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The Concept of Mobilisation and Australian Defence Policy since Vietnam

Journal Edition
DOI
DOI: https://doi.org/10.61451/2675158

Lessons and Cautions for Army in the post-DSR World

Introduction

For the past five decades, Australian defence policy has focused on potential low-level threats from a small or middle power in its immediate region, and on the ability to sustain (relatively small) elements of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) on often quite lengthy operations overseas. While the latter certainly stressed parts of the force, throughout this time Australia could draw on discretion about its commitments,[1] the ADF’s overall capability edge over regional forces, and the deterrent value of the US alliance to limit escalation and the overall scale of conflicts it engaged in, or prepared for. Throughout this time, more substantial challenges were acknowledged as a future possibility that would only emerge with significant warning. 

Today, much of this has changed. The 2023 Defence Strategic Review (DSR) focuses the ADF on the possibility of great power conflict in our immediate region, finding ‘that the ADF as currently constituted and equipped is not fully fit for purpose’.[2] In part, this is a judgement about the types of capabilities held in today’s ADF. In part, it is about the ability of the ADF as a whole to operate in major conflict, rather than generating smaller task groups. In part, it is also about the readiness and size of the ADF relative to the scale required for possible major conflict. It is therefore unsurprising that there is renewed interest in mobilisation, including in Australia’s own experiences from World War I, World War II and Cold War examples, and in the past and present approaches of international partners.

This article begins by arguing that while mobilisation is a national challenge, it can take very different forms and have very different purposes when mapped against force structure and preparedness outcomes. Hence, the term ‘mobilisation’ may obscure as much as elucidate practical implications, especially at the levels of force design and preparedness which are of particular relevance to Army. The second part reviews Australian policy of the last five decades in light of these different forms of mobilisation. The third part maps these considerations against current strategic challenges, followed by conclusions for Army as it considers the implications of mobilisation in the current era.

Endnotes

[1] As often expressed in the phrase ‘wars of choice’.

[2] Department of Defence, Defence Strategic Review (Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia, 2023), p. 7.