A former Australian minister has launched a crowd-funded inquiry into the Aukus submarine deal, as the UK government reaffirms the pact’s integrity. Sources confirm the ex-minister, whose identity remains undisclosed, is rattling cages in Canberra and London. The inquiry, funded by public donations, claims to have uncovered documents suggesting cost overruns and security loopholes in the trilateral alliance.
Meanwhile, Whitehall mandarins insist the deal is watertight. But this journalist has seen the figures. The price tag for the nuclear-powered submarines has ballooned, and whispers of kickbacks to middlemen grow louder.
The UK’s reaffirmation is a predictable PR move. They want to bury this story. But the crowd-funded inquiry has teeth.
It’s already demanded documents from the Ministry of Defence. And the ex-minister? They’re not backing down.
The Aukus pact was sold as a cornerstone of Indo-Pacific security. Now it looks like another gravy train for defence contractors. The UK government’s response is a masterpiece of weasel words.
But our sources say the real fight is about control of submarine technology. And who gets the billion-pound contracts. The inquiry’s first hearing is set for next month.
Expect fireworks. Expect denials. But most of all, expect the truth to leak out gradually.
This is a story that will not stay buried.









