Brazil’s Defense Crossroads: Will Lula’s China Tilt Undermine Hard-Won Partnerships?

08/09/2025

President Lula’s recent decision to station Brazilian general officers permanently in Beijing marks a potential inflection point in Brazil’s defense partnerships, one that could jeopardize billions of dollars in established defense industrial relationships and undermine decades of successful technology transfer programs.

While proponents frame this as a move toward “strategic autonomy,” a closer examination reveals troubling parallels to colonial-era relationships that could subordinate Brazil to Chinese interests while simultaneously destroying the most successful defense partnerships in Latin American history.

The Risk to Established Strategic Partnerships

Brazil’s current defense industrial landscape represents one of the most sophisticated technology transfer arrangements achieved by any developing nation. The Swedish partnership, centered on the $4.7 billion Gripen program, has delivered genuine industrial capabilities including final assembly at Embraer’s facilities, transfer of critical radar and electronic warfare technologies, and access to software source codes. Similarly, the French partnership has produced the $10+ billion submarine program with Naval Group, including four conventional Scorpène-class submarines, one nuclear-powered submarine, and comprehensive naval technology transfer at the Itaguaí Naval Complex.

These relationships represent far more than arms purchases. They constitute foundational investments in Brazil’s defense industrial base. The Swedish arrangement alone has created thousands of high-skilled jobs and positioned Brazil as a potential Gripen export hub for Latin America. The French submarine program has established Brazil as one of only a handful of nations with nuclear submarine capabilities, a strategic asset of immeasurable value.

President Lula’s apparent pivot toward China places all of this at risk. Unlike the transparent, democratic partnerships with Sweden and France for both nations have robust legislative oversight and shared democratic values, Chinese military cooperation operates under fundamentally different principles that could compromise Brazil’s existing relationships.

The Illusion of Diversification

The narrative surrounding Brazil’s military rapprochement with China emphasizes diversification and reduced dependence on traditional Western partners. The promise of Chinese VT-4 tanks, J-10 fighter jets, and advanced artillery systems appears to offer strategic options and technological advancement.

However, this framing obscures a fundamental reality: Brazil would not be achieving independence through diversification, but potentially abandoning its most successful defense partnerships for a relationship that exhibits classic characteristics of technological dependence.

Brazil’s economic relationship with China already demonstrates concerning patterns. China purchases Brazilian soybeans, iron ore, and crude oil while exporting manufactured goods and technology—a classic center-periphery relationship that has “primarized” Brazil’s economy. Military cooperation threatens to extend this subordinate dynamic into the security realm, potentially undermining the genuine technology transfer and industrial development achieved through European partnerships.

From Industrial Partnership to Technological Dependence

The contrast between Brazil’s existing European partnerships and potential Chinese cooperation is stark. Swedish and French arrangements have prioritized:

  • Technology Transfer: Genuine transfer of manufacturing capabilities, software source codes, and technical expertise that builds Brazilian industrial capacity.
  • Local Production: Final assembly and increasingly sophisticated manufacturing within Brazil, creating jobs and export potential.
  • Democratic Oversight: Partnerships between democracies with transparent legislative processes and public accountability.
  • Strategic Independence: Agreements that enhance Brazil’s capabilities without creating political dependencies.

Chinese military cooperation, by contrast, typically involves:

  • Technology Dependence: Equipment requiring ongoing Chinese maintenance, spare parts, and upgrades, creating lasting vulnerabilities.
  • Limited Transfer: Minimal genuine technology transfer, maintaining Chinese control over critical capabilities.
  • Opaque Processes: Authoritarian decision-making without meaningful public scrutiny or legislative oversight.
  • Political Leverage: Military dependencies that can be leveraged for broader geopolitical influence.

The Democratic Governance Challenge

Perhaps most concerning is how a Chinese pivot could undermine the governance frameworks that made Brazil’s European partnerships successful. The Gripen and submarine programs succeeded precisely because they operated within democratic oversight structures, with legislative approval, public debate, and transparent decision-making processes.

The decision to station Brazilian generals permanently in Beijing appears to have bypassed these crucial democratic safeguards. When Brazilian military officers become embedded in Chinese institutional structures, they risk absorbing different assumptions about civil-military relations, strategic priorities, and acceptable levels of public accountability—precisely the kind of institutional influence that could compromise Brazil’s democratic governance of defense policy.

Strategic Costs of Abandoning Proven Partnerships

A Chinese pivot would exact immediate strategic costs:

  • Sunk Investment Losses: Billions invested in Swedish and French programs could become stranded assets if Brazil pivots to incompatible Chinese systems.
  • Industrial Capacity: The manufacturing capabilities developed through European partnerships—from Gripen final assembly to submarine construction—could become obsolete.
  • Export Potential: Brazil’s emerging role as a defense exporter, particularly for Gripen aircraft to other Latin American nations, would be jeopardized.
  • Alliance Relationships: Brazil’s status as a democratic partner and potential NATO ally would be compromised, limiting access to Western defense technologies and intelligence sharing.
  • Technological Autonomy: Rather than building on the industrial base created through European partnerships, Brazil would become dependent on Chinese systems and support structures.

The Path Forward

Brazil’s frustrations with some aspects of its defense relationships are understandable, but the solution lies in building on successful partnerships rather than abandoning them for untested alternatives.

