I think it’s difficult for any media organisation not to show some form of bias how ever small.
Re the 4 Corners programme, I thought it was not a bad overview for an audience viewer that may know little of the subject.
Did it have a bias towards the “we do think the SSN venture will be a problem camp”
I’d say yes , but then I guess my own personal bias mirrors that sentiment.
Interested as to what Old Faithful or anyone else made of the programme content.
Cheers S
I don't see it as a biased report. I think people were simply and pragmatically pointing out the difficulties that will need to be resolved to enable an outcome. If the report didn't cover this view people would have still said it was biased, just the other way. I think in Australia we at least have always had a healthly ability to call out the downside of any strategy, which has usually resulted in the strategy ending up stronger.
I didn't however get a sense of enviability from the report. Effort is going into resolving the problems, and I suspect many (perhaps not all) will be resolved. Maybe the first boat is 2034 rather than 2032. I would be surprised for instance if there are not announcements in the near future to hurry up the Henderson/FBW redevelopment, and increase the number of people in the American/US training system. It was interesting observing the scenes in the report focused on the actual yards in America and what they are doing to increase the labour force.
The report interviewed a number of American stakeholders, many on the Republican side. It was a good look into their psyche and why they see this as important for America. I took out of it that the Americans do not see the submarine deal as just something for the Australians. They see it as of intrinsic value to the Americans. It's something they want, and they will (eventually) do what is necessary to make it happen.
I should point out that obtaining a cadence of 2.4 boats per year is important for the Americans to sustain their own fleet (they need to get above 2 per year for themselves), not just for providing boats to Australia. Failing this metric has consequences of their own. So they have to find a solution regardless of us, our component just comes along with that.
The conversations in the report indicated that there is more of a concern with the Australian policical landscape and less with the American one. America has concerns that we might flip flop (its not like we don't have a track record in this space), or aren't prepared to/can't stump up the resources necessary to sustain the strategy. These are valid.