logo
Australia to deploy 100 soldiers to help Ukraine in war against Russia

Australia to deploy 100 soldiers to help Ukraine in war against Russia

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

Australia will deploy up to 100 soldiers and a military aircraft to Europe in an effort to support Ukraine in its ongoing war with Russia. Defense Minister Richard Marles announced the contributions at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NATO ) leaders summit in the Netherlands on Wednesday.
At the request of NATO and Poland , Australia will deploy a Royal Australian Air Force E-7A Wedgetail aircraft in August along with 100 Australian Defense Force personnel. Part of Operation Kudu, the deployment is designed to protect an international gateway for humanitarian and military assistance into Ukraine and will not be direct combat roles.
The deployment is expected to conclude by November and will compliment Australia's more than $1.5billion in support to Ukraine since the Russian invasion in February 2022 .
'Australia is proud of its longstanding operational partnership with NATO,' Mr Marles said in announcing the commitments on Wednesday.
'The deployment of an E-7A Wedgetail aircraft will again showcase our ability to operate from Europe, alongside NATO and partners, in support of Ukraine and international peace and security.'
Leaders of the defensive alliance descended on The Hague on Tuesday for two days of talks on the conflict and Washington's uncertain commitment to NATO. Representatives of the member states, including many European nations, the UK, the US and Canada, are expected to commit five per cent of their national outputs to defence and related spending.
Australia is not a NATO member but is considered one of its Indo-Pacific partners alongside Japan, the Republic of Korea and New Zealand. During the summit, Australia also imposed a fresh wave of financial sanctions and travel bans on 37 individuals and financial sanctions on seven entities.
Mr Marles said the sanctions will target Russia's defense, energy, transport, insurance, electronic and finance sectors and proponents of disinformation and propaganda.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong welcomed the sanctions as a sign of Australia's deep ties with NATO member states. 'Our targeted sanctions reflect our close coordination with key NATO partners, including the UK, Canada and the European Union.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

There were toe-curling displays of affection towards 'Daddy' Trump at the NATO summit - but like it or not, it worked
There were toe-curling displays of affection towards 'Daddy' Trump at the NATO summit - but like it or not, it worked

Sky News

time38 minutes ago

  • Sky News

There were toe-curling displays of affection towards 'Daddy' Trump at the NATO summit - but like it or not, it worked

Donald Trump the "daddy" and a NATO summit marked by simpering gratitude. That was the overriding theme of a day-and-a-half of defence and diplomacy at The Hague. Like it or not, the fawning praise by Mark Rutte, the head of NATO, and many other European allies appears to have paid off, with the US president heading home seemingly back on board with the notion of collective defence - for now. The most toe-curling display of affection towards Mr Trump came when he, along with Mr Rutte, were speaking to reporters about how the US commander-in-chief brokered a ceasefire deal between Israel and Iran. "They've had a big fight, like two kids in a schoolyard," Mr Trump said. "You know, they fight like hell. You can't stop it. Let them fight for about two, three minutes, then it's easy to stop them." Mr Rutte added: "And then Daddy has to sometimes use strong language to get it stopped." I later asked Mr Trump at a news conference at the end of the summit about being called "Daddy" and whether he regards his NATO allies as children. The president said: "He likes me. I think he likes me. If he doesn't, I'll let you know. I'll come back and I'll hit him hard. Okay? He did it. Very affectionate. Daddy. You're my daddy." 1:14 I continued the question, though, to ask again whether he views fellow NATO member states as children and once they bolster their defences, might they be able to defend themselves without needing to rely on the US. The president said he thought they would still need help from the start. As for whether they could go it alone without the United States in the future, he said: "Ask Mark [Rutte]." For now, the feeling at the summit was more harmonious than hostile. 4:06 Whether that sentiment endures will depend on everyone being true to their word and increasing defence spending to a new target of 3.5% of GDP - up from 2% - with an additional 1.5% of GDP to be invested in national resilience. It adds up to 5% in total - a figure first touted by Mr Trump when he returned to the White House for his second term and resumed an attack on NATO, accusing too many of its members of freeloading off American security instead of paying to defend themselves. The US president, though, seemed to think the boost to budgets would be happening quickly, whereas the shortest timeline all 32 allies could agree to is 10 years. Spain has been even more flaky, agreeing to the new target but making clear it won't be met. As well as disappointing Mr Trump, such a slow pace of change is also woefully inadequate to rearm member states in time to confront what the Baltic states and Poland believe to be a very real risk of Vladimir Putin testing the alliance's defences within the next five years.

