Monday 20-04-2026 9:11am

Yanks arrest Iranian containership

Donald Trump says the US has taken custody of an Iranian flag ship that attempted to pass a blockade that Washington has been maintaining around Iranian ports. President Trump posts on TruthSocial: Today, an Iranian containership Touska, nearly 900 feet long and weighing almost as much as an aircraft carrier, tried to get past our Naval Blockade, and it did not go well for them. The US Navy guided missile destroyer USS Spruance intercepted the Touska in the Gulf of Oman, and gave [it a] fair warning to stop," Mr Trump said. "The Iranian crew refused to listen, so our navy ship stopped them right in their tracks by blowing a hole in the engineer room. Right now, US Marines have custody of the vessel." He added: "The Touska is under US Treasury sanctions because of [its] prior history of illegal activity. We have full custody of the ship, and are seeing what's on board!"


 SPORT:

Bears rising from their slumber

Only one walkover the rest just solid, hard knocks. AFL had one close shave with Melbourne Beating Brisbane 104-102 but Fremantle had the West Coast by the short and curlies 97-41 and the same with Melbourne 130 to Richmond’s 55. In the NRL Eels were too slippery for the Bulldogs 38 to 20 and the Roosters crowed over the Knights 38-24.[click to read more]

Pamela Whaley in the Oz reckons a rugby league shockwave is about to pulse through Western Australia on the back of the launch of the Perth Bears academy. These are the 20 home-grown juniors on the fast-track to NRL debuts.

It’s less than a year before the start of an NRL era for Perth Bears but they're already preparing the next generation. It’s about the long crawl.

Countless hours of video, pitches to parents and visits to junior clubs has produced 20 of the brightest young players in Western Australia selected for the inaugural academy with more to come over coming months in Brisbane and North Sydney.

Players who could have been lost to rival clubs, or the sport, now have a pathway to the top.

The aim is to make an NRL player out of them over the next six seasons as well as stop a massive leak of West Australian talent moving east every year to chase their dreams.

Last week, Perth Bears announced their inaugural Bear Tracks academy, the start of the six-year plan to produce home-grown talent in the NRL by 2031.

It’s the genesis of the Bears' next generation, beginning with a group of 14 to 17-year-olds among some of the best young athletes in WA.

They'll be pushed, tested and trained with the aim of fielding an SG Ball team in 2029, Harold Matthews in 2030, and preparing them for on-field and travel demands so they're NRL-ready by 2031.

Head of elite pathways Ian Millward has been running the program along with coach Mal Meninga and assistant Ben Gardner. There was a specific strategy in targeting this age group.

By 2029, you would expect there'd be a couple of really good players out of that, say there’s two or three local boys, Millward says.


 STOCKMARKET:

The engine is still humming …

The U.S.-Iran ceasefire in early April appears to have revived so-called TINA ("There Is No Alternative") trades, driven by peace hopes, soaring U.S. earnings growth and the relative insulation of the world’s biggest economy to an energy shock., Reuters updated on today's website. [click to continue reading]

Over the last year, investors, particularly in the United States, had sought out cheaper markets abroad where returns were juiced up by a weaker dollar. Enthusiasm over the AI boom and expansive government spending has also boosted equities, from Seoul and Tokyo to Frankfurt and London.

The war and ensuing surge in energy prices hurt confidence and risk markets. But U.S. President Donald Trump’s April 7 ceasefire announcement has sent Wall Street shares to record highs again.

Global investors have poured a net $28 billion into U.S. equities since the eve of the ceasefire announcement, with U.S. investors alone accounting for nearly $23 billion of that total, according to LSEG/Lipper data.

Until that point in the year, they had pulled a net $56 billion out of U.S. stocks, including a net outflow of almost $90 billion by U.S.-based investors.

The ceasefire has sharpened focus on which markets have the strongest outlook and early signals from earnings season suggest the U.S. remains robust.

While most major equity markets have erased their war-driven losses, the S&P 500, opens new tab is 2% above pre-war levels.