True strategic autonomy should involve:

  • Leveraging Existing Capabilities: Using the industrial base built through Swedish and French partnerships as a foundation for further indigenous development.
  • Expanding Proven Partnerships: Deepening cooperation with European partners while maintaining the democratic oversight and technology transfer principles that made these relationships successful.
  • Selective Engagement: Limited cooperation with China in areas that don’t compromise existing partnerships or democratic governance principles.
  • Indigenous Development: Using transferred European technologies as stepping stones toward genuinely Brazilian defense capabilities.
  • Regional Leadership: Leveraging Brazil’s position as Latin America’s most successful defense technology recipient to become a regional hub for democratic defense cooperation.

Brazil stands at a crossroads. It can build on the most successful defense industrial partnerships in Latin American history, relationships that have delivered genuine technology transfer, industrial capabilities, and strategic autonomy or it can abandon these proven successes for the uncertain promise of Chinese cooperation.

The permanent stationing of Brazilian generals in Beijing may mark a historic moment, but history suggests that Brazil’s greatest strategic successes have come through partnerships with democratic allies committed to genuine technology transfer and shared governance principles.

The choice facing Brazil is not simply between different suppliers, but between building on demonstrated success or starting over with a partner whose approach to international relationships has consistently prioritized Chinese interests over genuine partnership. Brazil’s size, resources, and democratic institutions position it to be a truly independent actor but only if it recognizes that strategic autonomy comes from building on strength, not abandoning it.

The Swedish and French partnerships represent that strength. The question is whether Brazil will build on this foundation or squander it in pursuit of an illusion of diversification that could leave it more dependent than ever.

Note: The Brazilian decision is highlighted here:

https://jornalggn.com.br/coluna-economica/a-aproximacao-militar-do-brasil-com-a-china-por-luis-nassif/#google_vignette

Also, see the following:

Is There a Military Pivot to China Underway by President Lula’s Brazil?

Chinese defence giant moves to acquire 49 percent of Brazil’s Avibras Aeroespacial

https://macaonews.org/news/lusofonia/china-norinco-brazil-avibras-aeroespacial/

The King Stallion in Inter-Agency Duty

08/08/2025

U.S. Marines with Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron (HMH) 461, Marine Aircraft Group 29, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing (MAW), and 2nd Distribution Support Battalion (DSB), Combat Logistics Group 2, 2nd Marine Logistics Group, perform an external lift with a CH-53K King Stallion at U.S. Coast Guard Base Sector Key West, Florida, July 30, 2025.

Marines with 2nd MAW and 2nd DSB are training alongside elements of the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection to refine humanitarian assistance and disaster relief capabilities while also refining the CH-53K King Stallion’s ability to support distributed aviation operations in a joint environment.

U.S. Marines with HMH-461 and 2nd DSB execute an external lift with a JLTV

2nd Marine Aircraft Wing

July 30, 2025

(U.S. Marine Corps video by Sgt. Rowdy Vanskike

 

Australia’s Strategic Recalibration: Building Self-Reliance Through Deeper Partnerships

By Robbin Laird

Australia stands at a strategic crossroads.

The Pentagon’s last-minute withdrawal from the Indo-Pacific Deterrence Dialogue in Canberra, coupled with the Trump administration’s review of AUKUS and escalating trade tensions, has crystallized a fundamental challenge for Australian strategists: how to maintain essential alliance relationships while building the strategic autonomy necessary to navigate an increasingly complex security environment?

This moment of recalibration reflects what Professor John Blaxland terms a “poly-crisis”or the convergence of major power competition, environmental challenges, governance breakdowns, and technological disruption.

In this context, Australia must build strategic resilience through diversified partnerships while maintaining capacity for independent action, not as an alternative to the U.S. alliance, but as a means of strengthening it.

The Limits of Alliance Dependency

Recent events starkly illustrate the risks of excessive alliance dependency. The Pentagon’s decision to bar officials from the Canberra dialogue, described by ANU’s Rory Medcalf as “disappointing and counterproductive for alliance interests”, occurred precisely when strategic dialogue is most crucial. China has conducted unprecedented naval exercises around Australia, including gunfire drills under the Sydney-Auckland flight path, marking a significant escalation in regional tensions.

Paul Dibb’s assessment is particularly sobering: Australia has become “the only ally that always says ‘Yes'” to U.S. requests for forward defense operations outside its region of primary strategic concern. This reflexive compliance has created unhealthy dependency dynamics that serve neither country’s interests. More troubling, it has masked a fundamental reality about Australian defense capabilities.

The Australian Defense Force remains what Dibb describes as “essentially a peacetime force capable of handling only low-level contingencies for a limited time.” Despite decades of alliance cooperation, Australia could sustain only “a couple of battalions, two submarines and a continuous combat air patrol” for short periods. The ADF is no larger than it was 40 years ago, when planners assumed Australia would face no direct military attack without significant warning.

Strategic Self-Reliance Within Alliance Frameworks

The solution lies not in abandoning the U.S. alliance but in what might be termed “strategic self-reliance within alliance frameworks.” Dibb’s central guideline captures this balance: demonstrate to Washington that “short of a large attack on Australia by a major power, we would be able to defend ourselves.”

This approach serves multiple strategic purposes.

It reduces abandonment risks by making Australia a more capable partner, mitigates entrapment risks by maintaining independent options, and contributes to regional stability by creating multiple resilience nodes rather than single points of failure. The 1999 East Timor intervention exemplified this principle when President Clinton made clear that Australia must lead regional operations in its primary area of concern.

Australia’s unique geographic challenges demand this self-reliant approach. Responsible for 10 percent of Earth’s surface through territorial and maritime claims, Australia faces strategic vulnerabilities that no ally can fully address.

