The Forum > General Discussion > Australia's Role in Hypersonic Warfare
Australia's Role in Hypersonic Warfare
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There is no reference to the military implications of this scramjet research in any of the University of Queensland's or the DSTO's (Defence Science Technology Organisation) media releases despite the acknowledgement that, "The most ambitious project in a $US459 billion defence spending bill is the Falcon....the cost of the vehicle has not been revealed but a spokesman for the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency said the first test flight was scheduled for next year." ("America pumps billions into space-age weapons", Sydney Morning Herald, November 15, 2007). The Australian government also is keeping a discrete silence over this research.
Australian scramjet research will be boosted by increased funding and by the appointment of Dr Russell Boyce of the University of New South Wales, at the Australian Defence Force Academy, to the DSTO Chair and Professorship in Hypersonics. "In November 2006 DSTO signed a $74 million HIFiRE Agreement with the United States Air Force that will comprise up to 10 hypersonic flight experiments planned for the Woomera Testing Facility over the next five years." (Minister for Defence Media Mail List, May 2, 2008).
The Australian Hypersonics Initiative is pushing ahead without adequate consideration of its profound military, societal, legal and international implications. Destabilisation will result leading to the development of counterforce strategies by countries feeling threatened by hypersonic pre-emptive strike, like China or Russia. The world will be less governed by collective security and one more prone to unilateralism and chaos.