choosing between the Atlantic alliance and the emerging American AI order. The question is not whether Europe is left behind. It is whether its entry points are being quietly built — and whether anyone in Brussels is paying attention to where the doors are.

At the same Miami summit, Trump announced that the United States had agreed, for the first time, to sell Saudi Arabia the F‑35, America’s most advanced fighter jet. For years, that sale had been withheld in part to protect Israel’s qualitative military edge. Its approval now, in the context of the war, signals that the alliance architecture has shifted enough that old constraints no longer apply. Saudi Arabia is being brought fully inside — not just as an investment partner or AI customer, but as a peer defense partner with access to some of America’s most sensitive military technology.

Seen together, the Iran campaign, the Abraham Accords, the AI export program, and F‑35 access form the security spine of the new order.

The Monetary Backbone: From Bretton Woods to Digital Dollars

The Marshall Plan world was anchored by Bretton Woods and the dollar’s role as global reserve currency, supported by U.S. military power and institutional credibility. The question for the Abraham Accords and Pax Silica era is what plays that role now.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent helps sketch an answer.  In a recent address, he argued that industrial capacity, technological leadership, and a strong‑dollar policy together form the backbone of U.S. economic sovereignty. He then singled out stablecoins — dollar‑denominated digital currencies — as a mechanism for reinforcing the dollar’s global role and extending its network effects into emerging digital payment systems. The GENIUS Act’s regulatory framework is, in part, a preemptive strike against a widely adopted Chinese digital currency that would operate outside U.S. law and erode American monetary leverage. In this telling, dollar stablecoins are Bretton Woods for the machine age.

The loop closes further when you consider where AI itself is heading. As Galaxy Digital’s Michael Novogratz has observed, in the near future the largest users of stablecoins may not be humans at all, but autonomous AI agents paying one another for compute, data, and services. If the world’s AI runs on American infrastructure and settles its transactions in dollar‑denominated digital money, U.S. monetary primacy is not merely preserved in the AI era. It is hard‑wired into it.

What Does It All Mean

Put together, the pieces are an interconnected strategy:

  • The Abraham Accords as a Marshall Plan–style framework for binding partners into a common project.
  • Pax Silica,Nvidia‑backed AI “factories” and a Pax Silica Fund as the compute and cloud stack that operationalizes that framework.
  • F‑35 sales, integrated air defense, and Iran containment as the hard‑power spine of the architecture.
  • Dollar‑denominated stablecoins and, eventually, AI‑driven digital payments as the monetary substrate that backs and extends it.

Together, they amount to a nascent global order that runs on AI infrastructure and dollar‑linked digital rails, offered to partners who are told — as Europe was told in 1947 — that the initiative must come from them, and that America stands ready with “friendly aid” in drafting the program.

Trump said it plainly in Riyadh in 2025: We will work together. We will be together. We will succeed together. We will win together.”

The architecture is being written now, and it has multiple doors: the American AI export program, the Abraham Accords, Pax Silica, the emerging stablecoin rails. A new world order is taking shape, and if history is any guide, the countries that shape it will not be the ones who waited to understand it. The Middle East and emerging technology are where the map is being drawn. The question is who picks up a pen.