AUKUS Overhauls Submarine Plan: Three Used Virginia-Class Boats for Australia, First Joint Undersea Drone Project Launched

According to Naval News, the AUKUS partners formalized a sweeping update that streamlines the submarine acquisition schedule while accelerating uncrewed undersea capabilities under Pillar II. The move comes as pressure mounts to bring forward deterrence against China’s naval build-up in the Western Pacific.
At a Glance
- Who: United States, United Kingdom, Australia (AUKUS)
- What: 3 used Virginia-class submarines for Australia + joint UUV payload development
- When: Joint statement 30 May 2026, Shangri-La Dialogue
- UUV first delivery: 2027
- UK commitment: £150 million (~$202 million)
- Base: SRF-West, HMAS Stirling (Western Australia), 2027
Background: AUKUS and Its Two Pillars
Established in 2021, AUKUS rests on two pillars. Pillar I delivers Australia a nuclear-powered attack submarine capability; Pillar II covers joint development of advanced technologies including AI, hypersonics, cyber and undersea drones. According to Breaking Defense, the 30 May statement advanced both: Australia’s interim submarine formula changed, while Pillar II’s first “signature project” was launched.
The Change: Why the Submarine Formula Shifted
Under the previous plan, Australia would have received two used Block IV boats (delivery 2032-2034) and one newly built Block VII boat (2037). The revised arrangement converts this mix into three in-service Virginia-class boats. The stated rationale is to streamline supply chains, maintenance burden and operational requirements while maximizing cost efficiencies. These interim boats bridge to the next-generation SSN-AUKUS class expected in the 2040s.

Uncrewed Underwater Vehicles: The Real New Dimension
The most forward-looking element is the joint UUV development under Pillar II. The three nations aim to “detect, deter and deal with maritime threats” using interchangeable payloads including sensors and weapons. Protection of undersea cables is a headline mission, alongside surveillance, strike, anti-submarine warfare, mine countermeasures and electronic warfare. Each partner first focuses on different payload effects before moving to trilateral integration via shared standards and common control systems.
Why It Matters for Turkey
AUKUS’s push into undersea autonomy aligns directly with Turkey’s fast-growing naval ecosystem. Through the MİLDEN (National Submarine) programme, Turkey is pursuing an indigenous non-nuclear attack submarine, while on the unmanned surface side it has fielded a broad capability set: the ASELSAN-SEFİNE MARLIN USV and the Sancar armed unmanned surface vessel are already operational in reconnaissance and strike roles. Turkey’s edge lies in developing fully indigenous solutions without export constraints — at a time when even Washington must hand allies used boats due to shipyard bottlenecks, the strategic value of Turkey’s national-production model is underscored once more.
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly changed in the AUKUS plan? Australia will receive three in-service Virginia-class submarines instead of a new-build/used mix, and the partners launched their first joint UUV payload project.
Why used submarines? US shipyard production bottlenecks and cost pressure; transferring in-service boats simplifies the supply chain.
When do the UUVs arrive? First deliveries begin in 2027.
What is SSN-AUKUS? A next-generation attack submarine class jointly developed by the three nations, expected in service in the 2040s.
Bottom Line
The 30 May 2026 statement shows AUKUS is no longer just a submarine sales programme; it is becoming a joint industrial-technology bloc in uncrewed undersea systems. As supply bottlenecks force the used-boat formula, real competition is shifting to undersea autonomy — a domain where Turkey is also strongly positioned through MİLDEN and its national USV line.


