Preliminary Pages
Foreword
This review of the Defence
Annual Report 2007-2008 focuses on the activities, achievements and
undertakings of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and the Department of
Defence during the period July 2007 to June 2008. During this period ADF
personnel remained heavily engaged in a wide variety of operational deployments
world-wide, with the withdrawal of troops from Iraq balanced by an increased
commitment to Afghanistan marked by the tragic death of four ADF members and
the wounding of a number of others.
During the 2007-2008 reporting
period, in addition to the significant operational tempo, Defence also
maintained a focus on reform following a number of recent reviews, inquiries
and investigations, as well as the development of a new White Paper.
The review of the Defence Annual
Report is an important task and an opportunity for the Defence Sub-Committee to
inquire into a broad range of Defence issues as part of the process of
accountability of Government agencies to Parliament. The Defence Sub-Committee
takes this responsibility very seriously.
This year, the Defence
Sub-Committee selected a broad range of issues for examination at public
hearings held in Canberra on 16 April, 19 June, and 21 August 2009. This
extended timeline for the hearings was required to accommodate commitments of
relevant Department of Defence personnel.
The major topics included
joint/air/land capability and procurement, personnel issues, energy and the
environment, and several other issues of interest.
The Committee examined the High
Frequency Modernisation Project noting that Defence will still need to
demonstrate that the post-Kinnaird reforms are sufficient and have been
well-implemented delivering projects on time, on budget, and with required
levels of capability.
The Committee also examined the
ADF’s air capability and procurement and noted the unprecedented changeover of
platforms that Defence is managing across its air capability and elsewhere,
including the Wedgetail Airborne Early Warning and Control platform, the Tiger
Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter, and the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). The
Committee notes that the JSF acquisition will be the most expensive single
acquisition in Defence’s history. As our sole or principal air fighting
platform it will be, arguably, our most important defence acquisition.
In addition, maritime assets will
comprise a large part of the Defence procurement program for the next decade or
more. The failure of the Seasprite project – a ship based helicopter capability
for the Royal Australian Navy – is a powerful indicator of the importance of improved
acquisition procedures. The true cost of the project’s failure is not only to
be counted in dollar terms; it is also to be counted in terms of lost
capability where it may in fact be needed.
Recruiting and maintaining
personnel continue to be significant challenges for the ADF. The Committee
recognises that Defence has taken considerable effort to develop a sufficient
and sustainable cohort of skilled personnel, capable of satisfying the
increasingly technical requirements of modern defence forces. In particular,
the Committee welcomes the move by Defence to adopt a more flexible pay
structure so that it is better placed to attract, develop and retain skilled
personnel. However, there is emerging evidence of weakening in the current pay
system and the Committee has therefore recommended that Defence place a high
priority on developing a more agile and responsive solution.
The Committee has also inquired
into external constraints facing Defence such as climate change and the steps
Defence had taken to prepare for oil depletion and oil shocks. The Committee
recommended that:
n  Defence
adopt a more assertive strategy with regard to oil shocks and alternative
fuels, with the specific purpose of providing a capability to mitigate risk due
to a dependence on oil-based fuels; and
n  new
fuels developed to mitigate risk to Australia’s defence capability from oil
shocks and oil scarcity be designed to reduce Defence’s carbon footprint, where
possible, in balance with energy yields and other practical considerations.
The Committee would like to thank
all of the individuals and organisations that participated in this Review of
the Defence Annual Report 2007-2008. We would also like to express our
ongoing appreciation to the men and women of the ADF for the outstanding work
that they continue to do in Australia and around the world. Finally, the
Committee would also like to thank their families for the support they provide
and the sacrifices they endure, to enable our Service men and women to
contribute to Australia’s security.
The Hon Arch
Bevis MP
Chair Defence Sub-Committee
Membership of the Committee
 
  | 
   Chair 
   | 
  
   Senator M Forshaw 
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Deputy
  Chair 
   | 
  
   The Hon D Hawker MP 
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Members 
   | 
  
