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US-Iran war updates: Donald Trump launches ‘Project Freedom’ as ship attacked near Iran, peace talks stall

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Madeline CoveThe Nightly
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VideoDonald Trump has announced Project Freedom to rescue ships trapped in the Strait of Hormuz, warning the US will respond with force if the humanitarian effort is interfered with.

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Jewish Australian ‘genuinely terrified’ by anti-Semitism

Sheina Gutnick, whose father died at the Bondi terrorist attack is speaking at the Bondi royal commission about her experience with anti-Semitism.

She says she was “genuinely terrified” when her daughter needed to enter the health system after two nurdses made anti-Semitic comments on a live stream.

She says she weighs up which suburbs she can pick up click and collect orders from due to the risk of anti-Semitism.

Shre also describes real-life cases where she has been confronted in public while wearing her Star of David pendant, once while carrying her young child.

Iran responds to Trump's Project Freedom’

Ebrahim Azizi has warned the United States’ proposed “Project Freedom” risks undermining the fragile ceasefire, cautioning that any move in the Strait of Hormuz could trigger renewed tensions.

“Any American interference in the new maritime regime of the Strait of Hormuz will be considered a violation of the ceasefire,” he wrote on X.

“The Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf would not be managed by Trump’s delusional posts! No one would believe Blame Game scenarios!”

With the mission expected to move ahead in the coming hours, concerns are growing the region could slip back into open conflict.

Major banks' profit falls as global tensions start to bite

Geopolitical tensions driven by the Middle East crisis and high fuel prices have created a volatile macroeconomic environment, Australia’s biggest business bank says.

National Australia Bank, which is one of the big four, on Monday posted a 19.3 per cent fall in 2026 first-half statutory net profit to $2.75 billion, on revenue of $11.16 billion.

Its preferred cash net profit, which excludes large items, was flat at $3.59 billion from the same period last year, but 2.3 per cent higher from the end of its 2025 fiscal year.

NAB’s result was supported by strong growth of 5.4 per cent in its business and private banking arm and a higher net interest margin, which reflects its earnings on lending activity.

Read more.

Government won’t extend fuel excise cut beyond June in Budget

Motorists looking for extended relief at the bowser will have to wait until June to see what the Government decides to do.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says while the $2.5 billion cost of the three-month halving of that fuel excise that’s in place now will be reflected in next week’s Budget papers, “people shouldn’t expect to see in the Budget on Tuesday night an extension of that, because we’ve made it really clear that it’s a temporary thing”.

However, he acknowledged that the global oil price “has been a real rollercoaster”, fluctuating between $80 and $120 a barrel, and that flowed through to the prices people paid and the pump.

The cut to the excise started on April 1 and is currently in place until June 30.

“If we get closer towards the end of that three month period, obviously, like all of these policies … we’ve got a range of contingencies, but people should expect that that petrol tax cut will be in the Budget until the end of June,” Dr Chalmers said.

Trump posts ‘I HAVE ALL THE CARDS’ as meme war rages

The US-Iran ceasefire may be holding - just - but tensions are still playing out online.

Donald Trump has shared what appears to be an AI-generated image of himself holding a stack of UNO Wild cards, alongside the caption: “I HAVE ALL THE CARDS”.

The phrase has become a recurring point of friction between US and Iranian leaders in recent weeks, emerging as a symbolic line in the ongoing war of words even as ceasefire talks continue.

Wong pushes China fuel talks as Hormuz tensions escalate

Penny Wong says talks are underway to secure additional fuel supplies from China following recent discussions with her counterpart Wang Yi.

After her visit, Senator Wong confirmed China had agreed to resume shipments, adding: “Our fuel security depends on each other in many ways,” noting Australia’s energy exports are closely tied to supply chains.

She said she remained hopeful the ongoing, commercially sensitive negotiations would deliver a positive outcome for Australia.

Senator Wong also described the latest attack on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz as “deeply concerning”, backing international calls to reopen the critical waterway.

“We’re engaging with the US, with the UK, with France, with others, around the Strait of Hormuz,” she said, adding, “Obviously, we all want to see the strait opened.” She confirmed, however, that Australia is not directly involved in the current US-Iran negotiations.

Trump keeps pressure on Iran as peace deal doubts grow

US President Donald Trump said that he had yet to review the exact wording of a new Iranian peace proposal, but he was unlikely to accept it, because the Iranians had not yet “paid a big enough price”.

Mr Trump’s remarks on social media concluded a day in which he publicly mused about the possibility of restarting air strikes, the latest mixed signal as he seeks to end the war he launched more than two months ago.

On Sunday, Israel ordered thousands of Lebanese to leave villages in southern Lebanon, an escalation of a war between Israel and Iran’s Hezbollah allies that has run in parallel to the Iran war and could further complicate wider peace efforts.

Iran has said talks with Washington cannot resume unless a ceasefire also holds in Lebanon, which Israel invaded in March to attack Hezbollah after the Iranian-backed Lebanese group fired across the border in support of Tehran.

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Iran tensions surge as Trump launches ‘Project Freedom’

The world is watching the Strait of Hormuz with renewed unease after US President Donald Trump announced a US-backed mission to escort stranded ships out of the critical oil chokepoint, coupled with a blunt warning that any interference would be met with force.

In a statement, Mr Trump said multiple countries had asked the United States to help free vessels stuck in the narrow waterway, describing them as “neutral and innocent bystanders” caught in a widening Middle Eastern conflict.

The operation, dubbed “Project Freedom,” is set to begin Monday morning local time and will involve US efforts to guide ships safely out of what Mr Trump called “restricted waterways”.

But the announcement quickly pivoted from humanitarian framing to a harder edge.

“If, in any way, this Humanitarian process is interfered with, that interference will, unfortunately, have to be dealt with forcefully,” he said.

Read more.

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