logo
Australia deploying plane, ADF personnel to Europe in NATO pledge

Australia deploying plane, ADF personnel to Europe in NATO pledge

Courier-Mail5 days ago

Don't miss out on the headlines from Breaking News. Followed categories will be added to My News.
Australia is deploying a surveillance plane and some 100 defence personnel to Poland in a major pledge to NATO allies.
The move comes amid growing fears Russia's war in Ukraine could spill over the border and trigger a much broader conflict in Europe.
Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles announced the deployment from the NATO Summit in the Netherlands overnight.
'We just concluded a really successful summit here at the NATO gathering in The Hague,' Mr Marles told reporters.
'We have been able to announce that we will be deploying an E-7 Wedgetail to Poland in August for a three-month rotation, which will help support Ukraine in its struggle and defiance against Russia.
'There will be about 100 Australian personnel who come with that asset.'
Australia is deploying an E-7A Wedgetail and some 100 defence personnel to Europe amid fears Russia's war in Ukraine could spread. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Mr Marles, who is also defence minister, said Australia slapped further 'financial and travel sanctions on 37 individuals and seven entities' related to Russia's 'defence, energy and … other critical sectors'.
The commitment builds on an agreement signed at the summit to deepen defence industry co-ordination as Australia and NATO countries scramble to ramp up production and procurement.
Mr Marles said it would help both parties spend smarter – somewhat of a mantra for the Albanese government as it resists US calls to boost Australia's defence budget.
He said the summit 'reaffirmed the connection that exists between the Indo Pacific on the one hand and the North Atlantic on the other'.
'We are obviously focused on the Indo Pacific in terms of our own strategic landscape, but what's happening here in Europe is having an influence on the strategic landscape in the Indo Pacific,' Mr Marles said.
'And as we seek to focus on the Indo Pacific, we really need to have an eye on what's occurring here, which is why this meeting has been so important and has grown importance over the last few years. And I see it as being very important as we go into the future.'
Still no Trump meet
Among the summit's attendees was Donald Trump.
Neither Anthony Albanese nor any of his senior ministers have had an in-person meeting with the US President since his inauguration in January, driving concerns about the Prime Minister's management of the Australia-US alliance.
Mr Marles was close to meeting Mr Trump as part of talks with the Indo Pacific Four (IP4), but a last-minute schedule change dashed chances of a face-to-face.
US President Donald Trump attended the NATO Summit in the Netherlands. Picture: AFP / Nicolas Tucat
Mr Marles said it was a 'really important meeting with the (NATO) Secretary General' all the same, stressing that fellow IP4 countries Japan, Korea and New Zealand 'are deeply important in terms of Australia's strategic interests'.
'In respect of all of them, we really are at a high point of our bilateral relationship, and we are working increasingly as a team,' he said.
He added that having 'the best lines of communication possible with NATO, to be working as closely as possible with NATO is very much in the advantage of the four of us in terms of how we jointly assert our national interests within the Indo Pacific'.
'And it was a very important meeting in respect of that,' Mr Marles said.
He also said he did not get to meet US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth.
They last met on the sidelines of the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore earlier this month.
Mr Hegseth used the meeting to call on the Albanese government to lift defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP, igniting a major debate in Canberra and fuelling criticisms that Australia is ill-prepared to defend itself against an increasingly aggressive China.
Mr Marles said it was not disappointing he did not get to meet his US counterpart.
'I'm in contact with Pete,' he said.
'We met in Singapore just a few weeks ago, and I met him literally a few months before that.'
He said there would 'be opportunities to be able to further the conversations that need to be had with Pete Hegseth in the future'.
No budge on budget
NATO members agreeing to boost defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP was the key outcome of this week's summit.
The collective commitment is a major win for Mr Trump, who has threatened to drop US military support for Europe it did not spend more.
Mr Marles said it was 'obviously a very significant decision has been made here in relation to European defence spending', but noted it was 'fundamentally a matter for NATO'.
Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles says he is not disappointed he did not meet US President Donald Trump or his US defence counterpart Pete Hegseth. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
'We've gone through our own process of assessing our strategic landscape, assessing the threats that exist there, and the kind of defence force we need to build in order to meet those threats, to meet the strategic moment, and then to resource that,' he said.
'And what that has seen is the biggest peacetime increase in Australian defence spending that we have seen in our history.'
Mr Marles said the Albanese government's position was 'understood' by NATO.
Finance Minister Katy Gallagher echoed the position when fronting media on Thursday, saying Labor had 'put billions of dollars into defence'.
'But I would again say in the last three years we put $11bn across the forward estimates and $57bn into defence over the medium term,' she told the ABC.
'We've been able to do that at a time we have put increases into health, and other important social programs.
'So … it is a balancing act. But the government's job is to make sure that all areas of government are funded properly, including defence.'
While the Albanese government has committed record cash for the defence budget, much of it would not kick in until after 2029.
With the Australia itself predicting a major global conflict by 2034 and some analysts warning of a US-China conflict before 2030, critics have argued the money is not flowing fast enough and instead tied up in longer-term projects at the cost of combat-readiness.
Originally published as Australia deploying plane, ADF personnel to Poland in NATO pledge

