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buglerbilly
15-02-10, 10:27 PM
U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Seeks Ways to Strengthen U.S.-Australia Pact


U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn III discusses with Australian officials.

07:07 GMT, February 15, 2010 PAGO PAGO, American Samoa | Australia is already one of America’s strongest allies, and Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn III will visit the nation to see how the alliance can become even stronger.

Lynn will meet with Australian leaders in Sydney, Adelaide and Canberra to discuss the scope and shape of U.S.-Australian military cooperation.

“Australia is a critical ally that is supporting the effort in Afghanistan in important ways, and we think we can work with them on future threats like cybersecurity,” Lynn said during an interview aboard a military aircraft.

Tomorrow, Lynn will speak about U.S. cybersecurity concerns at a roundtable discussion with Australian academics, business leaders and political leaders during a forum at the Australian Maritime Museum in Sydney. The talk kicks off a five-day visit that was delayed 36 hours by blizzards in Washington.

During his visit, Lynn will discuss Afghanistan with Australian leaders.

“We are in a surge situation where we are trying to increase the overall effort,” he said. “But the Australians are making a tremendous effort in Afghanistan already.” Australia has about 1,550 servicemembers in Afghanistan and is contributing to the civilian operations in the country as well.

Lynn will discuss the Defense Department’s Quadrennial Defense Review with leaders of the Australian defense ministry. The leaders will be familiar with the document, as two Australian officers were embedded with the Pentagon’s policy office as the review progressed.

“I think they are going to be pretty familiar with the reasoning and the approach,” Lynn said. “[But] I think it is still important to discuss it with their leadership.”

“It’s important for us to compare and contrast and discuss how our reviews approached things,” Lynn said, noting the Australians completed a comparable review in May.

Looking to the future, Lynn said, many asymmetric threats and anti-access threats threaten both the United States and Australia, and the two nations can work to mitigate the effects. The deputy secretary also will discuss Australians’ leadership in the region and the threats they see.

And U.S. and Australian leaders will share lessons learned from military procurement and acquisition. “We’re going to talk with their people about their approach to acquisition reform and some of the things we’re doing in terms of fixed-priced contracting and trying to establish firmer requirements earlier on in programs,” Lynn said. Part of the Australian defense review was a pledge to modernize and recapitalize the force.

Australia also is a partner in the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter program, planning to buy 100 of the fighters.

“I am planning on walking them through the changes we’ve made in the program,” Lynn said. “We really re-set the program, and tried to establish a baseline of development costs to get a more conservative estimate in production costs.” The moves are designed to give the program – and the nations participating in it – more stability, he said.

Lynn is best known in the department for his work on cybersecurity. Some Australian government sites were overwhelmed by denial-of-service attacks earlier this week. Australia has the same concerns as the United States about a cyber attack and has established a command inside its defense ministry to defend this important infrastructure.

But it is a new fight in a new environment, Lynn noted. Terrorist organizations can launch cyber attacks, he said, but attributing attacks to groups or nations is tough.

“I think we’ll get better at it, but it’s an inherently difficult proposition,” he said. “One of the purposes of this trip is to increase international cooperation, because the Internet doesn’t respect national borders. The more shared warning, the more shared resources you devote to attribution, the better we’re going to get at it.”

Still, attribution never will be perfect, he acknowledged.

Setting the parameters for a discussion of the cyber threat also is problematic. “One of the difficulties in the cyber world is the definition you use: what’s an attack? Do they have to do physical damage? Is intelligence gathering an attack? Does somebody have to get hurt? These are all questions we are wrestling with,” the deputy secretary said.

“We are in the early stages of defining the doctrine on cybersecurity, and I think even the basic concepts of what constitutes an attack and what’s an appropriate and proportional response are things we are still working through,” he said.

These issues must be raised with allies, he said, but it is hard to do so until the United States can define for itself some of the basics.

“It’s something we are working on in the interagency process -- with the Department of Justice on the legal concepts, and working with the Department of Homeland Security on how we protect both the ‘dot-gov’ world as well as critical infrastructure in the private sector,” Lynn said.

