
The Australian Defence Force
Meeting the Modernization Challenges
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Robbin Laird

This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
About this listen
In addition to the seminar report, Dr. Robbin Laird conducted several in-depth interviews with ADF members and Australian strategic analysts concerning priorities in enhancing the ADF as a force ready to “fight tonight.” The current government has crafted a number of long-range plans to shape a new ADF a decade out, but this seminar and the book focus on short and mid-term modernization versus long-term restructuring.
How to think about ADF modernization from a shorter-term perspective to deal with pressing challenges in the Indo-Pacific region? How does shaping modernization via adding autonomous systems and steady transformation of joint enablers such as ISR, C2, and EW capabilities change how to view longer-range force planning?
As John Blaxland, Professor of International Security and Intelligence Studies and Director of the Australian National University’s North America Liaison Office, based at the Australian Embassy in Washington DC., has written about the book:
"The indefatigable Robbin Laird is at it again, providing a unique service to Australian defence and to the U.S.-Australia alliance, with enduring insights arising from the 2024 Williams Foundation seminar and beyond.
"In The Australian Defence Force: Meeting the Modernization Challenges, Robbin Laird updates us on the work covered in his previous book, Australia and Indo-Pacific Defence: Anchoring a Way Ahead (2023). That work provided much more than just an overview of material covered at the previous Williams Foundation seminar. His lucid distillation of the key issues and challenges related to Australia and Indo-Pacific defence, spanning air, land, sea and beyond, warrant re-reading. It also sets up the reader for the contrast which follows in this volume.
"Laird’s new work focuses on the rub points arising from trying to implement long term strategic choices for acquiring next generation military capabilities, while being required to manage ongoing day-to-day operational requirements for the Australian Defence Force – a force which finds itself increasingly challenged. Laird explains this as ‘a case study in the clash between force design for an envisaged force and the need to enhance the force in being to deal with the world as it is.’
"This book highlights the enduring challenge faced by a democracy in getting the politics right while facing short political cycles and competing national priorities which inhibit government willingness to spend on defence. This reflects the age old ‘guns’ versus ‘butter’ dilemma faced by governments elected not on what might happen on the international stage, but on what they have done so far on the domestic front.
"Laird captures the essence of the challenge for defence readiness whereby exquisite platforms are no longer the sole focus, and in planning for continent-spanning defence capabilities, how to build combat mass effectively. The challenge is a significant one in light of the scale of the emergent security issues in the Indo-Pacific to which Australia may be required to respond and the reluctance of governments to spend to match their rhetoric with reality."
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