   Senator M Arbib (from
  01/07/08 till 11/09/09) 
  Senator A Bartlett (till 30/06/08) 
  Senator M Bishop 
  Senator M Cormann   (till
  23/09/08) 
  Senator A Eggleston (till
  19/03/08) 
  Senator the Hon A
  Ferguson  
  (from 01/07/08) 
  Senator M Fifield 
  Senator M Furner (from
  16/03/09) 
  Senator S
  Hanson-Young (from
  04/12/08) 
  Senator the Hon D Johnston 
  (from 23/09/08) 
  Senator L J Kirk   (till 30/06/08) 
  Senator S Ludlum   (from 26/11/08) 
  Senator the Hon J A L (Sandy) Macdonald (till
  30/06/08) 
  Senator C M Moore   
  Senator K O’Brien   (from
  01/07/08) 
  Senator M Payne (from 19/03/08) 
  Senator N Stott Despoja (till
  30/06/08) 
  Senator R Trood 
  Senator R S Webber (till 30/06/08) 
  The Hon B Baldwin MP 
  The Hon A Bevis
  MP 
   | 
  
   The Hon J Bishop
  MP (from
  11/03/09) 
  Mr M Danby MP 
  The Hon J
  Fitzgibbon MP (from
  15/06/09) 
  Ms A Ellis MP 
  Mr S W Gibbons MP   
  Ms S Grierson MP 
  Mr D Hale MP 
  The Hon I
  Macfarlane MP 
  Mrs L Markus MP (from 25/09/08) 
  Ms S Mirabella MP (till
  11/03/09) 
  The Hon J Murphy
  MP (from
  20/03/09) 
  Mr R Oakeshott MP(from
  20/03/09) 
  Ms M Parke MP 
  Ms K Rea MP 
  Mr B Ripoll MP 
  The Hon A Robb AO MP (till 25/09/08) 
  Mr S Robert MP 
  The Hon P Ruddock MP 
  Ms J Saffin MP 
  The Hon B Scott MP 
  Mr K Thomson MP (till
  15/06/09) 
  Ms M Vamvakinou
  MP 
   | 
 
 
  | 
     
   | 
  
     
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Secretary 
   | 
  
   Dr M Kerley 
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
Membership of the
Defence Sub‑Committee
 
  | 
   Chair 
   | 
  
   The Hon A Bevis MP 
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Deputy
  Chair 
   | 
  
   The Hon B Baldwin MP  
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Members 
   | 
  
     
  Senator
  M Arbib (till
  11/03/09) 
  Senator
  M Bishop 
  Senator
  the Hon A Ferguson  
  Senator M Fifield   
  Senator M Forshaw   (ex officio) 
  Senator
  M Furner (from
  16/03/09) 
  Senator
  the Hon D Johnston 
  Senator S Ludlum    
  Senator
  K O’Brien   
  Senator
  M Payne
    
  Senator
  R Trood 
  Mr
  M Danby MP 
   | 
  
     
  The
  Hon J Fitzgibbon MP (from 15/06/09) 
  Mr
  S W Gibbons MP 
  Ms S Grierson MP 
  Mr
  D Hale MP 
  The
  Hon D Hawker MP (ex officio) 
  The
  Hon I Macfarlane MP   
  Mrs L Markus MP 
  Ms
  S Mirabella MP(till 11/03/09) 
  Mr S Robert MP 
  Ms
  J Saffin MP 
  The
  Hon B Scott MP   
  Mr
  K Thomson MP (till
  15/06/09) 
   | 
 
 
Committee Secretariat
 
 
  | 
   Secretary 
   | 
  
   Dr Margot Kerley 
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Defence
  Adviser 
  Inquiry
  Secretary 
   | 
  
   WGCDR David Ashworth 
  Mr Muzammil Ali (till 25 June
  2009) 
  Dr Brian Lloyd (from 2 March
  2009 till 11 June 2009) 
  Mr Paul Zinkel (from 1
  September 2009) 
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Officer
  Manager 
   | 
  
   Mrs Donna Quintus-Bosz 
   | 
 
 
  | 
   Administrative
  Officers 
   | 
  
   Ms Sonya Gaspar 
  Ms Gillian Drew 
   | 
 
 
  | 
     
   | 
  
     
   | 
 
 
Terms of reference
 
Pursuant to paragraph 1 (b) of its resolution of
appointment, the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and trade
is empowered to consider and report on the annual reports of government
agencies, in accordance with a schedule presented by the Speaker of the House
of Representatives.[1]
The Speaker’s schedule lists annual reports from agencies
within the Defence and Foreign Affairs portfolios as being available for review
by the Committee.[2]
 