We've had our fourth exogenous shock in six years and given the nature of the shock, it’s not surprising that we go back to the economy that has performed the best over the very long-term, is investing the most in the short-term and is producing the best set of results, said Michael Browne, global investment strategist at the Franklin Templeton Institute in London.

TINA prevailed for years as U.S. shares climbed to record highs but suffered a setback around the January 2025 start of Trump’s second term, with investors pivoting to a TIARA trade — There Is A Real Alternative — that favoured Europe and emerging markets in particular.

I like to say there’s something called 'TINA', said Gabriel Shahin, founder of Falcon Wealth Planning, which manages roughly $1.4 billion. Investors are looking at the resilience of the S&P and realising the engine is still humming.

The U.S.’s status as a net energy exporter, compared with European countries and others like Japan, has helped Wall Street recover more quickly from the post-war market turbulence.

Friday’s announcement by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi that the Strait of Hormuz was open following a ceasefire accord agreed in Lebanon helped propel global stocks higher.

Jim Caron, chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, which manages nearly $2 trillion, told a virtual roundtable on April 10 there had been a shift from the 2025 consensus view that European would outperform U.S. stocks.

We do not, any longer, think that is the case. In fact, we're taking actions in portfolios and we're discussing this and we're thinking about making a move towards reducing our European overweight to actually even going towards underweight Europe in favour of going overweight the U.S., he said.

A number of major investment banks upgraded U.S. equities to overweight from neutral in recent days, citing resilient corporate earnings — particularly in the technology sector — that could cushion the fallout from the Middle East conflict.

First-quarter earnings so far show some sectors, such as energy and banks, have fared well, while others grapple with the impact of the war. LSEG/IBES data shows first-quarter earnings growth for S&P 500 companies is expected to be nearly 14%, while European earnings are forecast to grow by 4.2%, mostly thanks to the oil and gas sectors.

We started the year with a more positive approach to the U.S. than others, said Browne at the Franklin Templeton Institute. Clearly what’s happened, whether it (the war) stops tomorrow or not, is going to have more of an impact on the European and some Asian economies than it is on the U.S. economy.

The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday shaved its 2026 U.S. growth estimate by just one-tenth of a percentage point to 2.3% but lowered euro zone growth estimate by 0.2 percentage points to 1.1%.

Investors have cut exposure to popular trades such as Europe and Asian emerging markets since the ceasefire announcement.

A Bank of America weekly report on Friday, citing EPFR data, showed South Korean equity funds posted a record outflow of $2.5 billion in the week to April 15, while European stocks posted a $4.7 billion outflow, the largest since November 2024.

U.S. equities are still showing a cumulative net outflow of $30 billion in 2026, but that is almost a quarter of what it was in mid-March, according to LSEG data.

The S&P index’s burst past 7000 this week marked a gain of more than 10% in 11 days, faster even than the bounce-back after Trump’s Liberation Day tariff announcement in April 2025 shook global markets, according to Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid.

Excluding overlaps, such rapid gains are a relatively rare occurrence, with the S&P 500 achieving a 10%+ rally in 11 sessions only 15 times this century, Reid said.


 NEWS:

🎪 Pauline on the
nose and Albo
under the nose

Core support for Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has fallen again, as voters resist support for any new taxes and revenue measures in Anthony Albanese’s fifth budget, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

An exclusive Newspoll prepared for The Australian reveals that One Nation’s primary vote has slid from a historic high of 27% in February to 24%, as the right-wing party faces greater scrutiny and increased pressure from a more assertive Coalition.

Amid the ongoing fuel crisis, fears of a global recession and immigration policy clashes, support for the Albanese government and Coalition remained static at 31% and 21% respectively. Mr Albanese holds a nine-point margin over Angus Taylor on who voters think would make the better prime minister.

The Newspoll, conducted between Monday and Thursday last week, included a question asking 1235 voters whether they endorsed 10 options Jim Chalmers may pursue to increase revenue streams in the budget. None of the options attracted an absolute majority, despite only one in six voters rejecting all suggestions.

