Australia urged to adopt Singapore’s ‘poisonous shrimp’ defence tactics
A think tank said Canberra’s ‘reliance on great and powerful friends’ was not enough to deter threats from China and Russia

Until then, Canberra faces a major gap in its defences, warned the report by the non-partisan Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), which receives funding from Canberra’s defence ministry as well as the US State Department.
“Australia’s traditional reliance upon ‘great and powerful friends’ and extended nuclear deterrence now seems no longer assured,” the authors wrote.
“Australia has options to fill today’s deterrence gap: we just need to look beyond conventional paradigms,” they said.
“History demonstrates that innovative concepts and asymmetric capabilities can achieve deterrent effects ahead of and during conflict,” the authors wrote.