So the Honourable Member from down under has pricked the Aukus bubble. An Australian ex-minister, no less, has launched an inquiry into the submarine deal. Whitehall, one hears, is in a state of haute consternation. Sovereignty fears, they say. How deliciously predictable.
Let us step back. Aukus was sold to the public as a triumvirate of technocratic virtue. Three Anglophone powers, pooling their submarine technology, their nuclear know-how, their strategic imperatives. A latter-day Entente Cordiale, but with more carbon fibre and fewer moustaches. Yet behind the press releases and the photo-ops, a familiar malady lurks: the creeping suspicion that this alliance is not a partnership of equals but a vehicle for American dominion, with Britain and Australia playing the role of grateful satraps.
Consider the timing. The inquiry comes not from a radical backbencher or a jealous rival nation, but from a former minister. That suggests a depth of concern that transcends mere party politics. The question is: what exactly is causing the disquiet? Is it the fear that Australian sovereignty will be compromised, its naval strategy subordinated to Washington’s grand chessboard? Or is it a more existential worry, that Aukus represents a triumph of symbolism over substance, a distraction from the hard choices that genuine strategic independence requires?
Compare this to the Victorian Era. When Britain built its empire, it did so with a clear-eyed understanding of power. The Royal Navy ruled the waves not because of treaties but because of steel, coal, and the willingness to use both. Today, we have Aukus: a deal that promises cutting-edge submarines but delivers them, perhaps, a decade too late, at a cost that will strain budgets, and with strings attached that no amount of diplomatic language can conceal.
Intellectual decadence, I call it. We have replaced strategic thinking with branding. The Aukus logo is sleek. The rhetoric is grand. But the substance is thin. The inquiry from Australia is a symptom of a deeper rot: the inability of Western democracies to think in terms of national interest without apologising for it. We are obsessed with alliances as moral communities, not as instruments of power. The result is a flabby consensus that satisfies no one.
The Fall of Rome offers the inevitable parallel. Late Rome was suffused with treaties, with foederati arrangements that traded sovereignty for security. The barbarians were bought off, incorporated, appeased. It did not end well. The lesson is that a nation that cannot define its own interests will find them defined by others. Australia, by launching this inquiry, is perhaps trying to wake from the coma of alliance dependency. Good for them.
Whitehall’s jitters, then, are not just about a submarine deal. They are about the spectre of imperial decline, the realisation that the old certainties are crumbling. The British establishment, so adept at managing decline with a stiff upper lip and a knighthood for the right people, now faces a rebellion from the periphery. If Australia can question Aukus, what else might be questioned? The Five Eyes? The special relationship? The entire edifice of Anglophone supremacy?
In the end, this inquiry will probably produce a report, a few headlines, and a ministerial reassurance. The submarines will be built, eventually. But the damage is done. The question of sovereignty has been aired. And once aired, it cannot be unasked. The Victorians knew that power was a thing to be wielded, not shared. We have forgotten that lesson. The Australian ex-minister, bless his contrarian soul, is reminding us. Whether we listen is another matter.








