
#48 Sovereign Firepower: Building Australia's Munitions Capability | Jason Murray - Part 1
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このコンテンツについて
In this episode of Intelligence Optimised, host Todd Crowley sits down with Jason Murray, CEO of Ares Armaments Australia, to unpack how sovereign munitions - especially non-standard, mission-specific rounds - can cut exposure to overseas shocks and lift counter-UAS readiness across the Indo-Pacific. Non-standard ammunition is imported, freight can be several times the product cost, and demand from larger theatres can crowd Australia out.
Key points for planners and capability managers:
✔️ Build small-batch specialist lines with low MOQs that switch calibre fast.
✔️ Close supply-chain gaps - primers, propellant, cases - and plan for surge.
✔️ Source local training munitions so police can train more for less.
✔️ Counter-UAS: the ‘Rooster’ round converts existing small arms for greater effect on small drones with lower fall-back risk - vital for urban defence and critical infrastructure.
✔️ Understand how Remote Weapon Stations intersect with ammunition choice.
✔️ Navigate certification: push proven concepts from TRL 6 into TRL 7 with the right backing.
✔️ Collaborate across ADF, policing and allied forces in the Northern Territory and Far North Queensland (NT/FNQ); learn from US pathways like the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU).
Strategic takeaways
✔️ Build sovereign munitions capacity for non-standard needs.
✔️ Prioritise supply-chain resilience and domestic inputs.
✔️ Plan counter-UAS at the tactical edge.
✔️ Use small-batch domestic manufacture to shorten lead times and lift readiness.
✔️ Don’t bank on imports during global surges.
References to Thales Australia, EOS Defence and the US Defense Innovation Unit (DIU).
Find deeper briefs inside Vaxa Bureau.
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