AUKUS needs to pool tech resources as US edge erodes -Australian intelligence chief

By Kirsty Needham

SYDNEY (Reuters) – The U.S. technological edge is eroding, an Australian intelligence chief said on Tuesday, as a Sydney conference was told the AUKUS alliance of Australia, Britain and the United States must collaborate on quantum and hypersonic technology to compete with China.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, chairman of the U.S. Special Competitive Studies Project, told the Sydney Dialogue that China was unlike the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War, because it was “an autocratic competitor that is run by technocrats that is very capable of inventing a new future”.

Andrew Shearer, the director-general of the Office of National Intelligence, said the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region was starting to “shift away from the United States and its allies, undermining deterrence”.

“We are seeing our longstanding technological edge start to erode, and in some cases that edge is totally gone,” he added.

The AUKUS alliance will see Australia buy a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines, but Defence Minister Richard Marles told the conference, hosted by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, it would also share other defence technologies.

Australia’s top quantum computer scientist, Michelle Simmons, said AUKUS would need to overcome hurdles to collaboration, such as foreign investment and visa restrictions, and she urged the three nations to form a “joint mission” to develop a quantum computer.

“Its quite critical for the nations to work together to make sure we pool our resources, to make sure we are at the forefront,” she said.

Britain was behind where it wanted to be in hypersonics and AUKUS would help, said Stephen Lovegrove, Britain’s former national security adviser.

Schmidt, who has advised United States Department of Defense on artificial intelligence, said China is organised around drones, hypersonic and automation technology, and this should influence Australia’s military spending decisions.

Although it was likely there would be decoupling between China and Western allies in critical technology, China was not an enemy and the could work together in other areas, he added.

“We are going to have a great deal of non-strategic partnering with China, and Australia will in particular, there will be lots of trade in things that are relatively commodity… but there’s not going to be agreement on common standards on chips,” he said.

He criticised the U.S. government for restricting Chinese researchers from moving to the United States to work on technologies like quantum computing.

“Why would you not want the smartest Indians and Russians and Chinese out of those countries and in your country?” he said.

(Reporting by Kirsty Needham. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

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