Increasing the petroleum resource rent tax was deemed the most acceptable option, with 42% of voters supporting the reform, ahead of 35% who supported reducing tax concessions for property investors, 29% who backed lower tax concessions for family trusts, and 27% who favoured taxing inheritances of more than $1m.

The PRRT overhaul and crackdown on property investor tax concessions were more widely supported by Labor and Greens voters. Reducing tax concessions for property investors is not any more acceptable for renters than those who own their homes; however, those who own an investment property are less likely to find this option acceptable.

There was considerably weaker support for increasing taxes on businesses, increasing the bank levy, removing GST exemptions, lifting the GST rate, reducing tax concessions for superannuation and increasing personal income taxes.

The results show younger voters aged 18-34, who are often cited by the Treasurer in his push for intergenerational equity, are more resistant to most revenue-raising options than other age groups. One Nation voters are the most likely to find all of the revenue proposals unacceptable, with 26% rejecting all options.

Mr Albanese and Mr Chalmers ∼ who face the growing threat of a global recession, higher inflation and weak economic growth ∼ today will convene the first in a series of rolling meetings of cabinet’s expenditure review committee to determine what makes the cut ahead of the May 12 budget.

Mr Chalmers, who faces a hard sell to introduce new taxes or remove concessions in the budget, is expected to bank a large chunk of multibillion-dollar tax revenue windfalls and unveil plans to rein in ballooning expenditure across the NDIS.

Mr Taylor, who last week released the first phase of the Coalition’s hardline immigration policy, which was attacked by Paul Keating and Labor ministers, suffered a decline in his net approval rating, with 33% of voters satisfied with his performance, 46% dissatisfied and 21% uncommitted.

The Prime Minister appears to have stemmed Labor’s recent electoral bleeding after halving the excise on petrol and diesel for three months at a cost of $2.55bln, releasing a national fuel security plan, delivering a televised statement to the nation, visiting refineries and meeting with Indo-Pacific leaders to shore up supplies.

After crashing last month to his worst net approval rating since last year’s election, Mr Albanese improved slightly to minus 17, with 40% of voters satisfied with his performance, 57% dissatisfied and 3% uncommitted.

Core support for the Greens lifted from 12% to 13%, while the primary vote for independents and other minor parties increased from 10% to 11%.

One Nation has come under pressure on a number of fronts in recent weeks, including revelations the party rehired a convicted rapist. There has also been mounting scrutiny over the price tag of uncosted policy proposals following the unintentional leaking of sensitive draft policy documents to Liberal and Labor MPs.

On who voters think would make the better prime minister, 46% selected Mr Albanese, 37% picked Mr Taylor and 17% were uncommitted.

Before Sussan Ley was rolled as leader and quit parliament in February, the former opposition leader had fallen more than 20 points behind on the better prime minister ranking and the Coalition’s primary vote plunged to a record low of 18%.

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 LOCAL CHATTER:

Coming up this long weekend are the markets, Anzac Day and the three-day sheep dog trials on Wilson Memorial oval and Rosedale!!!
♦♦♦♦
On a sad note … Blackville's 25-year-old markets have decided to call it a day. Market organisers said it was hard to find volunteers, food stalls and red tape causing them to resign hence cancelling the popular markets.

 NEWS:

🐶 It's not
a dog's life
any more

Wellness isn't just for humans anymore. From local start-ups to supermarket giants, a rising generation of pet food barons is moving to capture Australia’s booming 'raw and fresh' frontier the Daily Telegraph newspaper today. [click to read more]

Australia’s multi-billion dollar pet industry is in the midst of a revolution as millions of dog and cat owners shift away from traditional kibble diets for premium raw and fresh options, with a rising generation of pet food barons swooping in to capitalise of the explosive trend.

And it’s big business.

There are now 31.6 million pets in the country, according to the latest national survey from Animal Medicines Australia and keeping them fed is a $9.8bln market.

Petstock, a major retailer majority-owned by supermarket giant Woolworths, reports that fresh and frozen diets have booked consistent double digit growth over several years and now outpace traditional formats.