 
List of abbreviations
 
 
  | 
   ADF 
  AEW&C 
  ANAO 
  ANZAC 
  ARH 
  ASC 
  ASRV 
  ASW 
  AWD 
  BAMS 
  BAE 
  C17 
  CBRN 
  CDF 
  CIOG 
  COTS 
  CSIRO 
  DEWHA 
  DFRT 
  DIO 
  DMO 
  DSD 
  DSTO 
  ELF 
  ESM 
  FMS 
  FFG 
  FVM&T 
  GAO 
  GFC 
  GJ 
  GOPS 
  GORPS 
  HF 
  HNA 
  HR 
  IED 
  IOC 
  ISR 
  JLTV 
  JSF 
  LHD 
  MEAO 
  MESA 
  MOTS 
  NATO 
  NCW 
  OEG 
  PMV 
  PMV-L 
  PSI 
  RAAF 
  RAN 
  RFT’s 
  RSL 
  SDD 
  SIP 
  UAV 
  WMD 
   | 
  
   Australian Defence Force 
  Airborne Early Warning and
  Control 
  Australian National Audit Office 
  A Frigate Class of the Royal
  Australian Navy 
  Armed Reconnaissance Helicopters 
  Australian Submarine Corporation 
  Australian Submarine Rescue
  Vehicle 
  Anti Submarine Warfare 
  Air Warfare Destroyer 
  ‘Broad Areas Maritime
  Surveillance’ program 
  British Aerospace 
  Heavy airlift aircraft  
  Chemical, Biological, Radiological
  and Nuclear 
  Chief of Defence Force 
  Chief Information Officer Group 
  Commercial-Off-The-Shelf 
  Commonwealth Scientific and
  Industrial Research Organisation    
  Department of the Environment, Water,
  Heritage and the Arts 
  Defence Force Remuneration Tribunal 
  Defence Intelligence Organisation 
  Defence Material Organisation 
  Defence Signals Directorate 
  Defence Science and Technology
  Organisation 
  Enhanced Land Force 
  Electronic Support Measures 
  Foreign Military Sales 
  A Frigate Class of the Royal
  Australian Navy   
  Field Vehicles Modules and
  Trailers 
  Government Accounting Office
  (United States of America) 
  Global Financial Crisis 
  Gigajoule 
  Graded Officers Pay Structure 
  Graded Other Ranks Pay Structure 
  High Frequency 
  Hardened
  Network Army 
  Human Resources 
  Improvised Explosive Device 
  Initial Operational Capability 
  Intelligence, Surveillance and
  Reconnaissance 
  Joint Light Tactical Vehicle 
  Joint Strike Fighter 
  Landing Helicopter Dock 
  Middle East Area of Operations 
  ‘Multi-Role Electronically
  Scanned Array’ radar 
  Military–Off-The-Shelf  
  North Atlantic Treaty
  Organisation 
  Network Centric Warfare 
  Operational Experts Group 
  Protected Mobility Vehicle  
  Protected Mobility Vehicle Light capability 
  Proliferation Security Initiative 
  Royal Australian Air Force 
  Royal Australian Navy 
  Request for Tender 
  Returned and Services League 
  System Design and Development 
  Statement of Interdiction
  Principles 
  Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 
  Weapons of Mass Destruction 
   | 
 
 
List of recommendations
1     Introduction
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that, in the absence of a clear
strategic case for high-risk first-of-type acquisitions, military off-the-shelf
purchases should be the default option for procurement projects.
This recommendation does not necessarily relate to any
particular acquisitions currently under consideration but rather represents a
broader statement of policy reflecting on issues relating to past acquisition
programs.
Recommendation 2
The Committee recommends that the Department of Defence review
its current procedures for rapid acquisition to ensure that it is meeting the
ADF’s needs, particularly where they are linked directly to overseas
operational commitments.
7     Defence personnel – Niche skills and pay
Recommendation 3
The Committee recommends that Defence places a high priority
on developing a solution to the difficulties that it, and KPMG, has identified
with the current pay systems.
8     Submarines
Recommendation 4
The Committee recommends that Defence ensure the provision of
submarine escape training at HMAS Stirling be re-established.
Recommendation 5
The Committee recommends that the deployability issues
governing the Australian Submarine Rescue Vehicle Remora be resolved without
delay.
9     Constraints
Recommendation 6
The Committee recommends that Defence adopt a more assertive
strategy with regard to oil shocks and alternative fuels, with the specific
purpose of providing a capability to mitigate risk due to a dependence on
oil-based fuels. Defence should provide such a capability, sufficient to
maintain an identified core capability, within a timeframe of 10 years.
Recommendation 7
The Committee recommends that new fuels developed to mitigate
risk to Australia’s defence capability from oil shocks and oil scarcity be
designed to reduce Defence’s carbon footprint, where possible, in balance with
energy yields and other practical considerations.