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Regional security

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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and US President Joe Biden.

Who’s to blame for Australia’s big new security nightmare? Our closest ally

Three Pacific leaders have warned they may be forced to turn to China for financial support because their oldest and closest ally, the United States, is unreliable.

  • Anne Hyland

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US official Richard Verma was in Sydney last week.

Allies ‘have to compete aggressively’ with China for Pacific security, US warns

A senior US official has made the warning ahead of this week’s address to the Australian parliament by PNG Prime Minister James Marape.

  • Peter Hartcher
Army personnel will be shifted from southern to northern Australia in the biggest overhaul since 2011.

‘Hard decisions’: Hundreds of troops sent north in Australian Army overhaul

Almost 1000 defence force roles will be shifted from southern to northern Australia in the biggest restructure of the army in over a decade.

  • Matthew Knott
Xi Jinping, Ursula von der Leyen

Europe’s new economic security plan is aimed at the country whose name shall not be spoken

The European Commission this week unveiled a new economic security plan aimed at limiting its exports of strategic technologies to China while strengthening screening of sensitive inbound investments to Europe.

  • Stephen Bartholomeusz
The prime minister is the keynote speaker at the opening-night dinner for the Shangri-La Dialogue.

The prime minister’s biggest moment on the world stage has arrived

Anthony Albanese has top billing among a chorus of heavy hitters from around the globe at Asia’s premier security meeting, the Shangri-La Dialogue.

  • Chris Barrett
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during the AUKUS announcement in San Diego.

Australia’s no longer a small player in global politics, so we must be ready for hard choices

Australia’s regional proximity to the world’s greatest conflicts means that complacency regarding our security is redundant and increasingly dangerous.

  • George Brandis
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An F-16 fighter jet shot down the objects.

‘We’re calling them objects, not balloons, for a reason’

Four shoot-downs over North America have raised questions about what the unidentified flying objects are, who sent them and why. The answers, though, are elusive.

  • Farrah Tomazin
FBI agents prepare to recover balloon material on the ocean floor off the coast of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

US jets shoot down fourth mystery object

An octagonal object has been downed over Lake Huron, Michigan, the Pentagon says.

  • Phil Stewart and Andrea Shalal
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ordered that the unidentified object over northern Canada be shot down.

Third object shot down in a week over North America raises questions

At least one of the objects downed was believed to be a spy balloon from China, but the other two have not yet been publicly identified.

  • Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali and Steve Scherer
Hypersonic missiles could travel from Sydney to Perth in less than 30 minutes.

Hypersonic missiles are just the start if Australia is to secure its sovereignty

Australia must acquire more missiles with greater range and better launch platforms to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/topic/regional-security-1mov