Northern military bases have long been inadequately supplied even lacking basic aviation fuel while potential forward positions like Cocos (Keeling) Islands remain underdeveloped despite their strategic value for operations around key maritime chokepoints.

The Japan Partnership

The recent selection of Japan’s upgraded Mogami-class frigates illustrates effective “spoke-to-spoke” collaboration that transcends traditional hub-and-spokes architecture. These ships represent more than a procurement decision; they embody a strategic partnership model that enhances both nations’ capabilities while creating mutual dependencies that strengthen rather than constrain autonomy.

The upgraded Mogami offers significant advantages over alternatives. With 6,200 tonnes displacement and 32 vertical launch system cells, quadruple the eight cells on current Anzac-class frigates, these ships provide substantially enhanced firepower. Their 90-person crews, enabled by extensive automation, address Australia’s personnel recruitment challenges while their 40-year design life offers long-term value. Most importantly, their advanced combat management systems and 360-degree augmented reality walls represent cutting-edge technology sharing between democracies.

Beyond technical capabilities, the Japan partnership addresses broader strategic imperatives. Japan’s defense industrial base, democratic values, and geographic position create natural strategic convergence. Both nations face similar challenges balancing great power competition while maintaining alliance relationships. Japan’s location in the first island chain, stretching from northern Japan to Indonesia, aligns with Australia’s interest in preventing Chinese control over critical sea lanes.

The partnership extends beyond naval platforms. Hanwha’s defense manufacturing presence in Geelong reflects broader defense industrial cooperation that reduces single-supplier dependencies while creating economic benefits. This approach demonstrates how strategic partnerships can generate mutual advantages that pure alliance relationships cannot achieve.

Building Resilient Partnership Networks

Australia’s strategic approach extends beyond bilateral relationships to multilateral frameworks designed to address complex security challenges requiring networked responses. The Quad partnership with India, Japan, and the United States focuses on maritime security and democratic values. AUKUS enables advanced technology sharing for submarine capabilities. The Five Power Defence Arrangements provide regional security cooperation with Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, and the United Kingdom.

Singapore exemplifies successful partnership building. Australia’s relationship with Singapore “rivals the intimacy of the Australia-New Zealand relationship,” built on mutual trust through recognized educational and professional standards, overlapping interests in ASEAN-related mechanisms, and shared commitment to open trade and regional stability. The Singapore-Australia Free Trade Agreement demonstrates how economic, and security cooperation can reinforce each other.

These partnerships serve different functions but collectively create strategic depth that bilateral alliances alone cannot provide. They enable Australia to influence regional dynamics while avoiding the binary choice between China and the United States that has trapped some nations in unsustainable positions.

Managing the China Challenge

China’s extraordinary rise presents Australia’s most complex strategic challenge. In twenty-five years since WTO accession, China has transformed from peripheral economic actor to central hub of global commerce, emerging as the leading trading partner across Eurasia, Africa, Latin America, and Oceania. This economic dominance, coupled with rapid military expansion and increasingly assertive “wolf warrior diplomacy,” creates what Blaxland describes as a fundamental “duality” for countries like Australia.

At bottom, the challenge is coming to terms with Global China which has its own version of what a global order should look like and it is not one that a democratic society like Australia will like.

The challenge involves both capability and intent assessments. China’s military capabilities have “exploded onto the scene” with hypersonic weapons, extended nuclear ballistic missile forces, and advanced naval platforms. Recent Chinese naval exercises circumnavigating Australia represent unprecedented assertiveness in what Australia considers its strategic approaches. Meanwhile, China’s security partnerships across the South Pacific with Solomon Islands, Kiribati, and Tonga directly challenge Australia’s traditional influence.

Australia’s response needs to acknowledge economic realities while maintaining strategic independence. China imposed an estimated USD 16 billion in punitive tariffs following Australian calls for COVID-19 investigations, demonstrating the reality of economic coercion. Australia’s successful diversification of trade relationships, such as renewing negotiations with the European Union, revitalizing ASEAN ties, and expanding collaboration with India shows how strategic partnerships can provide resilience against such pressure.

The Taiwan question looms particularly large. Chinese control over Taiwan and the first island chain could trigger neutralization of Japan and the Philippines, creating cascading effects across the Indo-Pacific. As Blaxland notes, Taiwan has become “a beacon of liberal democracy for Asia” whose fall could prompt significant U.S. withdrawal from regional engagement.

Practical Capabilities for Strategic Autonomy

Meaningful self-reliance requires concrete military capabilities that partnerships can help provide more efficiently than purely national approaches. Australia’s geographic challenges, vast territory, extensive maritime claims, limited population, demand specific investments guided by threat assessments and alliance cooperation.

Priority capabilities include long-range anti-ship strike missiles exceeding 2,000 kilometers range, essential for denying adversaries freedom of action in Australia’s strategic approaches. The emergence of low-Earth-orbit satellites capable of detecting submarine snorkels through pattern analysis and AI has made diesel-electric submarines vulnerable during long transits, necessitating nuclear propulsion for sustained underwater operations, hence AUKUS’s strategic importance.

Integrated air defense systems capable of protecting critical infrastructure against sophisticated missile threats represent another priority. Given recruiting challenges, investment in autonomous systems, drones, unmanned combat aircraft, and submarines, can extend Australia’s reach while reducing personnel requirements. These systems increasingly operate in “crewed-and-autonomous teaming” arrangements that multiply force effectiveness.

