It has been gradually building towards the inevitable: Australia entering the fray in the Middle East again – this time to fight Iran – in another war in which it is not threatened.
After a phone call from U.S. President Donald Trump two nights ago, Prime Minister Albanese has sent our military to the Middle East to join the conflict.
Ostensibly, it is to protect the United Arab Emirates from Iranian drones and missiles, though why that is our responsibility is unstated. And now we have joined the fray, in a war we do not lead, we are in our usual position: under the direction of our imperial masters. In this case, the U.S., as is now usually the case, except also now, via proxy, their own political masters, Israel.
Because this is Israel’s war, wagging the American dog and we are nothing more than the fleas being thrown every which way, most likely to kingdom come.
If we sacrifice our youth in this needless war, as now seems increasingly likely, with America preparing to commit “boots on the ground” in an Iranian ground war, it will be the most egregious and senseless folly in Australia’s long history of lumpen subservience.
Previously, gung ho Australia has sent its men into these ancient lands to fight the Ottoman Empire, the Third Reich, the Iraqis (twice) and Afghanistan. In none of these conflicts was Australia even remotely threatened, yet we lost the cream of our youth in droves, dying on those harsh, unforgiving sands.
Only against the Reich, the Nazis, the Germans in World War II, could the war even remotely be called just, but still, Churchill tried to divert our troops in 1941, the valiant Rats fleeing Tobruk – repeating the earlier valour of Gallipoli – to Burma to defend the British Raj, not the Japanese Empire who were walking up to our door on the Kokoda Trail. In 1941, Prime Minister Curtin separated Australia from the broken defensive shield of Britain, then, only to take up with a new imperial overlord — the U.S.A.
What a poisoned chalice that new alliance has been, even from the start.
Because, even with those hardened desert veterans bolstering our conscripted men, the valiant “Chocos”, in the jungles of New Guinea, Australia fought more than 30,000 Japanese back to the sea, inflicting the Japanese their first defeat of World War II, whilst suffering horrific losses. They did so without next to no assistance from United States forces, apart from some minor mopping-up operations in the last month of this unimaginably arduous 8-month campaign.
General Douglas MacArthur fatefully said, fleeing the Philippines in 1941, “I will return”. Instead, Australia has returned, as a nation, to dutifully follow the United States into every one of its foolish foreign adventures following that World War, into America's proxy wars with China in Korea and Vietnam. In terms of Vietnam, America's quixotic battle against Communism involved the conscription of our precious youth via a death lotto — a birth date ballot. And into all its oil-fueled escapades in the Middle East. Three times in the last 35 years.
Now Australia has taken its first few tottering steps into a fourth. One more potentially incendiary than the rest. Will it involve conscripting our youth into fighting another war in which our nation is not threatened? A war that, by the look of current fuel prices, is directly counter to our citizens' – and our nation's – national interests? Is it the start of another world war, this time with nuclear weapons in the hands of at least two of the parties?
Though not in the hands of Iran. Despite America and Israel's first strike on Iran because of nuclear weapons, the United Nations inspection body, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said it was not even close to producing the weapons that Trump said they had destroyed by military strikes six months ago.
Weapons that Iran didn't have, were not close to having, and were close to convincing the United States in talks in Oman, by all reports, the day before Trump attacked. The very day before America’s first Tomahawk struck Iran's capital, Tehran, assassinating its leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as well as ripping apart 175 little Iranian girls attending school that day — this latter U.S. war crime was confirmed today.
United Nations experts have condemned this unprovoked first strike – and this atrocity – saying it is a breach of international law. Australia's PM Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong have unconvincingly hedged about its legality, asserting that it is up to America to decide the matter.
We can be assured the world-based order has broken down if a supposed democracy such as Australia maintains, straight-faced, that only the accused murderer, if it is America, can pass judgment upon its own alleged misdeeds. Might now, apparently, make right. So long to the rules-based order.
Worse, rather than getting tired of winning with Donald, Australia is on the less artful side of this dealer. We have committed to spending billions on a military pact, AUKUS, which involves sending hundreds of billions of dollars to pay for this mafia boss' protection, in somewhat affordable yearly increments, on nuclear submarines and untested aircraft we have explicitly agreed we may never receive. What a deal!
The money we are sending to the U.S. is so huge, indeed, as perhaps Australia's most distinguished ever bureaucrat, John Menadue, wrote this week, Australia cannot possibly pay America's yearly imperial tribute, as well as afford what is necessary to otherwise defend ourselves.
Wrote Menadue:
‘AUKUS will cost about 60 times our annual defence budget. We can’t have AUKUS and a sovereign defence capability.’
"Washington is being run by dangerous criminals. Yet our government lines us up in support of these crazies for fear of being wedged by the ailing Murdoch media and the Austral Americans in our midst" - John Menadue https://t.co/ikff3WPtYx
— Michael Pascoe (@MichaelPascoe01) March 10, 2026
We are at their mercy. This is the gaudy, gilt-edged, gold-leafed poisoned chalice we have chosen to condemn ourselves and future generations to sip. It is why Anthony Albanese takes leering selfies with Trump and late-night calls committing our nation to yet more war, meekly following this alleged paedophile towards whatever precipice his madness might lead.
We should not commit our troops to another war in the Middle East.
The theocratic regime of Iran is objectionable to Independent Australia, which believes in equality, equity, secularism and democracy. However, its foe, Israel, is another theocratic regime, which is currently engaged in genocide.
We should not pick sides to appease our colonial overlord in a war in which we have no part. It is time to rip up AUKUS, write off whatever we have wasted, put the money into Australia and forge a new and independent path. One that does not sacrifice our treasure, dignity and undervalued self-respect.
Let us not waste another golden generation in another futile war of aggression. Another folly that will yet again simply sink more of the blood of our youth into the ever-thirsty sands of the Holy Lands.
This is an abridged version of an Independent Australia editorial sent to paid subscribers in the weekly newsletter, which also collates all the stories published by IA the past week, amongst other features. The full editorial may also be read in the members only area. You can subscribe to Independent Australia HERE.
Follow IA founder Dave Donovan on X/Twitter @davrosz and Bluesky @davrosz.bsky.social, Independent Australia on Bluesky @independentaus.bsky.social, X/Twitter @independentaus and Facebook HERE.
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