Australia’s Future Role in the Indo-Pacific National Security Dynamics and Strategic Scenarios

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15170/PSK.2026.07.01.04

Keywords:

Australia, Indo-Pacific region, national security, strategic scenarios

Abstract

This article examines how Australia is repositioning itself as a security actor in the Indo‑Pacific amid sharpening strategic competition between the United States and China. It combines a mapping of Australia’s evolving national security architecture with a dual analytical lens drawing on middle‑power theory and (neo)realist international relations theory. Empirically, the study traces recent reforms in intelligence coordination, defens e spending, cybersecurity and counter‑terrorism, and situates them within a wider Five Eyes and Indo‑Pacific alliance context. Analytically, it conceptualises Australia’s strategy as a hybrid posture in which middle‑power activism – diplomatic coalition‑building, norm promotion and regional engagement – operates under the structural constraints of realist balancing against China. The article further develops four scenario pathways – Taiwan contingency, US strategic retrenchment, an AUKUS setback, and an AI-quantum arms race – to assess how this hybrid logic shapes Australia’s future room for manoeuvre. The contribution lies in synthesising fragmented policy developments into a coherent national security narrative and in showing how Australia’s middle‑power agency is both enabled and bounded by Indo‑Pacific power shifts.

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Published

2026-05-08

How to Cite

Sáfrán, J. (2026). Australia’s Future Role in the Indo-Pacific National Security Dynamics and Strategic Scenarios. POLARITIES, 7(1), 52–68. https://doi.org/10.15170/PSK.2026.07.01.04