Northern base development remains crucial but incomplete. While improvements support U.S. strategic bomber operations, Australia has not adequately developed South Pacific basing or completed Cocos (Keeling) Islands infrastructure. Enhanced access arrangements with Japan could contribute to Taiwan deterrence while providing Australia forward positioning capabilities.

The Cognitive Domain Challenge

Modern strategic competition extends beyond traditional military domains into what Blaxland calls the “cognitive domain” or the ability to influence operations, disinformation campaigns, and digital propaganda targeting the “wetware” of human minds. This domain is “increasingly targeted by influence operations” that blur lines between collaboration, competition, and conflict.

Democratic societies face vulnerability in this domain where public opinion shapes policy in ways authoritarian systems can exploit. Australia’s 2023 cybersecurity strategy provides a framework for building resilience, but the challenge requires whole-of-society responses that partnerships with like-minded democracies can help coordinate.

The Chinese approach, drawing from Sun Tzu’s preference for “winning without fighting,” emphasizes “gray-zone” operations or activities between peace and war characterized by cyber operations, maritime brinkmanship, psychological operations, and economic coercion. Understanding this requires moving beyond Western analogies like chess toward the Chinese game of Go, which emphasizes encirclement, indirect pressure, and strategic patience.

Alliance Evolution, Not Abandonment

Current U.S.-Australia tensions, while concerning, should be understood as adjustments in global power dynamics rather than fundamental strategic realignment. The appointment of Elbridge Colby as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy suggests continuity in underlying strategic logic despite tactical changes.

Colby’s “Strategy of Denial” argues that while the unipolar moment is passing, the United States must focus resources on preventing Chinese hegemony in Asia which is an objective that aligns with Australian interests. His recognition that the U.S. faces “structural limitations” requiring “hard choices” actually supports Australian arguments for greater self-reliance and burden-sharing.

The challenge lies in managing relationships during uncertainty while building capabilities that strengthen alliance bonds. This requires “strategic patience “in maintaining long-term perspective while adapting to short-term political changes. It also demands clear communication about Australian priorities and mutual alliance benefits, even during policy disagreements.

Historical precedent suggests caution about premature conclusions regarding U.S. strategic direction. The Bush administration’s early China focus was overshadowed by 9/11 and subsequent Middle East conflicts. Current tensions over trade deficits — Australia imports USD 50.6 billion from the US while exporting USD 23.8 billion — reflect broader U.S. economic concerns rather than fundamental strategic shifts.

A Network of Democratic Resilience

Australia’s strategic recalibration reflects broader international system changes requiring new approaches to alliance management and partnership building. The hub-and-spokes era is evolving toward complex networks of cooperation among democracies facing common challenges.

Success requires what Blaxland calls “strategic literacy”or combining historical insight with geopolitical foresight. Australia’s objective should be building resilience and expanding cooperation while acting with principled pragmatism. The partnership with Japan, deeper cooperation with South Korea, strengthened Singapore ties, and continued US alliance all serve this network-building objective.

Rather than choosing between alliance dependence and strategic isolation, Australia is in the process of creating relationships that enhance both security and autonomy. This approach serves not only Australian interests but contributes to regional stability by providing alternatives to pure great power competition.

As middle powers with significant capabilities and shared democratic values, Australia and its partners can influence regional dynamics in ways that great power competition alone cannot achieve. Their success in building resilient partnerships may determine whether the Indo-Pacific becomes a region of conflict or cooperation.

The path forward requires sustained commitment to capability building and partnership development, strategic thinking that transcends traditional alliance categories while maintaining democratic values, and recognition that in an interconnected world, true security comes from networks of mutual support among nations sharing common interests and values.

Australia’s strategic recalibration represents not retreat from alliance commitments but their evolution toward more sustainable and effective cooperation.

This is an adaptive approach that may prove essential for preserving the stability and prosperity that democratic partnerships have created and must work together to maintain.

Sources for this Article:

John Blaxland, “Recalibration in the Indo-Pacific: An Australian Perspective,” Korea Policy, Vol 3. Issue 1, July 2025.

https://keia.org/publication/recalibration-in-the-indo-pacific-an-australian-perspective/

Colin Clark, “Why it matters that DoD quit on a defense forum in Australia, Breaking Defense.

https://breakingdefense.com/2025/08/why-it-matters-that-dod-quit-on-a-defense-forum-in-australia/

Paul Dibb, “Our US alliance is essential — yet we must also be more self-reliant, ASPI Strategist, 2 August 2025.

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/our-us-alliance-is-essential-yet-we-must-also-be-more-self-reliant/

Malcolm Davis, “Australia chooses big, heavily armed Japanese frigates,” ASPI Strategist, 5 August 2025.

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/australia-chooses-big-heavily-armed-japanese-frigates/

Beyond Hedging: Democratic Middle Powers and the Crisis of International Order

Beyond Great Power Competition: The Rise of Middle Powers in a Globalized World

Middle Powers in a Changing World: How Australia and Brazil Navigate the China Dynamic

 

Lightning Strikes Home

The first F-35A Lightning II aircraft permanently assigned to the Florida Air National Guard’s 125th Fighter Wing taxi on the flight line after landing at Jacksonville Air National Guard Base, Florida, July 9, 2025.

The delivery marks a key milestone in the wing’s continued transition to the F-35, initiating the phased arrival of aircraft bearing the unit’s signature tail flash.

As one of the newest Air National Guard units to field the fifth-generation fighter, the wing enhances the Air Force’s ability to provide agile combat airpower in support of U.S. and allied operations worldwide.

JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA

07.08.2025

Photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Hancock 

125th Fighter Wing

Australia’s USV Program Supporting Maritime Border Security

Australia faces one of the world’s most daunting maritime surveillance challenges. With responsibility for approximately 10 percent of the world’s ocean surface and 59,700 kilometers of coastline, the Australian Maritime Border Command (MBC) has long struggled with the fundamental problem of insufficient assets and manpower personnel to effectively monitor such vast areas.

The solution has come in the form of unmanned surface vessels (USVs), which are proving to be a promising force multipliers in Australia’s maritime security operations.

At the forefront of Australia’s USV program is the domestically-developed Bluebottle platform, manufactured by Sydney-based Ocius Technology. These innovative autonomous vessels represent a uniquely Australian approach to maritime surveillance, designed specifically to address the challenges of persistent ocean monitoring in harsh conditions.

Measuring 5.6 meters (19 feet) in length, Bluebottle USV vessels harness solar, wind, and wave energy to remain at sea for months at a time without requiring fuel or human intervention. The vessels utilize a patented “rudder-flipper” system that converts the pitching motion of ocean waves into forward propulsion, allowing them to maintain speeds of 2-3 knots on solar power alone, with a maximum speed of 5.6 knots.

The effectiveness of Australia’s USV program is not theoretical for it has delivered measurable results in real-world operations. Through the provision of the Australian Defence Force, the Australian Martime Border Force has successfully deployed four Bluebottle USVs that have accumulated an impressive 23,000 nautical miles of unescorted maritime surveillance patrols off the coast of Western Australia. This represents a significant expansion of surveillance capacity that would have been impossible to achieve with traditional crewed vessels given budget and personnel constraints.

Perhaps most compelling is the documented success in combating illegal activities. During one 30-day mission split between two maritime sanctuaries, the USVs identified 19 boats violating protected areas. Each violator received government notification, and the deterrent effect was immediate. The following weekend saw zero violations. This demonstrates that USVs provide not just detection capability but also effective deterrence through persistent presence.

Australia’s USV program has found applications across multiple aspects of maritime security:

Illegal Fishing Detection and Deterrence

From August to December 2021, Maritime Border Command conducted comprehensive trials of the Bluebottle system specifically to assess its effectiveness as a maritime surveillance platform for detecting small boats that pose security threats. The trials confirmed that the mere presence of USVs in fishing areas led to voluntary compliance, with fishermen avoiding protected sanctuaries when they knew autonomous surveillance was active.

In a 30-day trial conducted by Parks Australia in early 2023, two Bluebottles monitored the Two Rocks and Jurien Marine Parks off Western Australia’s coast, capturing 24/7 real-time imagery of maritime activity. The trial specifically targeted illegal fishing in no-take zones, areas vital for protecting threatened species and allowing fish stocks to recover.

Border Security Operations

The Australian Army’s Regional Force Surveillance Group has integrated Bluebottles into Operation Resolute, the nation’s primary border protection operation. During a two-week deployment in October 2022, a contingent of 18 personnel used USVs to conduct surveillance and reconnaissance around remote islands off northwestern Australia, searching for foreign fishing vessels and evidence of illegal activities.

Major Alexander Brent, the Maritime Border Command liaison officer, noted that USV integration “added significant capability to the operation” by allowing ground forces to operate independently while still benefiting from continuous maritime surveillance. The contingent surveyed approximately 5,500 square kilometers during the deployment, demonstrating the force multiplication effect of unmanned systems.

Marine Protected Area Surveillance

Marine Parks Australia has emerged as a regular user of USV technology, deploying Bluebottles to patrol marine parks along the New South Wales coast. In one notable operation, the USVs monitored three separate areas, including one located 150 nautical miles offshore which is a distance that would be prohibitively expensive and logistically challenging for regular crewed patrols.

Technological Advantages and Force Multiplication

The success of Australia’s USV program stems from several key technological and operational advantages:

Persistent Presence: Unlike crewed vessels that must return to port regularly, Bluebottles can remain on station for months, providing continuous surveillance coverage. This persistence is powered by renewable energy systems that generate up to 1,500 watts from solar panels mounted on the vessel’s sail and deck.

Remote Operations: Ground forces can control the USVs remotely, freeing human personnel to focus on other critical tasks such as onshore reconnaissance and patrolling while maintaining maritime surveillance capability.

Operational Safety: USVs eliminate the need to place personnel in potentially dangerous situations, operating in the “dull, dirty, or dangerous” missions that are ideal candidates for unmanned systems.

Cost Effectiveness: The ability to conduct long-duration patrols without fuel costs, crew expenses, or regular maintenance cycles makes USVs significantly more economical than traditional surveillance methods.

Advanced Capabilities and Future Development

Australia’s USV program continues to evolve with increasingly sophisticated capabilities. The Royal Australian Navy has invested A$4.9 million in acquiring five Bluebottle USVs, with all vessels delivered by June 2023. These naval variants are being tested with advanced payloads for anti-submarine warfare and underwater surveillance missions through partnerships with defense contractor Thales Australia.

Recent developments include the integration of passive acoustic surveillance systems, demonstrated during trials off San Diego where a Bluebottle successfully deployed and operated a ThayerMahan Outpost passive sonar array for five days using only renewable energy. This capability positions Australia’s USVs as platforms for distributed underwater surveillance networks, supporting the AUKUS partnership’s advanced defense technologies.

