U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has urged Australia to substantially boost its defence spending to align more closely with the United States’ strategic objectives in the Pacific region.
During a meeting with Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue on May 30, Hegseth said the investment would help “maintain peace through strength” in the Indo-Pacific.
The ministers also discussed other key priorities for the U.S.-Australia alliance, including accelerating U.S. defence capabilities in Australia, strengthening defence industrial base cooperation between the two countries, and creating supply chain resilience.
The push from Hegseth comes after Elbridge Colby, Trump’s undersecretary of defense policy, told a U.S. Senate Committee that Australia needed to up its spending to at least 3 percent of GDP.
“Australia is currently well below the 3 percent level advocated for NATO, by NATO Secretary General Rutte, and Canberra faces a far more powerful challenge in China [compared to the Europeans against Russia].”
Australian Government’s Response
During a press conference on June 1, Marles acknowledged Hegseth’s request.While the defence minister did not disclose the exact increase asked by the United States, he said the two countries had been working on the issue.
“Of course, we have already engaged in the last couple of years in the single biggest peacetime increase in defence expenditure in Australia’s history. So we are beginning this journey.”
Marles then cited the AUKUS trilateral defence partnership with the United States and the UK as an example of Australia’s efforts to increase its defence capabilities in recent years.
“We will continue to have the conversation with the United States, and we understand, and we’re up for it,” he said.
According to the 2025 federal budget, Australia’s defence spending currently stands at 2.05 percent of GDP, up from 2.03 percent in the previous fiscal year.
This would increase defence funding as a proportion of GPD to 2.3 percent over the next decade.







