US-Iran war updates: Chris Bowen cuts fuel stock obligations, Donald Trump says Khamenei ‘damaged but alive’
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Key Events
Everything you need to know
- New Iranian leadership defiance: In his first public address since the assassination of his father, the new Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to continue blocking the Strait of Hormuz and demanded the closure of all US military bases in the region.
- Strikes on Tehran: The IDF and US forces launched an ‘extensive wave’ of aerial bombardments on the Iranian capital, with residents reporting powerful explosions that shook buildings.
- Missile barrage on Israel: Iran retaliated by firing waves of missiles toward Israel, causing injuries in the north and forcing thousands of civilians into bomb shelters.
- Gulf under attack: Pro-Iranian forces targeted multiple Gulf nations, including Saudi Arabia, which reported intercepting 12 drones, and Oman where a drone strike hit thePort of Duqm.
- Panic buying: Energy Minister Chris Bowen announced a release of 400 million litres of diesel and 300 million litres of petrol from Australia’s onshore fuel stockpile to help address shortages, as service stations and wholesalers run dry amid widespread panic buying.
- French military fatality: President Emmanuel Macron confirmed the first French military death of the war after a soldier was killed in a drone attack in the Erbil region of Iraq.
- US aircraft crashes in Iraq: A KC-135 refuelling aircraft crashed in western Iraq during Operation Epic Fury. US Central Command said the crash was not due to hostile fire. Rescue operations are ongoing.
- Energy markets in crisis: Brent crude oil prices have surged past $US100 per barrel due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
- Humanitarian crisis in Iran: The UN reports that 3.2 million people have now been internally displaced within Iran since the conflict began on February 28.
Bowen hits out at petrol profiteers
Energy Minister Chris Bowen has lashed out at “unAustralian” individuals who he accused of hoarding fuel then trying to sell it online at inflated prices.
“I ask Australians buy as much fuel as you need, no more, no less,” he said.
“There are other people, I’ve seen it on Facebook marketplace, filling up jerry cans, Bunnings running out of jerry cans, selling fuel at inflated prices.
“That is unAustralian. It’s dangerous. It shouldn’t be done now.
“We shouldn’t lump everybody in, (that’s) clearly a minority of people doing that.”
‘No need for ground troops’: US senator
US senator Lindsey Graham has played down the possibility of US troops being deployed to Iran.
“I don’t see this conflict ending today,” the Republican senator said in Washington.
“I think the mission is to make sure they cannot regenerate, that they’re going to be beyond capable of building missiles to hit us and they’ll never go back to the nuclear business.
“There are weeks more of this coming, then we’ll make an assessment.”
Everything you need to know
- New Iranian leadership defiance: In his first public address since the assassination of his father, the new Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to continue blocking the Strait of Hormuz and demanded the closure of all US military bases in the region.
- Strikes on Tehran: The IDF and US forces launched an ‘extensive wave’ of aerial bombardments on the Iranian capital, with residents reporting powerful explosions that shook buildings.
- Missile barrage on Israel: Iran retaliated by firing waves of missiles toward Israel, causing injuries in the north and forcing thousands of civilians into bomb shelters.
- Gulf under attack: Pro-Iranian forces targeted multiple Gulf nations, including Saudi Arabia, which reported intercepting 12 drones, and Oman where a drone strike hit thePort of Duqm.
- Panic buying: Energy Minister Chris Bowen announced a release of 400 million litres of diesel and 300 million litres of petrol from Australia’s onshore fuel stockpile to help address shortages, as service stations and wholesalers run dry amid widespread panic buying.
- French military fatality: President Emmanuel Macron confirmed the first French military death of the war after a soldier was killed in a drone attack in the Erbil region of Iraq.
- US aircraft crashes in Iraq: A KC-135 refuelling aircraft crashed in western Iraq during Operation Epic Fury. US Central Command said the crash was not due to hostile fire. Rescue operations are ongoing.
- Energy markets in crisis: Brent crude oil prices have surged past $US100 per barrel due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
- Humanitarian crisis in Iran: The UN reports that 3.2 million people have now been internally displaced within Iran since the conflict began on February 28.
Thousands of targets hit in Iran
US Central Command revealed that it has hit about 6000 targets in Iran since February 28.
