The Aukus deal is a trilateral security pact between Australia, the Uk and the US. The biggest part of the pact is the acquisition of nuclear powered submarines jointly developed by the three countries, although Australia will have a minor role.
The deal itself came as a surprise because initially Australia was not interested in nuclear powered submarines and to carry on the deal they had to cancel a deal with France to acquire diesel-electric submarines.
The huge costs involved in the deal:
Australia's PM said the plan - which will cost Canberra up to A$368bn (£201bn) over 30 years
and the doubts about the necessity of such weapons made me wonder whether Australia was called in to give financial support to a project whose cost were spiralling out of control. So. Do the financial reasons mattered a lot more than the military reasons to get in the project?
Note: A further detail about the project. I do not know whether this is the open issue. But it is enough to raise some doubts. The submarines that Australia is expected to acquire should be powered by the Rolls-Royce PWR3 reactors. Those reactors are an evolution of an American S9G reactor. According to Wikipedia:
the MoD awarded Rolls-Royce a £600 million contract to produce reactors for the Dreadnought-class and also for the final boat of the Astute-class
It means £120 million per submarine (4+1) Not only it is an expensive project, it is behind schedule:
the National Audit Office reported that the construction of the plant was five years behind schedule