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Jim Garamone

buglerbilly
19-02-10, 02:06 PM
Lynn Sets Stage for Further U.S.-Australian Cooperation

(Source: U.S Air Force; issued February 18, 2010)

ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT --- Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn III's meetings with Australian leaders over the last several days have helped to set the stage for new levels of cooperation between the long-time allies.

"I think we were able to establish a foundation that we will be able to build on for the rest of the year," Mr. Lynn said.

During the six-day trip, Mr. Lynn met with business and civic leaders in Sydney and with Australian government and defense leaders in Adelaide and Canberra, Australia. He also visited with Navy Adm. Robert F. Willard, the commander of U.S. Pacific Command, during a stopover in Honolulu.

Mr. Lynn discussed Afghanistan and Australia's contribution to the effort against al-Qaida with government and defense leaders.

"I expressed our gratitude for all their efforts, both in terms of the direct military efforts and the training they are doing of the Afghan security forces," Mr. Lynn said. Australia has about 1,550 servicemembers in Afghanistan, most of them based in Oruzgan province in Regional Command South.

Mr. Lynn also spoke to Australian leaders about the F-35 joint strike fighter program and hopes for U.S. Senate ratification of the Defense Trade Cooperation.

"We were also able to exchange ideas on acquisition reform and budget reform, just to improve both our prospects in that regard," Mr. Lynn said.

But most important, he said, are the new doors opened, especially in cyber and space operations, in the alliance.

"I think we're going to be able to build our cooperation by building on the foundation of this decades-long alliance," the deputy said. "As these new threats emerge, I feel that we'll be able to rely on our oldest allies to aggressively go after them."

In space operations, Australian and the U.S. officials share common interests.

"We're putting in place mechanisms to explore them jointly," he said. "Technology cooperation is one element, joint policy exploration is another, and how we integrate our assets with their assets is another."

The two nations also have mutual interests in cybersecurity.

"We can develop shared awareness of the threat, we can cooperate on technologies, and we can collaborate as we work our way through the conception and development that needs to take place in this new domain," Mr. Lynn said.

The domain is new, just more than 20 years old, but the pace of cyber operations, and threats against the cyber infrastructure, will continue to increase, he said.

"I don't think we have any choice but to keep pace with the technology," Mr. Lynn said. "The technology is going to drive us to develop doctrinal concepts, legal concepts and they are going to allow us to protect this critical area."

In Honolulu, Mr. Lynn briefed U.S. Pacific Command officials on the trip and had a chance to discuss with commanders their issues and concerns.

Officials briefed Mr. Lynn on the realignment of U.S. forces in the Pacific and other challenges, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said. Admiral Willard and Pacom's service-component commanders spoke about humanitarian and disaster operations, maritime security, weapons proliferation and combating terrorism and extremism.

"The deputy commented on the broad nature of their work and that the command is leaning forward on missions that go beyond the traditional sphere," Whitman said. "They held good discussions on cybersecurity."

Admiral Willard hosted Mr. Lynn and his party for a tour of the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor. "It was a very moving experience, and a reminder of the sacrifices made," Mr. Whitman said.

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buglerbilly
27-04-10, 03:50 PM
Australia and the United States Renew the Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement

(Source: Australian Department of Defence; issued April 27, 2010)

The Chief of the Defence Force, Air Chief Marshal Houston, and the US Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Cartwright, today renewed the Australia-United States Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) at a short ceremony in Canberra.

The Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement, a treaty level arrangement, is the principal vehicle through which cooperative military logistics support is conducted between the United States and Australia.

Since its inception, the Agreement has ensured supply support and services to Australian and US forces deployed to all parts of the world wherever Australian and United States forces are operating together. Of particular note is the mutual support that has been facilitated by the Agreement during operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Agreement has also played a significant role in major exercises such as the Talisman Sabre series that is conducted biennially between Australia and the US.

“Renewing today the Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement demonstrates the continuing strength and practical application of our long-standing Alliance,” Air Chief Marshal Houston said.

“I am pleased that General Cartwright and I have been able to renew an agreement that provides the foundation for the important work of our military logisticians.”

The ACSA will come into effect when respective Parliamentary processes that approve its renewal have been concluded.

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