BREAKING — Australia Deploys E-7A Wedgetail and AMRAAMs to UAE — 85 ADF Personnel — No Offensive Role — No Ground Troops in Iran
Global News · Australia · Iran War

Australia Refuses to Deploy Army Against Iran, Provides Defensive Aid

Prime Minister Albanese drew a hard line on 10 March 2026: no offensive action against Iran, no ground troops inside Iran. But with 115,000 Australians living in a region under missile attack, Canberra has deployed a Wedgetail surveillance aircraft and air-to-air missiles to the UAE — and the Greens are already calling it the start of another forever war.

8 min read By Robert
85
ADF Personnel Deployed
1
E-7A Wedgetail Deployed
4 wks
Initial Deployment Period
115,000
Australians in Middle East
2,600+
Australians Returned Home
1,500+
Drones Shot Down by UAE

A Line Drawn in Canberra

On 10 March 2026, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles, and Foreign Minister Penny Wong released a joint statement confirming Australia would deploy military assets to the Gulf while explicitly ruling out any offensive participation in the US-Israel war on Iran. The statement was unambiguous: Australia is not a protagonist in this conflict. Australian troops will not be deployed to fight inside Iran. Australia will not take part in strikes on Iranian territory.

What Australia will do is send one E-7A Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft, 85 Royal Australian Air Force personnel, and a supply of Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles to the UAE. The Wedgetail departed Australia on 10 March and is expected to be fully operational in the Gulf by the end of the week. The deployment is for an initial four-week period and was made in direct response to a request from the UAE government, which has faced over 1,500 Iranian rockets and drones since the war began.

Dubai Airport Briefly Closes After Iran Missile and Drone Attacks

Why Australia Moved Now

The immediate trigger was scale. According to Wikipedia's account of Australia's involvement in the 2026 Iran war, Iran first struck Al Minhad Air Base in the UAE on 3 March using loitering munitions, directly hitting a facility where Australian personnel and infrastructure were stationed. That attack made the question of Australian involvement sharply personal. Iran's wider retaliatory campaign was already targeting 12 countries across the region, and the UAE alone had been forced to intercept 253 ballistic missiles, 8 cruise missiles and over 1,400 drones by 9 March.

Albanese cited the human reality behind the strategic calculation: approximately 115,000 Australian citizens are in the Middle East, with around 24,000 based in the UAE alone. The majority are long-term residents, not tourists. Helping Australians, he said, means also helping the UAE and other Gulf nations defend themselves against what he called unprovoked attacks. That framing, defensive protection of Australian civilians rather than military alliance with the US and Israel, was the political foundation on which the deployment was justified to the Australian public.

There was also a diplomatic dimension that Albanese carefully did not address directly. The deployment announcement came hours after a phone call between Albanese and US President Trump. When journalists asked whether Trump had raised the question of military support during that conversation, Albanese described the call as warm and said it was primarily about the Iranian women's football team, before acknowledging they also discussed world events. He declined to confirm whether Australia's military commitment was discussed. Opposition and independent observers noted the timing and drew their own conclusions.

The Iranian Women's Football Team Five members of Iran's national women's football squad, in Australia for the AFC Women's Asian Cup 2026 in Queensland, were granted asylum by the Albanese government after staging a silent protest by refusing to sing the Iranian national anthem before their first match. Iran's state television labelled the players traitors. Albanese confirmed the asylum grants in the same press conference where he announced the military deployment, describing both as matters of protecting people from harm.

What the E-7A Wedgetail Does

The E-7A Wedgetail is one of the most capable airborne early warning and control aircraft in service anywhere in the world. Built on a Boeing 737 airframe and operated by the Royal Australian Air Force, it carries a multi-role electronically scanned array radar capable of simultaneously tracking hundreds of airborne targets, from fast-moving ballistic missiles to slow, low-altitude loitering munitions. Its range and altitude allow it to provide surveillance coverage across an extremely wide area, alerting ground-based air defence systems to incoming threats with enough lead time to intercept them.

The Wedgetail was previously deployed to Europe as part of Australia's assistance to Ukraine, where it performed the same airspace surveillance function. In the Gulf context, its role is to help the UAE and other regional partners detect Iranian ballistic missiles and drone swarms at distance, buying interception systems the time they need to respond. The AMRAAMs being provided alongside it are air-to-air missiles fired from fighter aircraft, adding to the UAE's layered ability to shoot down incoming aerial threats before they reach civilian infrastructure.