Industry data from 2023 indicates chilled and fresh formats account for around 4 - 7% of total pet food sales but they are growing faster than traditional formats, Petstock fresh and frozen category manager Aaron Pearce said.

Single-protein chilled products, like rolls, are among the most popular, particularly with proteins like kangaroo and wild boar, which are often used for pets with specific health needs. Frozen raw formats are also strong performers.

The appeal is twofold: perceived health benefits and functional outcomes. Pet parents are looking for solutions that support digestion, skin and coat and joint health, areas traditionally dominated by premium kibble.

A growing preference among pet owners for natural diets and the increasing humanisation of pets has triggered the boom, according to the Pet Food Industry Association of Australia.

We are seeing an increase in the humanisation of pets, a PFIAA spokeswoman told News Corp.

Australia has one of the highest pet ownership rates globally and pets are increasingly regarded as family members rather than animals, influencing pet food decisions.

Raw and Fresh founder Adam Guest operates a 24/7 processing facility in western Sydney, selling more than 400 meals an hour and delivering 70,000 meals a month.

We do all the manufacturing ourselves, from all the foods to all the treats as well, he said.

We make that food fresh every single week, that also goes out fresh that same week across the whole country.

Sydney-headquartered Lyka, founded by Ukrainian immigrant Anna Podolsky, operates a $16m facility in Dandenong in Melbourne and raised $67m in its latest funding round to keep scaling.

We are seeing this momentum firsthand at Lyka, she told News Corp.

We now have over 100,000 dogs eating our food, and we've served more than 100 million meals. That kind of adoption is a strong signal that behaviour is shifting.

In the 2024-25 financial year, the company grew 98% with more than $200m in annual recurring revenue, she said.

The company is now preparing for international expansion.





🗱 Out of the
bowser and into
the plug-in

Australian drivers face a staggering cost difference between electric vehicles and more traditional petrol powered cars, jaw dropping new figures have revealed writes the news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

Data compiled by EV analytics site Eltre shows some of the country’s top-selling electric vehicles costing as little as 2¢ per kilometre to run in Melbourne, compared to more than 24¢ per kilometre for diesel utes.

The figures, based on fuel prices and electricity rates as of April 17, show just how quickly the Middle East conflict has impacted fuel prices.

The biggest cost hit is being felt by those who drive utes, with Australia’s bestsellers like the Ford Ranger, Toyota HiLux, and Isuzu D-Max being the most expensive to run, with all of them sitting above 21¢/km, with the D-Max topping the list at 24.3/km.

Compared with electric vehicles like the Tesla Model 3, Tesla Model Y, and BYD Dolphin, which were all sitting at approximately 2¢c and 2.3¢c/km.

The cheapest petrol SUVs don't even come close, with the Hyundai Tucson and MG ZS sitting around 13¢ to 15¢/km, six to seven times more expensive.

The Australian Institute of Petroleum data shows petrol prices have jumped approximately 36.7% since January, while diesel has surged a staggering 68%.

That’s pushed the typical monthly fuel bill from around $150 to as high as $250, depending on the vehicle, compared to approximately $60 a month for EV owners.

Separate research from Polestar Australia, based on a survey of more than 1000 motorists, found Australians were already saving close to $100 a month by switching to electric, even before the Middle East conflict increased fuel prices.

Polestar CEO Michael Lohscheller said range anxiety has now turned into pump anxiety as more motorists move away from volatile fuel costs.

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🌇 Rough sleepers
caught in
a trap

Bikram Lama had a morning ritual. The rough sleepers of Hyde Park remember it well reports the The Guardian website. [click to read more].

The young Nepali man would emerge from his sleeping bag, perched in the bushes near the bustling tunnel entrance to Sydney’s St James station.

Throngs of office workers would stream past, eyes fixed to phones or dead ahead - anywhere but the dishevelled young man in front of them.

Lama paid them no mind. He'd return from breakfast, a bag of breadcrumbs in hand, and head straight to the flock of pigeons that also called the St James tunnel home.

