Australia Confirms Navy Staff on US Sub That Sank Iranian Warship

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has confirmed three Royal Australian Navy members were aboard a United States fast-attack submarine that sank an Iranian frigate off Sri Lanka. He firmly stated that the Australian personnel did not participate in any offensive action against Iran, adhering to strict national protocols. The embedding of Australian defence staff in US submarine crews is a long-standing arrangement under the AUKUS pact for training purposes. Sri Lankan officials report 87 bodies have been recovered from the site, with another Iranian ship given refuge in Trincomalee.

Key Points: Australian Personnel on US Sub in Iran Warship Sinking: Albanese

  • Australian PM confirms personnel on US sub
  • Stresses no role in offensive action
  • Part of AUKUS training arrangements
  • Sri Lanka reports 87 bodies recovered
  • Incident highlights embedded crew protocols
3 min read

"No Australian personnel participated in offensive action": Albanese on Navy members aboard US submarine that sank Iranian warship

PM Albanese confirms 3 Australian Navy members were aboard the US submarine that sank an Iranian frigate but states they took no part in offensive action.

"no Australian personnel have participated in any offensive action against Iran - Anthony Albanese"

Canberra, March 6

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has verified that three Royal Australian Navy members were stationed on a United States submarine that destroyed an Iranian naval vessel earlier this week, ABC News reported.

The Prime Minister maintained that the Australian personnel did not take part in the mission to destroy the IRIS Dena, asserting that the nation's military staff did not "participate in any offensive action" against Tehran.

The Iranian frigate was sunk by a US fast-attack submarine in waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. According to ABC News, Sri Lankan officials stated on Thursday that 87 bodies have been retrieved from the site, while 32 individuals have been rescued.

While Washington has not officially named the vessel involved, military analysts suggest it was the USS Minnesota. This Virginia-class submarine had previously rotated through HMAS Stirling near Perth.

As part of the AUKUS pact, numerous Australian personnel have been embedded in US fast-attack submarine crews based in Pearl Harbour to gain experience before Australia receives its own nuclear-powered fleet.

Initially, Australian authorities were hesitant to validate claims regarding the presence of their citizens on the attacking vessel. However, Albanese confirmed to Sky News this morning that three Australians were indeed present.

"We wouldn't normally confirm such an issue, but given our [National Security Committee] meetings and the public interest, I can confirm that there were three Australian personnel on board that vessel," he stated.

According to the ABC News report, the Prime Minister highlighted that strict protocols are in effect to prevent Australian staff from engaging in such combat roles.

"I can confirm also, though, that no Australian personnel have participated in any offensive action against Iran," he said.

Albanese further explained, "These are long-standing third-country arrangements that have been in place for a long period of time, and what they do is ensure that Australian defence force personnel, where they are embedded in third countries' defence assets, they act in accordance with Australian law, Australian policy, and that is, of course, taking place across the board."

Defence officials previously informed parliamentary hearings that "more than 50" ADF members were serving on American fast-attack submarines, with figures expected to rise. ABC News noted that approximately one in ten crew members on active US nuclear-powered attack submarines are currently Australian.

Additionally, civilian staff are undergoing training in nuclear submarine maintenance to support Australia's future domestic capabilities.

In the aftermath of the sinking, Sri Lanka has provided refuge to another Iranian ship. The replenishment vessel IRINS Bushehr was moved to Trincomalee, while 208 crew members were transported to a naval facility near Colombo.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The loss of life is tragic. 87 bodies recovered is a huge number. Regardless of geopolitics, my heart goes out to the families of those sailors. The article says Sri Lanka is helping with rescue and refuge, which is the right humanitarian thing to do.
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Vikram M
So our Navy people are getting training on US nuclear subs. This is about building our own capability, which is good for long-term security. But the government needs to be more transparent from the start, not wait to confirm things. The "third-country arrangements" sound like a legal loophole.
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Priya S
The strategic implications for the Indian Ocean are significant. A major powers' conflict is playing out in waters we consider our sphere of influence. India must watch this closely and ensure its own naval readiness. Our diplomacy with all parties - US, Iran, Sri Lanka - will be tested.
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Rohit P
One in ten crew members on active US attack subs are Australian? That's a staggering level of integration. It makes the PM's claim that they don't participate in "offensive action" hard to believe. What exactly is their role then? Just observers? Seems like semantics.
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Meera T
Respectfully, I think the government's handling of this information is poor. First they are hesitant, then they confirm. It creates confusion. In matters of war and peace, especially involving our citizens, clarity and honesty are non-negotiable. Hope lessons are learned.

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