Australia's Full Deployment at a Glance

Asset Type Role Duration
E-7A Wedgetail Airborne Early Warning & Control Aircraft Long-range airspace surveillance, missile and drone tracking 4 weeks initial
AMRAAMs (MIM-120C-7) Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles Provided to UAE to intercept Iranian aircraft, missiles and drones Transfer to UAE
85 ADF Personnel Royal Australian Air Force support crew Operate and maintain Wedgetail aircraft in-theatre 4 weeks initial
DFAT Crisis Response Teams Civilian consular staff On-ground support for Australians seeking to leave the region Ongoing

What Australia Has Ruled Out

Action Australia's Position
Offensive strikes on Iranian territory Ruled out explicitly
Ground troops deployed inside Iran Ruled out explicitly
Joining US-Israel bombing campaign Not participating
E-7A Wedgetail in Gulf airspace Confirmed deployed
AMRAAM missiles provided to UAE Confirmed transferred
Consular support for Australians DFAT teams on ground
Refuelling US surveillance aircraft Confirmed earlier in conflict
ADF personnel on US nuclear submarine Confirmed, 3 personnel on AUKUS rotation
Iran War Update: 150 US Soldiers Wounded in 10 Days

The AUKUS Complication

Australia's position has been complicated by a separate disclosure that three Australian Defence Force personnel were aboard a US nuclear submarine when it sank an Iranian vessel near Sri Lanka. Deputy Prime Minister Marles confirmed the personnel were present as part of a normal AUKUS rotation and that their involvement was a standard feature of the trilateral security partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States. He declined to say how senior those personnel were or whether they had any operational role in the decision to sink the vessel.

Opposition frontbencher Claire Chandler defended the personnel's presence, saying it was fair to expect Australian Navy personnel to be working alongside US counterparts within the AUKUS framework. The Greens took a sharply different view, with Senator Larissa Waters pointing to the incident as evidence that Australia's claimed non-participation in the war was becoming difficult to sustain in practice. The distinction between a routine training rotation and active participation in a wartime military operation was, she argued, collapsing in real time.

Greens Opposition Australian Greens leader Larissa Waters condemned the entire deployment, stating that Labor should not be sending assets to help a military that had killed 150 schoolchildren in a primary school bombing. She warned that Trump and Netanyahu's demands on Australia keep escalating, from refuelling spy planes to reconnaissance jets and missiles, and accused the Albanese government of having no red lines when it comes to appeasing Washington and Tel Aviv. She said the move risks dragging Australia into yet another forever war it cannot exit.

How Australia's Involvement Compares to Other US Allies

United Kingdom
Allowed US to use bases for defensive strikes. RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus struck by Iranian drones. Sent additional air defence assets to Cyprus. Starmer declined to join offensive campaign despite Trump calling him no Winston Churchill.
France
Condemned the Campaign
Macron said US and Israel launched operations outside international law. Deployed Charles de Gaulle carrier group to Mediterranean. Sent air defence assets and frigate Languedoc to Cyprus.
Germany & Italy
Italy pledged air defence, anti-drone and anti-missile systems to Gulf partners and naval assets to Cyprus. Germany took a cautious position, offering no direct military commitment to either side.
Spain
Refused US Base Access
PM Sanchez refused to allow US military use of Spanish bases. Trump threatened to cut off all trade with Spain. Spain still sent its frigate Cristobal Colon to help protect Cyprus defensively.
Australia
Defensive Only
Deployed Wedgetail and AMRAAMs to UAE. Refused offensive participation. Confirmed 3 ADF personnel on AUKUS submarine rotation that sank Iranian vessel. Refuelled US spy planes earlier in conflict.
Portugal
Granted US access to Lajes base in the Azores on condition that operations were defensive, retaliatory, necessary, proportionate and targeted exclusively military objectives.