The routine was so ingrained that Joe %man, a former rough sleeper who now busks at the tunnel, coined a nickname for Lama: the birdman.

I knew he was on his way back because the birds would start to congregate outside on the steps and some would come into the tunnel and wait, %man says.

He would greet them like his children. As he arrived, they'd all fly in.

One day last December, as Sydney sweltered through its interminable heatwave, the ritual stopped.

The pigeons waited in vain. Their birdman did not emerge.

In one of Australia’s busiest public parks, he had died a lonely death.

No one noticed.

For almost a week, thousands streamed past his corpse, making their way along the busy thoroughfare from the City Circle train line. Roughly 100,000 people went in or out of St James station during the time Lama lay there, Opal data suggests.

When he was eventually found by station staff just before noon on 7 December, his body had decomposed to such a degree that police were unable to visually identify him.

Erin Longbottom, the nursing unit manager of St Vincent’s homelessness health service, says it feels as though Lama’s death has been completely unacknowledged".

He was just somebody who fell through all the cracks, and was obviously scared and didn't have any support …

It’s like he’s an invisible person and that’s just completely devastating.

Guardian Australia has spent months tracing the life of Bikram Lama, seeking to understand how a young man who came to Australia to study computer science came to die a needless death on the doorstep of Australia’s busiest central business district.

The investigation has stretched to the remote village where Lama grew up, to his grieving family who are still without answers and to those who knew him while he slept rough on Sydney’s streets.

It exposes a glaring gap in federal and state responses to homelessness, which makes it impossible for support services to deliver housing, healthcare and financial assistance to people like Lama who came to Australia legally but lost their visa status or never obtained permanent residency.

Experts say non-residents are a growing cohort, trapped in homelessness because they cannot be given temporary or social housing, cannot legally work but also cannot get Centrelink payments or, in most cases, access public healthcare.

No matter who you are or how you came to Australia or what happened to you, you're actually still a human being and your life is valuable, Longbottom says. It made me really sad actually to think that this man … in his eyes he had no way out of the situation he was in. [click the intro to return to front page]




 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Chris Bowen has claimed oil drilling decisions should be based on economics and engineering, despite his government creating barriers that Vikki Campion says make new projects impossible writes Vikki Campion in Daily Telegraph yesterday. [click to read more]

Drilling for oil in Australian territory is the equivalent of dropping every last dollar into the dusty arcade claw machine while the entire Labor cabinet cheers go for it!, knowing the whole game is rigged.

When Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen this week said that decisions about whether to drill should be based on the economics and the engineering and if it meets the environmental approvals, then it can happen and should happen, it was as if he had had nothing to do with the economics or the environmental approvals.

Look at the first budget of the Albanese government, which cancelled a swag of grants announced for diesel storage and petroleum drilling and instead decided to fund the Environmental Defenders Office, which then took Beetaloo drilling projects approved by former Resources Minister Keith Pitt to the NT Supreme Court.

A new anti drilling bureaucracy

Last year, they brought in reforms so that businesses need to deliver a net gain for biodiversity, a new bureaucracy in a federal Environmental Protection Agency with the power to issue stop-work orders, and forced abatement of carbon emissions under the guise of a carbon tax masquerading as the Safeguard Mechanism.

Bowen and the rest of the Albanese government, who went on to spend the next four years talking about reducing emissions, know the system has been gamed so much, with everything stacked against any new proponent, only a fool would try.

Bowen blames engineering as the issue. Any drilling must pass those economics and engineering tests, he says. But it wasn't too hard for them to drill in the 1970s in the Bass Strait, one of the world’s most dangerous stretches of water, home to the roaring forties and shipwrecks galore, and its oil production softened Australia’s exposure to the last global petroleum crisis.

Just too difficult in Oz

But, now in 2026, Mr Bowen wants us to believe that drilling is just too difficult in Australia.

Australia’s oceans are apparently scarier than they were 50 years ago. More terrifying than Russian icy seas or the deep swell off the Gulf of Mexico, where some of the deepest oil rigs produce millions of barrels of oil.

