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Australia 'could help Gulf states'

March 9, 2026

Monday 09 March 2026
Mathew Knott
The Sydney Morning Herald


 

Foreign Minister Penny Wong says Australia could help Middle Eastern nations  defend themselves against attacks by Iran while declining to back US  President Donald Trump's insistence that he play a role in deciding the next  Iranian leader.
 
 Wong declared it was up to the Iranian people to determine who led their  nation as she ruled out any role for Australian troops in an offensive action  in the region.
 
 But in a new development, she flagged Australia could play a defensive role  in helping protect nations in the Gulf from Iranian missile and drone  strikes.
 
 ''We've had many countries which are non-participants [that] have been  attacked by Iran. You would anticipate as a consequence that we have been  asked for assistance and we will work through that,'' Wong told the ABC's  Insiders yesterday.
 
 ''We will work through that in accordance with the position I have outlined,  which is we are not participating in offensive action against Iran. And we've  made clear we would not participate in any ground troop deployment into Iran.
 
 ''We have been asked, and we will consider, in accordance with those  principles.'' Wong did not go into detail about exactly what Australia's  support could involve, saying the government would be transparent with the  public about any decision to provide military assistance.
 
 Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson said the opposition had sought a  briefing about any potential deployment of Australian personnel to the Middle  East in defensive combat roles.
 
 ''Australia has a proud record of standing with our allies and friends in  times of crisis, and the Coalition will carefully consider any deployment  proposals in the national interest once briefed,'' he said.
 
 Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian apologised on Saturday for attacks on  regional countries even as its missiles and drones continued flying towards  Gulf Arab states, indicating Tehran's political leadership may not be  exercising full command over Iran's armed forces.
 
 While avoiding direct criticism of Trump, Wong did not back his view that he  should play a role in choosing who leads Iran. Trump has said in interviews  in recent days that ''I have to be involved in the appointment'' of Iran's  next leader.
 
 Wong said ''the future for Iran and its governance, ultimately, is a decision  for the Iranian people, and that's not just a values judgment. It's also a  pragmatic judgment.'' ''We have seen regime change being sought by external  parties historically, and I think we all know that for there to be a  sustainable change of regime, it has to be something that the people of that  nation back and seek,'' she said.
 
 Wong repeated her view that Australia was ''not in a position to determine  the legal basis'' for the US and Israeli strikes on Iran.
 
 ''What we can do is make a judgment about what is in our national interests,  and what we support in order to keep Australians safe,'' she said. ''What  we've said is we support action to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear  weapon and we support action to prevent Iran from continuing to threaten  international peace and security.'' Wong rejected the idea that Australia was  again backing the US in a misguided military adventure in the Middle East, as  it did in the Iraq war in the early 2000s.
 
 She said the fact Australian troops were on a US submarine that destroyed an  Iranian war ship last week did not mean the country was actively involved in  the war, saying it was not new for military personnel to be involved in such  deployments.
 
 ''When they are deployed in that way, we always have arrangements to ensure  that any personnel comply with Australian law, Australian policy and  Australian directives,'' she said.

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