Liberal Party's social media pages 'hacked' with pornographic images - just hours after Sussan Ley's landmark speech
Liberal Party's social media pages 'hacked' with pornographic images - just hours after Sussan Ley's landmark speech

Daily Mail​

time44 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Liberal Party's social media pages 'hacked' with pornographic images - just hours after Sussan Ley's landmark speech

The Liberal Party's social media pages were briefly hacked with pornographic images allegedly advertising boob jobs - just hours after the new leader insisted her mission was to enhance female representation. Several extremely scantily-clad, seemingly AI-generated, women appeared on the 'stories' section of the Liberal Party of Australia Facebook page and Instagram accounts on Wednesday night. The images, which were broadcast to both page's combined 360,000 followers, were swiftly deleted - but not before eagle-eyed and fast-fingered viewers could grab screenshots. Some reported the X-rated pictures were an advert for breast enlargement procedures, while many saw the funny side. 'The Liberal party has gone t**s up,' one quipped. Another claimed they were 'just showing the benefits of inflation ', while a third suggested they were 'making the breast of a bad situation' following their historic humbling at the polls. 'The Liberal Party in Australia has been giving jobs to boobs for years. Just look at Dutton,' one joked. Daily Mail Australia approached the Liberal Party for comment. Sussan Ley, the party's first-female leader in its 80-year history, attempted to make a clean breast of things on Wednesday when she admitted the party had been 'smashed' at the federal election. 'Let's be honest and up front about last month's election,' she told the National Press Club in Canberra. 'We didn't just lose. We got smashed. Totally smashed.' Ley's speech was her first major attempt to refashion the party in her own image. She began it with an acknowledgement to country - a ceremony predecessor Peter Dutton said was 'overdone'. She also sought to distinguish herself from Dutton by highlighting her 'deep and abiding respect for the public service'. Dutton, infamously, had to abandon his plans to force all public servants back into the office because of its deep unpopularity. Ley, 63, also discussed two separate reviews into the Liberal Party's collapse: one conducting a 'root and branch' review of the election result and another having a 'deeper look at the existential issues we face'. Sussan Ley, the party's first-female leader in its 80-year history, attempted to make a clean breast of things on Wednesday when she admitted the party had been 'smashed' at the federal election She also insisted she was a 'zealot' about increasing the number of Liberal women in parliament, backing quotas for female candidates. 'As the first woman leader of our Federal Party, let me send the clearest possible message: we need to do better, recruit better, retain better and support better,' she said. 'That is why I will work with every Division, as will my Parliamentary team, to ensure we preselect more women for the 2028 Election.' Only a third of Liberal Party MPs are women compared to over half of Labor MPs.

John Pesutto pays $2.3m defamation debt to Moira Deeming, avoiding bankruptcy
John Pesutto pays $2.3m defamation debt to Moira Deeming, avoiding bankruptcy

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

John Pesutto pays $2.3m defamation debt to Moira Deeming, avoiding bankruptcy

Former Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto has paid $2.3m in legal costs owed to his colleague Moira Deeming, stifling a last-ditch effort by a fellow party member to block the payment. The payment, which made with the assistance of a $1.5m loan from the Victorian Liberal party, means Pesutto will avoid bankruptcy and be able to remain in state parliament as the member for Hawthorn. Last month, the federal court ordered Pesutto to $2,308,873 of Deeming's legal costs after it found in December that he repeatedly defamed the upper house MP by falsely implying she sympathised with neo-Nazis and white supremacists. The costs were in addition to the $300,000 in damages and $15,000 in interest Pesutto paid after the federal court judgment. Pesutto launched a fundraising campaign to help pay the bill but had to rely on a $1.5m loan from the Liberal party's investment vehicle, Vapold, which was approved by the administrative committee last Thursday. The payment of the costs removes the prospect of a court challenge, which was to be initiated by a member of the administrative committee, against Vapold providing the loan. More details soon …

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