The program has also demonstrated autonomous target recognition and collision avoidance capabilities, with USVs successfully identifying and maneuvering around small vessels using automated visual recognition systems.

The Way Ahead

While Australia’s USV program has achieved significant success, it faces ongoing challenges. Weather conditions can limit operations, and the relatively slow speed of renewable energy-powered vessels means they may not be suitable for rapid response scenarios. Additionally, the technology requires sophisticated command and control infrastructure and trained operators to maximize effectiveness.

Australia’s experience with USVs offers valuable lessons for other nations facing similar maritime surveillance challenges. The key to success has been focusing on persistent surveillance missions rather than trying to replace all crewed vessel functions. By identifying specific operational niches where USVs excel such as long-duration monitoring, dangerous environment operations, and force multiplication, Australia has created a program that delivers measurable security benefits.

The Maritime Border Command’s integration of USVs represents more than just a technological upgrade; it demonstrates a fundamental shift in approach to maritime security. Rather than attempting to patrol vast ocean areas with insufficient traditional assets, Australia has embraced autonomous technology to extend its surveillance reach and effectiveness.

As the program continues to mature, with ongoing contract extensions and capability developments, Australia’s USV operations provide a model for how unmanned systems can address real-world security challenges. The combination of domestic innovation, operational integration, and international collaboration has created a program that enhances Australia’s maritime security while contributing to allied defense capabilities.

For nations struggling with similar challenges of vast maritime domains and limited resources, Australia’s USV program demonstrates that strategic investment in autonomous systems can provide cost-effective solutions that deliver measurable security improvements.

The success of the Bluebottle platform proves that unmanned systems are no longer experimental technologies but operational capabilities ready to contribute to maritime security operations.

A Paradigm Shift in Maritime Operations: Autonomous Systems and Their Impact

Armenia’s Geopolitical Realignment: From Russia’s Orbit to Western Partnership

08/07/2025

Armenia is executing a careful but decisive pivot away from Russia toward closer integration with the European Union and United States, driven by Moscow’s failure to protect Armenian interests during the Azerbaijan conflict and Russia’s broader decline as a reliable security guarantor.

The EU’s nuanced approach, offering partnership without demanding complete severance from Russia, contrasts sharply with traditional binary geopolitical choices and may prove more sustainable for Armenia’s complex regional position.

The Breaking Point: Russia’s Failure in Nagorno-Karabakh

Armenia’s strategic realignment was driven by Russia’s inability or unwillingness to fulfill its security commitments during pivotal moments of conflict with Azerbaijan. In September 2022, Azerbaijan launched cross-border attacks into recognized Armenian territory.

In response, Armenia invoked Article 4 of the CSTO treaty which thereby they were expecting support from its Russian-led security alliance but instead received only diplomatic overtures without any military assistance. The chief of staff of the CSTO, Colonel Anatoly Sidorov, explicitly rejected the notion of intervention and urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve the conflict through political means. A CSTO mission was dispatched merely to assess the situation, which left Armenian leadership and public opinion deeply dissatisfied.

The decisive rupture in Armenian-Russian security relations came in September 2023, when Azerbaijan undertook a large-scale military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh. During the operation, Russian peacekeepers which were originally deployed under the 2020 ceasefire, which President Vladimir Putin had presented as a security guarantee failed to intervene as Azerbaijani forces reclaimed control over the region.

This led to the near-total exodus of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian population, over 100,000 ethnic Armenians fled to Armenia. Russian officials articulated that their peacekeepers would only use weapons if they themselves were endangered and did not act to protect the local population.

As a result, Armenia publicly acknowledged that its reliance on the Russian security umbrella was no longer viable. Prime Minister Pashinyan declared that the Armenian-Russian alliance was “insufficient to ensure Armenia’s external security” and shifted policy toward peacebuilding and independence, intensifying Armenia’s engagement with Western partners.

According to European Union officials and policy analyses, Russia’s lack of military response during Azerbaijan’s “blitzkrieg” effectively gave Azerbaijan a green light to act and contributed to Armenia’s strategic pivot away from Moscow.

Armenia’s Formal Break from CSTO

Armenia’s response has been methodical and irreversible. On February 23, 2024, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that Armenia had “frozen” its participation in the CSTO, stating “We have now in practical terms frozen our participation in this treaty” and that membership was under review.

The break became more concrete when Armenia announced in May 2024 that it had stopped making financial contributions to the CSTO, with Pashinyan declaring in June that “We will leave. We will decide when to exit…Don’t worry, we won’t return”. By December 2024, Pashinyan stated that “we already consider ourselves outside the CSTO” and “I believe we have crossed the point of no return”.

This dramatic shift reflects broader public sentiment. A 2024 poll by the International Republican Institute showed just 31% of Armenians viewed ties with Moscow positively, down from 93% in 2019. Meanwhile, a July 2024 Gallup opinion poll noted a 7% increase in support for Armenia’s membership in NATO, with 29% of respondents believing Armenia should strive for NATO membership, while support for CSTO membership decreased by 10%, with only 16.9% believing Armenia should maintain its membership.

The European Alternative: A Nuanced Approach

The European Union has crafted a sophisticated response to Armenia’s strategic reorientation, offering partnership without demanding complete rupture with Russia. In March 2024, the European Parliament passed a resolution confirming that Armenia could apply for EU membership if it met the Copenhagen criteria. This was followed by concrete support: the EU announced a €270 million Resilience and Growth Plan in April 2024, boosting EU funding to Armenia by 50%.