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EDITORIAL: Penny Wong the wrong person to win American's favour
EDITORIAL: Penny Wong the wrong person to win American's favour

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

EDITORIAL: Penny Wong the wrong person to win American's favour

Australian steel and aluminium exports to the US face punishing 50 per cent tariffs. From July 9 every single other item sent to our third largest trading partner will be subject to levies of 10 per cent. AUKUS, once touted as the 'once-in-a-generation' opportunity to foster international co-operation and boost peace and stability in the Pacific, is at risk with the Americans undertaking a 30-day review of the submarine deal — seemingly in retaliation for Australia's military budget intransigence. And US President Donald Trump has made it clear where Australia stands in his list of priorities, standing Anthony Albanese up and making no effort to schedule a make-up session. Australia's relationship with its No.1 security ally is at its lowest ebb in memory. And into this fray we are sending . . . Penny Wong. The Foreign Minister is off to Washington to meet with her counterparts in the Quad strategic partnership, including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The fact that it is Ms Wong, whose procrastination in backing the US's recent strike action against Iran and repeated conflation of Israel with Hamas's terrorist leadership has won her few friends in the Republican administration, who is being deployed at this critical juncture is deeply worrying. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister is seemingly no closer to securing a long awaited meeting with Mr Trump. The earliest opportunity for a sit-down is believed to be in September, when Mr Albanese is scheduled to travel to the US to address the United Nations. That would make it 10 months since Mr Trump's election, and eight since his inauguration, that the Prime Minister and the President have gone with just a handful of phone calls between them. All the while tensions continue to simmer — over AUKUS, over tariffs and over whether Australia is pulling its weight in our military alliance. It's a worrisome situation and one Mr Albanese appears content to play out, unwilling to risk further damage to his ego after Mr Trump blew him off having left the G7 summit in Canada early to deal with the conflict in the Middle East. Mr Albanese says Australia is continuing to lobby for an exemption to Mr Trump's so-called reciprocal tariffs, with diplomats working behind the scenes on making the nation's case. No doubt that's true. But it's clear that those efforts have so far entirely failed to secure any traction. This is not a problem that will be resolved through diplomats — particularly if those diplomats are Kevin Rudd, who Mr Trump has a public, personal dislike for. Nor is it likely that Ms Wong will secure any meaningful wins. Australia's best chance of repairing our relationship with our most important ally comes will come at the highest level. That means Mr Albanese needs to get to DC sooner rather than later to meet with Mr Trump. And when he does so, he needs to be armed with arguments stronger than those already tried and failed.

Libs will axe Victorian Voice to parliament
Libs will axe Victorian Voice to parliament

