Get access to our best features

Get access to our best features

US, UK, and Australia announce deal on nuclear submarines

Summary by Ground News
President Joe Biden and the leaders of Australia and the United Kingdom on Monday announced that Australia will purchase nuclear-powered attack submarines from the US in a deal estimated to total around €342 billion to modernise its fleet amid growing concern about China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific.
Published 15 days ago · San Diego, United States

News Articles

More Filters
All
Left
Center
Right

US, Australia and UK ink nuclear-powered submarine deal

US News: WASHINGTON: The United States, Australia and the United Kingdom has announced a nuclear-powered submarine deal, a step aimed at countering the Chinese.

15 days ago·Mumbai, India
Read Full Article

Aukus deal: US, UK and Australia agree on nuclear submarine project

The US, UK and Australia say new nuclear-powered submarines will help ensure stability in the Pacific.

15 days ago·United Kingdom
Read Full Article

Size of UK’s nuclear submarine fleet could double under Aukus plans

First of new vessels expected to be seaworthy by the end of 2030s, with Australia receiving theirs in early 2040s

15 days ago·London, United Kingdom
Read Full Article

Australia says offered China briefing over nuclear submarine deal

Australia offered China a briefing over its nuclear-powered submarine deal with the United States and Britain but is not aware of any response from Beijing, Defence Minister Richard Marles said on Tuesday.

15 days ago·United Kingdom
Read Full Article

Biden announces nuclear-powered submarines for Australia

PM Albanese said the agreement “represents the biggest single investment in Australia’s defence capability in all of our history”

15 days ago·India
Read Full Article

Biden announces next step of submarine deal with UK and Australia

The president and prime ministers for the United Kingdom and Australia announced the next steps in their strategic partnership on nuclear-powered submarines

15 days ago·London, United Kingdom
Read Full Article
Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

37% of the sources lean Left
World Socialist Web Site
The Guardian
The Hindu
The Independent
Daily Mirror
NDTV
USA Today
+31
BBC News
Reuters
Hindustan Times
South China Morning Post
The Hill
Channel News Asia
+25
Times of India
The Telegraph
New York Post
TASS [🇷🇺-affiliated]
Malay Mail
Bangkok Post
+23
Washington Examiner
The Epoch Times
Latestly
PressTV
The Daily Telegraph
Fox News
+1
L 37%
C 29%
R 34%
See less detail