Armenia has responded enthusiastically to European overtures. On March 26, 2025, Armenia’s parliament adopted a bill officially endorsing Armenia’s EU accession process with 64 parliamentarians voting to approve it. Public support is strong: an October 2024 poll found that 58% of Armenians were in favor of joining the European Union, while a January 2025 survey found that a majority believe Armenia will join the EU in the next ten years.

The EU’s approach includes practical benefits beyond financial support. In July 2024, the European Council approved beginning visa liberalization negotiations with Armenia, with the process expected to be finalized by June 2025 and Armenia introducing biometric passports by 2026. The EU also decided to support Armenia militarily through the European Peace Facility with €10 million to enhance the logistical capacities of the Armenian armed forces.

Economic Contradictions: The Russia Paradox

Despite political distancing, Armenia’s economic relationship with Russia has paradoxically strengthened since 2022. Trade turnover between Armenia and Russia reached a record $12 billion in 2024, with mutual trade increasing 1.6 times compared to the previous year. Armenia secured a spot among Russia’s top ten trade partners for 2024, accounting for 1.8% of Russia’s total foreign trade and ranking 8th alongside Germany.

This economic dependence reflects Armenia’s role in circumventing Western sanctions. Armenia’s GDP in 2024 is close to double what it was in 2021, rising from $13.9 billion to $27 billion, largely due to increased trade volumes and reexports to Russia worth more than $7.3 billion. Armenian media reported sharp rises in shipments of Russian gold and diamonds to Armenia and their subsequent re-export, with Armenia importing about 66 tons of gold worth $4.4 billion in the first half of 2024, almost all from Russia.

However, this economic relationship creates vulnerabilities. Russia supplies around 85% of all gas to Armenia and the country’s energy infrastructure is largely controlled by Gazprom, giving the Kremlin coercive tools against Yerevan. Additionally, cash remittances from Armenians working abroad, mostly in Russia, contribute significantly to Armenia’s GDP, making up 14% of GDP in 2018.

Limited U.S. Engagement

The United States has increased support for Armenia but with measured restraint. To date, the United States has invested approximately $3.3 billion in Armenia to support democratic reforms, economic growth and resilience, and humanitarian assistance, including $340 million since 2021. In 2024, the U.S. announced $20.6 million in new support for Armenia to bolster cyber, border, and energy security.

Military cooperation has expanded cautiously. The United States has provided $27 million in funding to support Armenia’s border security capabilities and approximately $18 million in Foreign Military Financing for armored ambulances, cyber defense operations, and training center improvements. The two countries have conducted joint Eagle Partner peacekeeping exercises in 2023 and 2024.

However, critics argue this support is insufficient. The total US-European aid package of $290 million over four years amounts to just $72.5 million annually which is one-third of what the United States gives the Central African Republic and a fraction of the $5.7 billion Armenia receives in Russian remittances.

Strategic Implications and Future Outlook

Armenia’s pivot reflects broader shifts in post-Soviet geopolitics.

With closed borders with both Azerbaijan and Turkey, Armenia remains geographically constrained, but the country is looking to new partners, especially India, to diversify its international relationships.

Armenia will only be able to diversify its economy more fully when the land border with Turkey, closed since 1993, reopens, though normalization efforts are proceeding slowly.

The EU’s approach of graduated integration without demanding immediate rupture with existing relationships may prove more sustainable than traditional binary choices. As Armenia’s Ambassador to the EU noted, “Armenian foreign policy is neither a turn towards the West nor a turn towards the East” which is a pragmatic acknowledgment of the country’s complex position.

Russia’s declining influence extends beyond Armenia. Recent tensions between Russia and Azerbaijan over the deaths of Azerbaijani citizens in Russian custody have created the unusual situation where both Armenia and Azerbaijan now view Moscow with suspicion, potentially reshaping the entire South Caucasus dynamic.

Armenia’s realignment represents a careful but decisive break from three decades of Russian dependence. The country’s approach which is to embrace European integration while managing continued economic ties with Russia reflects the pragmatic realities facing small nations caught between great powers.

The EU’s nuanced strategy of offering partnership without ultimatums may provide a sustainable model for other post-Soviet states seeking to diversify their relationships while avoiding the costs of complete geopolitical rupture.

The success of this transition will depend heavily on external factors: the outcome of Russia’s war in Ukraine, the stability of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations, and the willingness of Western partners to provide sufficient economic alternatives to Russian dependence.

For now, Armenia has chosen a path of strategic hedging, but the momentum clearly favors deeper integration with European institutions and values.

Strategic Realignments in South Asia: The New Power Dynamics Shaping Regional Order

08/06/2025

By Pasquale Preziosa

South Asia, long considered the epicenter of geopolitical rivalry — particularly between India and Pakistan — is now entering a new era of heightened complexity.

The region’s established fault lines are being reshaped not only by traditional animosities but also by global shifts: the redefinition of United States interests, the tightening China-Pakistan strategic partnership, and India’s relentless pursuit of strategic autonomy.

Compounding these patterns, new regional challenges such as China’s ambitious plan to build the world’s largest hydroelectric dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo River (also known as the Brahmaputra) exert significant pressure on the regional balance.

U.S. Tactics: Transactionalism Over Strategy

U.S. policy in South Asia, once animated by Cold War logic or the post-9/11 “War on Terror,” now appears increasingly reactive, short-term, and transactional. Washington’s retreat from Afghanistan marked the start of this shift, creating both power vacuums and new opportunities for regional actors.