In the 1970s, we produced 70% of our own petroleum from local oil and refineries.

Now we rely on imports and there’s no guarantee we'll have fuel past mid-May.

The government measures fuel security by counting empty service stations, even though these aren't the main suppliers for big buyers like farmers or miners.

Zelots making sure we don't drill

It has everything to do with the government, which forced existing wells to be capped, who armed those who oppose petroleum on ideological grounds with taxpayer-funded court cases and who provide minimal transparency in relation to activist groups masquerading as charities.

Zealots staff environmental departments, industry super funds are forced to buy politically correct investments, and geologists find themselves busier with paperwork than getting dirty, forced to deal with both state and federal departments to handle what is a state resource.

Australia’s oil is both attainable and comparable to the best reserves in the world. The biggest impediment is not sub-arctic temperatures or deep oceans, but the government itself. No investor is going to sink billions into the Albanese claw machine for drilling, knowing that they will never win.

One-eyed passion

Bowen insists projects need to stack up environmentally, while disregarding foreign companies dynamiting pristine forests for wind turbines or NSW’s EnergyCo, in its one-eyed passion for building transmission towers spanning thousands of kilometres, no matter how much biodiversity goes under the bulldozer.

The game works for them — they get the prize. If we eased environmental approvals, as we do for transmission lines, sped up payments and granted landowners underground rights, we could produce Australian oil within six months.

Mr Bowen says any development needs to stack up economically but one must ask the question: with crude oil prices surging toward $144 a barrel and domestic fuel security evaporating, how exactly does refusing to develop our own resources make good economic sense?

The game was never meant to be won. It has been rigged to ensure the only people walking away with any plush toy from behind the glass are the ones Mr Bowen has already decided should win.

We have skills, technology and the guts to claim the prize for oil. The only thing we don't have is a government that’s prepared to let us play a fair game.

It’s easier to see the bite in the small towns, on the quieter streets, because when the shop shuts, it doesn't reopen; darkened windows sit as an empty reminder of what used to bring people together between the post office and the IGA.

Another day older and deeper in debt!

Over the coffee machine in one cafe, the owner confides that he thinks his business is done because he can't sell enough lattes and eggs to pay the four-figure power bill; even with the crowd out front, and the line at the till, with good staff and good food, every month he goes deeper into debt.

You see it in statistics from the Australian Securities & Investments Commission which show that 14,722 businesses entered insolvency in the 2025 financial year.

Statistics from the Australian Energy Regulator released this week show that more than 6200 electricity customers were disconnected in the last quarter, with the average account holder owing $2600 at the time of disconnection.

Thousands of businesses are going insolvent, and thousands of people are being disconnected from power.

And they tell us it's betting cheaper

Yet the same bureaucrats tell us power is getting cheaper and assure us renewables will send bills down. Just not before we go out of business.

The smart ones try to get out quickly, listening to their heads rather than their entrepreneurial hearts. They watch their plans fall apart — how they turned a shabby old house into a lively spot for coffee and tea, a place where the lonely or elderly could meet and talk, a bit of sophistication in a town where the only other choice is the pub.


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Reflecting, decades ago, on the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, Henry Kissinger observed that order once shattered can be restored only by the experience of chaos, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Today’s world, which Defence Minister Richard Marles aptly described in his National Press Club speech as defined by disorder, offers no such consolation.

There is chaos enough, but no sign of the order it is meant to produce. As the crises deepen and the prospects for order recede, prudence has a single meaning: to build the strength required to meet threats whose contours we can dimly discern but whose timing and precise nature remain inherently uncertain.

That imperative goes to the heart of Australia’s defence posture and will frame the debate about the 2026 National Defence Strategy. But a central insight, articulated by Arthur Tange, secretary of the Department of Defence from 1970 to 1979, retains all its force: Until you're talking dollars, you're not talking strategy.

Translating spendings into capability

The issue, however, is not simply how much is spent but whether that spending translates into capability. And on both counts there are grounds for concern.

