The Aukus pact is facing its most serious political challenge yet. An Australian ex-minister has launched a crowd-funded inquiry into the submarine deal. The move threatens to destabilise the already fragile agreement.
Andrew Hastie, a former Liberal frontbencher, is leading the charge. He has set up a fund to examine the costs and delays of the Aukus programme. His target: the $368 billion nuclear submarine project that sits at the heart of the pact.
This is not a fringe operation. Hastie has deep connections within Australian defence circles. He knows the players. He knows the numbers. And he smells blood in the water.
For Downing Street, this is a nightmare scenario. The UK has bet heavily on Aukus. It is the centrepiece of Britain's post-Brexit foreign policy. It is also a lifeline for the UK's struggling shipbuilding industry.
But the deal has been plagued by cost overruns and delays. The original timeline already looks optimistic. Now, with a hostile inquiry looming, the pressure is mounting.
Whitehall sources are rattled. They privately admit that any public scrutiny could expose the fragile foundations of the agreement. The UK's contribution alone is worth billions. Any delay or cancellation would be a catastrophic blow.
The timing could not be worse. The UK is already locked in a tense battle with France over fishing rights. The US is distracted by internal politics. And China is watching closely.
Hastie's inquiry will not have legal powers. But its political impact could be devastating. It will provide a platform for critics. It will feed into growing public scepticism about the cost of the programme.
The Australian government is trying to play it cool. They insist the inquiry is a stunt. But behind the scenes, they are worried. The coalition government is fragile. A backbench revolt on Aukus could be the spark that ignites a wider crisis.
For Sir Keir Starmer, this is a delicate moment. Labour has broadly backed Aukus. But the party is under pressure to support greater scrutiny. Any shift in position could open a rift with the unions.
What happens next? The inquiry will run for several months. If it gains traction, expect calls for a full parliamentary investigation. That would be political dynamite.
For now, the submarine deal remains intact. But the cracks are showing. The question is not whether Aukus will survive. It is how much damage this fight will do before it is over.
Watch this space. The game is changing.







