Where does Australia depend on the US?
Alliance commitments, intelligence, military capability, technology access and diplomatic alignment.
US-China relations through an Australian lens
Explore how the relationship between the United States and China affects Australia’s trade, business, education, defence, technology, diplomacy and long-term sovereignty.
The balancing act
Australia is shaped by three overlapping realities: the United States is its principal security ally, China is one of its most consequential economic partners, and the Indo-Pacific is the region where competition, cooperation and crisis risks converge.
This site is designed for decision-makers, students, journalists and citizens who want clear, non-partisan analysis of the trade-offs Australia faces.
Briefing map
Alliance commitments, intelligence, military capability, technology access and diplomatic alignment.
Export markets, international education, tourism, manufacturing inputs and regional diplomacy.
Taiwan, maritime disputes, sanctions, cyber operations, critical minerals, universities and supply chains.
Diversification, deterrence, diplomacy, industrial policy, regional partnerships and social resilience.
Subtopics
Each topic is written to support future expansion into dedicated pages, reports, charts or interactive explainers.
How US regulation, Chinese demand, sanctions risk and market access shape Australian companies.
Exports, imports, logistics, energy, food, minerals and resilience if tensions escalate.
International students, university funding, research security, visas and scientific collaboration.
AUKUS, basing access, deterrence, Taiwan contingencies, maritime security and capability gaps.
AI, semiconductors, cloud, 5G, undersea cables, espionage, cyber resilience and digital sovereignty.
Pacific engagement, ASEAN, rules-based order, development finance and middle-power coalitions.
Media narratives, diaspora safety, misinformation, political debate and social cohesion.
Best-case, baseline, economic shock, cyber crisis and conflict scenarios for Australia.
Scenario planning
US-China rivalry remains tense but bounded. Australia benefits from stability while investing in resilience.
Trade, finance, technology and research networks split further. Australia faces higher costs and more policy pressure.
A major incident targets institutions, infrastructure or exports. Preparedness and public trust become decisive.
A Taiwan or maritime crisis forces rapid decisions on alliance commitments, national security and economic survival.
Secure by design
This site avoids unnecessary complexity so it has a smaller attack surface.
No advertising pixels, behavioural profiling or third-party surveillance scripts.
No database, no login system and no server-side session storage in this starter version.
Cloudflare Pages-compatible _headers file with CSP, HSTS, referrer and permission controls.
Only a small local navigation script is used. No external JavaScript dependencies.
This website is designed with a security-first and privacy-first architecture. It minimises data collection, avoids invasive tracking, uses hardened web security controls and is structured to reduce exposure to common cyber threats.