Defence spending has certainly risen under Labor, though a significant share of the increase results from the AUKUS program the Coalition initiated. But the government’s decision to inflate the headline defence-to-GDP ratio by including pension and veterans' expenditures - items previously excluded - falls well short of clarity and candour.

The effect is far from trivial: the change alone lifts the ratio from just over 2% of GDP to the 2.8% Marles highlighted in his address.

No less important, once the definition is expanded in this way, the additional spending required to reach the government’s 3% target is dramatically reduced to just a further 0.2% of GDP.

No contribution to capability

The issue is not merely one of accounting. Those items were left out for good reasons: however justified they may be on other grounds, they do not directly contribute to military capability.

Including them obscures the fundamental question — whether Australia is allocating sufficient resources to build the forces our strategic circumstances demand.

As for the spending increase Marles announced - of $53bln over the next decade - it largely reflects amounts the government promised some time ago, and whose value has, since then, been significantly eroded by higher than expected inflation.

Nor is there any certainty the increases will actually eventuate.

The forward estimates, which cover the next four years, will include only a quarter of the projected uplift; that implies that the average increase in annual outlays in the subsequent six years must be roughly double that in the forthcoming budget — by which time any greater spending will be worth even less. Long experience suggests that such steeply backloaded promises are more easily made than honoured.

Not closing the freeriding gap

But even if those increases are delivered, they will still do little to narrow the gap between Australia’s defence effort and that of the US — a gap that, rightly or wrongly, fuels American concerns about free-riding.

On a standard, core-defence basis, Australian per capita spending over the forward estimates averages about $2430 a year, up only modestly from $2340. The US already spends around $4290 per person — close to twice as much.

And if the Trump administration’s 2027 defence budget is enacted, US per capita spending would exceed $5710, making the disparity starker still on even the most expansive assumptions about Australia’s own outlays.

Concerns about the efficiency of our spending are, if anything, just as pressing. Some few years ago, Mark Thomson and I surveyed the major reviews of how the Australian Defence Force acquires and maintains its weapons systems.

Regurgitating the malaise

One finding stood out: every review raised concerns remarkably similar, if not identical, to those identified by its predecessors.

As Paul Rizzo put it in his review of naval sustainment, the failures were longstanding, well known to Defence, and the subject of many prior reports.

There have, to be sure, been numerous remedial efforts. But it is difficult ∼ usually impossible ∼ to determine whether they have been effective.

Rarely have reforms been followed by systematic retrospective assessment: the kind of post-mortem that would establish whether the changes worked and, if not, why they failed.

The contrast with the US is instructive. Between 1989 and 2000, the American defence system underwent unprecedented change; in 1995 alone there were 23 major initiatives targeting defence procurement.

Shuffling the bureaucratic placemats

Recognising that the effects would take time to emerge, US policymakers commissioned a comprehensive, bottom-up appraisal in 2009. The results informed, and continue to drive, further rounds of reform.

There have, however, been no appraisals of comparable scale, rigour and transparency in Australia. Instead, having repeatedly shuffled the bureaucratic placemats without genuinely changing the menu, we stagger from acquisition mishap to capability fiasco and back again.

What makes this all the more striking is that our defence establishment has no shortage of senior personnel who might undertake analyses of that kind — indeed, it is remarkably top-heavy.

Here, too, the comparison with the US is telling. Australia has 248 star-ranked officers across a force of roughly 90,000 — one senior officer for every 363 personnel.

Four times the numbwer of officers

The US has around 848 star-ranked officers across 1.3 million active-duty troops — around one for every 1530. On that basis, Australia has roughly 4.2 times as many senior officers per service member as the US.

The contrast extends beyond structure to experience. Almost all serving US generals came up as majors and lieutenant colonels during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, most often accumulating four to six combat tours.

A significant number also commanded brigades or divisions in those theatres, gaining hard-won understanding of operational command.

By contrast, Australian general officers have typically had one or two deployments, measured in months rather than years.