Australia's Path Into the Conflict

28 Feb 2026
US and Israel launch Operation Epic Fury against Iran. Albanese government supports the stated objective of preventing Iran acquiring nuclear weapons but immediately rules out Australian offensive participation.
3 Mar 2026
Iran attacks Al Minhad Air Base in the UAE with loitering munitions. Australian personnel and infrastructure are present at the base. This is Australia's first direct exposure to Iranian fire in the conflict.
Early Mar 2026
Australia confirms it has been refuelling US surveillance aircraft as part of AUKUS cooperation. Three ADF personnel confirmed to have been aboard a US nuclear submarine that sank an Iranian vessel near Sri Lanka during a normal AUKUS rotation.
8 Mar 2026
Foreign Minister Penny Wong confirms Australia has received requests for military assistance from Gulf nations and is assessing them. She rules out offensive action and ground troops. More than 2,600 Australians have by now returned home from the region.
10 Mar 2026
Albanese takes an early morning call with Trump. Hours later, a joint statement from Albanese, Marles and Wong confirms the deployment of the E-7A Wedgetail and AMRAAM missiles to the UAE. 85 ADF personnel depart Australia the same day. Albanese also confirms asylum for five members of Iran's women's football team.
My government has been clear: We are not taking offensive action against Iran, and we are clear we are not deploying Australian troops on the ground in Iran. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, press conference, 10 March 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Australia has explicitly refused to take offensive action against Iran or deploy ground troops inside Iran. Prime Minister Albanese confirmed on 10 March 2026 that Australia's deployment is purely defensive and limited to protecting Gulf nations and Australian civilians from Iranian missile and drone attacks. Australia is not participating in US and Israeli strikes on Iranian territory.
Australia has deployed one E-7A Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft, 85 Australian Defence Force personnel, and stocks of Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles (MIM-120C-7 AMRAAMs) to the United Arab Emirates. The Wedgetail departed Australia on 10 March and is expected to be operational by the end of the week. The deployment is for an initial four-week period.
Australia has approximately 115,000 citizens in the Middle East, including around 24,000 in the UAE. Iran's retaliatory attacks have struck the UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait and other Gulf states, putting Australian lives at risk. The UAE formally requested Australian military assistance. Prime Minister Albanese also took a call from US President Trump on 10 March, shortly before announcing the deployment, though he declined to confirm whether the two conversations were directly linked.
Iran attacked Al Minhad Air Base in the UAE on 3 March 2026 using loitering munitions. Australian personnel and infrastructure were present at that base. This was the first direct attack on a facility hosting Australians since the war began on 28 February 2026.
The E-7A Wedgetail is a Boeing 737-based airborne early warning and control aircraft operated by the Royal Australian Air Force. It provides long-range airspace surveillance, can simultaneously track hundreds of incoming missiles and drones at distance, and coordinates air defence responses across a wide area. Its role in the Gulf is to detect and track Iranian ballistic missiles and drone swarms early enough to give interception systems time to respond.
Australian Greens leader Larissa Waters condemned the deployment as tantamount to joining another US-led forever war. She cited the killing of 150 schoolchildren in a primary school bombing and warned that demands on Australia keep escalating. Opposition frontbencher Claire Chandler took a different view, saying the coalition supported ADF personnel working with US counterparts within the AUKUS framework.
More than 2,600 Australians had returned home by 10 March 2026. However, approximately 115,000 Australians remain in the Middle East, the majority of whom are long-term residents who live and work in the region. The Australian government has deployed DFAT Crisis Response Teams on the ground to provide consular support to those seeking to leave.

What Comes Next?

Australia's position sits in an uncomfortable middle ground that will become harder to maintain as the conflict continues. Canberra has drawn a clear public line against offensive participation, and that line has held so far. But the AUKUS submarine incident and the refuelling of US surveillance aircraft have already shown that the boundary between alliance obligations and active participation is not as clear in practice as it is in press conference statements. Every week the war continues, the pressure on that line will intensify.

The four-week initial deployment of the Wedgetail is a significant detail. It builds in a natural decision point at which the Albanese government will need to choose whether to extend, expand or withdraw. If the conflict is still active at that point, and if Iranian attacks on Gulf infrastructure are continuing, the political case for withdrawal will be difficult to make with 115,000 Australians still in the region. Al Jazeera noted that the Greens' warning about Australia getting trapped in an escalating conflict echoes the same warnings made before Australia joined the US-led invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, both of which lasted far longer than their initial deployment periods suggested.

For now, Australia has made a careful, bounded commitment: defensive, time-limited and anchored to the protection of Australian citizens. Whether it stays bounded will depend almost entirely on events in Tehran, Washington and the Gulf that Canberra cannot control.

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