‘Gambler' Trump turns to China to pressure Iran on oil supply
Iran's military has derided US President Donald Trump as a 'gambler' and pledged to end the war on its own terms, as Tehran looked increasingly isolated on the global stage and the US urged China to intervene to ensure the world's busiest oil supply shipping lane remains open.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday belatedly declared he backed Trump's bombing blitz on Iran's nuclear plants, 24 hours after the government issued an ambiguous statement that neither endorsed nor condemned Sunday's air raid.
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West Australian
37 minutes ago
- West Australian
Michaelia Cash: Australia must stand up for its interests in the wake of US Iran strikes
The old adage that 'a week is a long time in politics' has been starkly demonstrated as an enduring truth with the significant world events that have unfolded recently. Israel has further exercised its sovereign right to defend its people and ensure the security of future generations. The Unites States strongly backed Israel with a series of precision strikes on nuclear facilities in Iran. It appears the US strikes will end Iran's nuclear capacity for now. The Coalition supports actions taken by the US to ensure that the Iranian regime is stopped from acquiring nuclear weapons. We can never allow the Iranian regime the capacity to enact its objectives of the destruction of the US and Israel. The world can never accept a nuclear-armed Iran and acting now to ensure that is the case is the right thing to do. These events are a long way from Australia but have implications for us and the rest of the world. President Donald Trump left the G7 meeting in Canada early to deal with the situation in the Middle East. For Australia this meant a planned meeting between the President and our Prime Minister on the sidelines of the G7 was cancelled. Given the situation in the Middle East, the decision by the President to cancel the meeting is completely understandable but to the detriment of Australia. This was an important opportunity for the Prime Minister to seek assurances on AUKUS and protect Australia from tariffs. Given global volatility and the growing list of issues in our relationship with the US, this underscores that the Prime Minister should not have merely relied on meeting with the President on the sidelines of international summits. The Prime Minister should have been more proactive in seeking to strengthen this relationship — Australia's most important — and we encourage him to change his approach to advance our national interest. As Australians we must step up our engagement across the board with the US. President Trump won the US election more than 200 days ago and has held meetings with leaders from the UK, Canada, Germany, Ireland, France, Japan, Norway and South Africa. Our Prime Minister has only spoken to the President on the phone. On the international stage, Australia needs its leader to stand up for our interests so we can build a stronger Australian economy. President Trump's tariffs on our steelmakers are not in the spirit of our century-old partnership, nor in line with our 20-year-old free trade agreement. We urge the US administration to give Australia a fair go and remove the tariffs, as they have done for the UK. And we urge the Albanese Government not to compromise on policies that ensure affordable healthcare, bio-security, and a fair economic landscape for Australian businesses and families. It must not sell out our Australian farmers and producers. Success can not be achieved through putting our world-class agriculture at risk. In regard to AUKUS, the Coalition put it in place and we want it to succeed. But the fact AUKUS is under review by the Pentagon is concerning because any delay or downgrade in the US commitment will impact our future defence capability. The Prime Minister must seek assurances from President Trump to safeguard the AUKUS agreement. AUKUS is the most important strategic initiative Australia has entered into in decades. It provides the nuclear-powered submarines and technological edge we need to deter conflict and defend our sovereignty in a more contested Indo-Pacific. This is not business as usual. The Prime Minister cannot afford to be a bystander in our relationship with the US. Anthony Albanese must put Australia's case clearly and secure the commitments we were promised. We will always support bipartisan co-operation on national security, but that co-operation cannot mask inaction from the Government. The Coalition wants the Government to succeed here because that is in our national interest. Michaelia Cash is the shadow minister for foreign affairs

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
Trump unlikely to be impeached over Iran strikes without congressional approval
Nationals Senator Matt Canavan discusses the chances of US President Donald Trump being impeached after the US attacked Iran's nuclear facilities without congressional approval. 'Just a couple presidents ago in Barack Obama, I believe he and his administration bombed seven countries … there was no congressional approval,' Mr Canavan told Sky News host Paul Murray. 'This is not a new thing ... clearly Donald Trump has done nothing different than a cavalcade of presidents before him, they weren't impeached. 'I don't think he will successfully be impeached here either.'

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
United States claims they will not get involved in an Iranian ‘regime change'
Sky News host Paul Murray discusses how the United States claims they are not going to get involved in 'regime change'. 'The United States has said they are not involved in the regime change like they were in Afghanistan … in Iraq,' Mr Murray said. 'The process of regime change … that process is one that is going to take years.'