Current U.S. engagement often oscillates unpredictably between India and Pakistan. With India, Washington has issued economic pressure such as tariffs, threats of sanctions, and even mediation suggestions over the disputed Kashmir region while simultaneously calling for closer security and technological cooperation as part of its Indo-Pacific strategy. With Pakistan, U.S. overtures have taken the shape of energy agreements and renewed interest in counter-terrorism collaboration, despite its history of frustration with Islamabad’s policies in Afghanistan.

Such inconsistency has eroded American leverage.

By failing to articulate a coherent, long-term stance, the U.S. has unintentionally widened the maneuvering space for regional powers, who can now recalibrate their alignments and extract greater concessions from an unpredictable Washington.

Russia Re-emerges as Arms Partner

Amidst these shifting dynamics, Russia sees an opening to revitalize its historical defense relationship with India. Demonstrating strategic flexibility, Moscow has reactivated its offer for India to acquire the Su-57E, an advanced stealth fighter jet.

More importantly, Russia is not simply offering an arms sale but is proposing a comprehensive co-production arrangement with substantial technology transfer utilizing Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL)’s manufacturing capabilities in Nasik. To address India’s immediate needs, Russia has also advanced the Su-35 fighter as an interim solution to maintain the Indian Air Force’s operational edge.

This move fits within a wider sphere of technological competition. India is determined to retain freedom of action, refusing to become overly dependent on any single foreign supplier, even as it seeks critical military technologies. This approach enables New Delhi to carefully balance the competing demands and pressures it faces, particularly from the U.S., by retaining options and negotiating from a position of greater autonomy.

China’s Dual Approach: Hydropower as Geopolitical Leverage

China’s role in South Asia is expanding along two major strategic vectors. The most significant development is Beijing’s plan to construct a colossal hydroelectric dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo. This is an upriver structure that will have outsized influence on water flows into the Brahmaputra, which sustains millions in India’s northeast.

While publicly framed as a developmental project to generate energy and combat climate change, the dam is also a potent instrument of silent coercion. By controlling a vital water source—a life artery for agriculture, livelihoods, and population stability in India’s northeast—China can subtly but powerfully influence India’s strategic calculations.

This form of infrastructural coercion complements Beijing’s broader pattern of “calibrated management” of its relationship with New Delhi: constantly testing Indian resolve, creating new dilemmas, and seeking to blunt India’s independent foreign policy by introducing new dependencies.

Turkey’s Aspirations: Neo-Ottoman Influence and Islamic Solidarity

Turkey, drawing from a revived neo-Ottoman ambition and leveraging its entrenched ties with Pakistan, is seeking to carve out a greater role in South Asia. Ankara’s engagement is especially pronounced in the Kashmir conflict which is a fraught issue that has become a rallying point in Turkish calls for Islamic solidarity.

Keen to position itself as an influential “middle power” within the Islamic world, Turkey is deploying both rhetoric and diplomatic capital to gain relevance in the region’s turbulent power games.

Regional Fallout: Middle Powers Seize the Initiative

The Indo-Pakistani-Afghan subregion which is the geographic core of South Asia has now emerged as one of the most unpredictable theaters in global geopolitics. Old alliances are in flux, and new axes are emerging. Fueled by rising nationalism, the breakdown of multilateral forums, and intensifying great power competition, regional states are busy redefining what it means to be a “power” in the 21st century.

India’s pursuit of strategic autonomy is perhaps best exemplified by its hedging between Washington and Moscow. It has deepened defense and technology ties with the U.S. —most visible in initiatives like the Quad — while simultaneously retaining its traditional defense relationship with Russia, mindful of energy, economic, and legacy weapons dependencies.

This balancing act gives India added leverage, as it refuses to be boxed in by any external power’s priorities.

At the same time, Pakistan is working to maximize gains from its “all-weather” friendship with China, while remaining open to selective engagement with the U.S. especially where economic and security assistance is available.

Chinese investment under the CPEC corridor and security ties with Beijing have clearly elevated Pakistan’s clout. However, Islamabad is careful to keep some diplomatic channels with Washington open, hedging against a total strategic dependency on China.

The New Unpredictability: Regional Order in Transition

What emerges is a volatile and interconnected geopolitical chessboard. Great powers compete for influence, while middle and even “small” powers (like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal) are learning to play major actors off each other, extracting material gains or security assurances.

The traditional center of gravity is shifting as new forms of assertiveness and competition such as technological, infrastructural, and narrative factors, reshuffle alliances and animosities.

Ultimately, the future configuration of South Asia’s political order will be written by how adeptly India, Pakistan, China, and ambitious middle powers navigate this disorder.

Their choices, alliances, and responses to mounting pressure will not only determine the regional balance of power but also inform the contours of the broader international order in the years ahead.

South Asia thus stands at a strategic crossroads, serving as both a stage for great power rivalry and a laboratory for new modes of regional diplomacy and competition where the old certainties are gone, and the game remains wide open.

This article is based on the August 4, 2025 article published by the author in Italian in PRP Channel.

Helicopter Evacuation Exercise

U.S. Marines with Marine Corps Air Facility Quantico conduct a helicopter medical evacuation exercise at MCAF Quantico on Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, June 4, 2025.

Marines conducts training consisting of loading and unloading ordnance and helicopter medical evacuations to increase mission readiness in the event of an emergency.

QUANTICO, VIRGINIA,

06.04.2025

Photo by Lance Cpl. Braydon Rogers  

Marine Corps Base Quantico