Herald Sun

timean hour ago

  • Herald Sun

Libs will axe Victorian Voice to parliament

Don't miss out on the headlines from Victoria. Followed categories will be added to My News. The Herald Sun revealed on Monday the Allan government was working to establish its own Voice to parliament – by making permanent the taxpayer-funded body advising on Treaty, and giving it the job of offering policy ­advice on behalf of ­Indigenous Victorians. But plans to bin the policy if elected to government are being explored by the state opposition, with shadow cabinet expected to formally consider the proposal. Until then no formal position can be announced but multiple Liberal MPs, speaking anonymously, said it was an obvious move given the party's staunch opposition to the plan. Premier Jacinta Allan doubled down on plans to introduce the Voice to parliament, saying it would deliver better outcomes for Indigenous Victorians who were lagging in key areas including education, homelessness and health. 'We know that Indigenous people here in this state continue to be significantly behind the rest of the population, and that's not fair,' she said. 'The significant change is that it will be a body that we'll be listening, taking on their advice. That's how you get an improvement in those key indicators. 'The system is not working and we have to change it,' she said. But Opposition Leader Brad Battin said the Coalition would vehemently oppose the introduction of legislation to enshrine the Voice to parliament. 'The Liberals' and Nationals' position is clear – we do not support a state-based treaty or a Victorian Voice to parliament,' he said. 'Victorians delivered a clear verdict in the referendum, and we are listening. 'Jacinta Allan is now trying to push ahead with her own version, without transparency and without a mandate. 'Any decision I make will always be in the best interests of all Victorians, not just to grab headlines.' The government would likely have no problem passing legislation through parliament with the likely support of the Greens and Legalise Cannabis. However crossbench MP David Limbrick said he would not support race-based laws. 'After Victorians rejected the federal version of this less than two years ago, they are fully justified in feeling that the government is ignoring their wishes,' the Libertarian MP said. 'We have already gotten a taste of how disastrous race-based politics can be with climbing bans in the Grampians. All the Indigenous ­bureaucracies have done so far is created division and resentment. 'Bureaucracy is not the answer, it is a massive part of the problem. Many millions of dollars are spent on Indigenous services every year, and yet people rarely see any benefit, and the gap on several indicators never closes. 'Victorians would be far better off to have bureaucracies like these shut down, and the money put back in their pockets.' The national Voice proposal was voted down by 60.06 per cent of Australians, including 54.15 per cent of Victorians. Ms Allan said: 'The key difference to the referendum that was put nationwide a couple of years ago is that was changing the Constitution. This is not changing the Victorian Constitution, it is simply taking a commonsense approach.' But Margaret Chambers, research fellow at the Institute of Public Affairs, said pushing ahead with such laws at a Victorian level was ­despite an 'overwhelming democratic rejection by Victorians of the Voice proposal'. 'It is unbelievable Premier Jacinta Allan is set to divide the community with a state-based body,' she said. 'The Allan government's proposal is a slap in the face of every Victorian that exercised their democratic right to vote No.'

City of Melbourne raids Covid cash to pay for bike lanes
City of Melbourne raids Covid cash to pay for bike lanes

Herald Sun

timean hour ago

  • Herald Sun

City of Melbourne raids Covid cash to pay for bike lanes

Don't miss out on the headlines from News. Followed categories will be added to My News. The City of Melbourne is still raiding a Covid-era economic recovery fund to bankroll its bike lane rollout into next year. The council's annual budget for cycling infrastructure is set at $3.5m, including a $539,000 parcel from the Melbourne City Recovery Fund (MCRF). The fund, announced by then premier Daniel Andrews almost five years ago, was a $100m pot – jointly funded by the state and Town Hall – to encourage people to return to the CBD over the 2020-21 summer. Remnants from the fund are now being directed into the council's 2025-26 cycling budget, amid claims the scheme was being used as a slush fund for the city's capital works. It comes as Lord Mayor Nick Reece on Monday night caved to pressure from the cycling lobby and tipped a separate $4.5m over the next three years into building new bike lanes. Mr Reece had been facing pressure from the cycling lobby, with the lord mayor saying he'd heard them 'loud and clear'. On the issue of the recovery fund, it was previously reported $825,000 had been diverted for road projects, including creating speed limits in East Melbourne and North Melbourne. Another $10m was pulled from the scheme for 40km of bike lanes, prompting criticism from Small Business Australia head Bill Lang over the fund's intentions. The recovery fund's aim was to kickstart economic activity, provide Covid-safe dining and improve CBD streetscapes, ­including wider footpaths, bollards and planter boxes to promote outdoor dining. But the money will now be spent on suburban bike lanes and other traffic infrastructure. A 2km section of Queensberry St, Carlton, has been identified as a priority project. The bike lane funding was queried by Greens councillor Olivia Ball at a recent council meeting. 'I thought MCRF ended in 2023,' Dr Ball said. Council infrastructure manager Rick Kwasek confirmed the money was being used in the budget, although it was not listed as a separate line item. 'There are components of the MCRF funding which remain, which is the $539,000,' he said. 'And that will support the cycling budget.' A City of Melbourne spokesman said a key purpose of the recovery fund was to invest in new infrastructure. 'We've made it safer, more enjoyable and more convenient to walk, ride and visit the city,' the spokesman said. 'This includes the Exhibition St upgrades, where we've transformed the theatre district with wide bluestone footpaths, greenery and protected bike lanes.' The council received 1466 submissions over its cycling infrastructure spending. More than $200,000 had also been pulled from footpath expenditure for cycle infrastructure.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store