The campaign has also damaged or destroyed more than 90 vessels, including over 30 minelayers and 60 naval ships.
Blasts rattle Dubai
Explosions have rattled buildings in Dubai, with a thick cloud of smoke hanging over the city’s financial hub.
Witnesses said buildings shook and sirens blared.
The UAE has come under repeated Iranian fire during the Middle East war, with Dubai’s airport, one of the world’s biggest, repeatedly targeted as well as its port and luxury real estate including the Palm Jumeirah.
How Australia is tackling petrol pump pain
As global oil prices surge past $US100 a barrel, the Federal Government has introduced a number of measures to shore up fuel supply in Australia.
Here’s what you need to know.
HOW DID WE GET HERE?
* The war in the Middle East has spiked fuel prices, in part because around 20 per cent of the world’s oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz - a key trade route between the Persian Gulf and the rest of the globe
* Iran’s new supreme leader has promised to keep the strait closed, and there are reports his regime has begun laying mines in the sea lane
* Video has emerged of two oil tankers ablaze in Iraqi waters after apparently being attacked by Iran
* In Australia, petrol prices have soared to well over $2 a litre for E10 in many locations
* Some regional areas have reported shortages. The government says demand for petrol and diesel has doubled as motorists and businesses panic-buy in response to the conflict
HOW IS AUSTRALIA RESPONDING?
* Fuel companies will be allowed to release a week’s worth of petrol and diesel - or nearly 800 million litres - from their domestic reserve to help meet the extra demand
* Energy minister Chris Bowen says the extra fuel will take some time to flow through to the bowser
* The government has also relaxed its fuel quality requirements, meaning higher sulfur petrol usually reserved for export can now be sold in Australia
* In late 2025, Labor raised Australia’s fuel standards - the latest change effectively puts that reform on pause for two months, and quality standards are still very high compared to other parts of the world
WHAT ELSE COULD BE DONE?
* One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce has suggested rationing fuel in the cities to ensure regional Australians aren’t disadvantaged. The government has rejected this idea
* The opposition says quality standards could also be lowered for diesel, which could help transport and logistics businesses who rely on the fuel to move goods around the nation
AAP
Casualties of war
Seven American troops have been killed in combat during the Iran war.
Six of the service members were killed when an Iranian drone struck an operations centre at a civilian port in Kuwait.
The seventh died after being wounded during an attack on the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia.
The Penatgon said that about 140 US service members had been wounded, including eight severely.
Iranian nuclear scientists targeted
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has trevealed that Iranian nuclear scientists have been targeted.
“In the current operation, we also opened the path for a broad strike against Iran’s massive missile stockpiles and missile-production facilities, as well as its nuclear project — including severe blows to senior Iranian scientists who led the development of nuclear bombs meant to destroy us,” he said.
“They are no longer here.”
Iran’s new supreme leader launches X account
Iran’s new supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei has joined social media - launching a verified account on Elon Musk’s platform X just days after taking power.
The account, under the handle @Rahbarenghelab_ already has tens of thousands of followers and has been used by the cleric to fire off a series of posts about Iran’s war with the US and Israel.
In one message to more than 44,000 followers, Khamenei urged supporters to continue the fight.
“Dear fighter brothers! The desire of the masses of the people is the continuation of effective and regret-inducing defence,” he wrote, according to X’s automatic translation from Persian.
He also called for Iran to keep using its ability to block the strategically crucial Strait of Hormuz as leverage in the conflict.
“I assure everyone that we will not forgo vengeance for the blood of your martyrs,” another post declared.
Khamenei also used the platform to pressure neighbouring Middle Eastern countries, urging them to “clarify their stance” and calling on nations hosting US military bases to shut them down.
Iran missiles leave 30 hurt
Iran has fired waves of missiles over Zarzir, in the country’s north, with emergency services saying that 30 people were injured.
“A short while ago, the IDF identified missiles launched from Iran toward the territory of the State of Israel. Defensive systems are operating to intercept the threat,” the Israeli military wrote on its official Telegram channel.
It issued a similar alert a short time later.
The Magen David Adom ambulance service raises the number of casualties from the missile impact in Zarzir from two to about 30, almost all of whom were lightly hurt by broken glass or are suffering from acute panic.
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