Only those from the special forces approach anything like the combat exposure of their American colleagues. Despite that, Australia’s military senior officers are, by international standards, extraordinarily well paid.

World's highest paid

The Chief of the Defence Force, to take but one example, earns about $1m a year — making the position almost certainly the highest- compensated military chief in the democratic world, with nearly three times the official salary of the US chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The disparity is even more striking when set against force size: Australia’s CDF earns the equivalent of around $10,340 for every thousand uniformed members of the ADF, compared with $3600 for Canada’s Chief of Defence staff and a mere $320-$380 for the US Chairman — whose salary is spread across a force 15 times larger.

That combination - an outsized upper layer and generous individual remuneration - raises legitimate questions about whether the ADF’s command structure reflects strategic necessity or institutional inertia. And the same questions arise even more acutely about the civilian establishment.

No one could reasonably expect Defence to be a paragon of efficiency: the complexity of its tasks makes it inevitable that there will be a great deal of muddling through.

Just turning up the volume

Yet it is also clear that we could do better. And it is clear too that spending increases, such as those Marles touted, may end up being no more sensible than turning up the volume on a faulty amplifier.

There is a compelling case for greater outlays but they must be accompanied by reforms that go beyond changing administrative labels — something given only token attention in Marles’s address.

It could, of course, be that voters are happy with what they are being given: Pharaonic commitments, made to be forgotten; creative accounting, which dresses a drab reality in gilt and glitter; and a defence establishment, both uniformed and civilian, that marches to its own drum.

But that will do us little good should the evil day dawn. As the curtain of illusion is ripped away, and lives are lost that could have been saved, we may learn, too late, that what we called strength was just expensive stagecraft.



 OVERSEAS:

Arseny Turbin’s teachers described him as “intelligent, thoughtful and fair.” But since his arrest at age 15 in 2023, he has been serving a five-year sentence on terrorism charges for allegedly attempting to join the Freedom of Russia Legion, which he denies. Now 17, he faces even more time in prison after authorities accused him taking part in a prison riot. He says he was not involved — and his supporters say the charges are politically motivated.


The Moscow Times reminds "People are screaming out loud right now. They've been stripped of their last resources and they continue to lose more. Businesses are dying. People are googling how to leave Russia. It's one of the most popular search queries right now." That's what blogger Viktoria Bonya said in her viral video that called on Vladimir Putin to address the mounting social and economic problems that are dominating headlines coming out of Russia. Bonya was quick to stress that she was not criticizing Putin himself, saying she considered him an "excellent politician." Instead, she suggested that regional officials ∼ the bad boyars to Putin's good tsar ∼ were keeping the Kremlin in the dark about issues like flooding in Dagestan, livestock culls in Siberia and consumers and small businesses suffocating under rising costs and tax burdens. Other public figures followed Bonya's lead and released similar videos. Time will tell if the appeals will have any impact. Putin's approval rating has slipped to 67.8%, its lowest level since the full-scale invasion in 2022. Bloomberg reported that some officials were growing concerned by the vocal backlash to widespread internet restrictions this year. What else happened this week: ■ The U.S. did not extend its temporary sanctions waiver on Russian crude and petroleum products, which was implemented to stabilize global oil prices. The waiver had helped Russia's oil revenues surge last month. ■ Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina warned that Russia was facing a severe labor shortage despite unemployment standing at 2%. ■ Russian websites started blocking access to users with VPNs as the government ramps up its efforts to crack down on the censorship circumvention tools. ■ Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv's forces had, in a first, captured a Russian position using drones and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) only. While experts told MT that the statement was mainly a PR move, it also highlights how unmanned systems "are already transforming both tactics and strategy" in the war. ■ Russia and Azerbaijan reached a compensation agreement nearly 16 months after a Russian missile mistakenly downed an Azerbaijani passenger jet, killing 38 people on board. ■ The U.S. believes that Cuba worked with the Kremlin to recruit its citizens to fight in Ukraine, Axios reported. The Moscow Times first reported on this targeted recruitment in 2023.






The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email