David Shoebridge condemns attacks on Iran, war on protesters

July 2, 2025
Issue 
Inset: Senator David Shoebridge. Pro-Palestine protesters march in Gadigal Country, June 29. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

Israel and the United States’ recentĀ bombing of Iran,Ģż²¹³¾¾±»å Israel’s genocide in Gaza, has further destabilised the Middle East region whileĀ .

NSW Greens Senator David Shoebridge, spokesperson for foreign affairs, peace and nuclear disarmament, defence and home affairs,Ā toldĀ  on June 26Ā the attacks on Iran were ā€œoutright illegalā€, with ā€œno evidenceā€ that Iran is close to having nuclear weapons.

Iran did receive aĀ Ā from theĀ  over reporting obligation failures.

Shoebridge noted that the ā€œIAEA has, on at least two occasions since this conflict escalated, made it very clear that they hadĀ  that Iran was proceeding to build a nuclear bombā€.

ā€œThat wasĀ confirmed by Ā evidence given to Congress … that there was no evidence Iran was proceeding to make a nuclear bomb,ā€ he said, also adding that intelligence indicated ā€œthere had been a decision by the Iranian regime not toā€.

ā€œ[The IAEA] was calling for negotiation and discussion. It pointed out how dangerous it would be if it led to an attack on nuclear facilities and strongly urged a peaceful dialogue,ā€ Shoebridge said.

ā€œAll international evidence we had was that Iran … was not the imminent threat that Benjamin Netanyahu, Penny Wong and Donald Trump have said.ā€

Ā and Israel has not signed theĀ .

Shoebridge confirmed Israel and the US ā€œusedĀ ā€˜imminent potential’ of an Iranian nuclear weapon … as the reason for their attack. It was an unlawful, illegal attack on Iran under international law,ā€ he said, which fuels the call for an immediate two-way arms embargo against Israel, as well as sanctions against Netanyahu, his cabinet and key decision makers.

ā€œWe should tear up the $2 billion or so in contracts the Albanese government has, either directly or indirectly, with Israeli weapons manufacturers, Shoebridge said, if we want Israel to take sanctions seriously.

Concerns remain about the roleĀ Pine Gap plays in these attacks. The jointĀ Ā has always beenĀ controversial, and government secrecyĀ about its role in unpopular foreign conflicts, the attacks on Iran included, makes it even more so.

Shoebridge said either the US has not informed Australia about Pine Gap’s role, which ā€œis incredibly disturbing for a notionally joint Australian facility in the middle of our own countryā€, or governments ā€œknow exactly the role that Pine Gap [is playing] and they just don’t want the public to knowā€.

Concerns hadĀ Ā about its role in drone attacks and assassinations in Iran and Syria and the potential toĀ 

Shoebridge is also concerned about the security ramifications of theĀ increasingly unpopular AUKUS deal, saying the ā€œleast likely scenario is that it remains on track for five decades and we get six nuclear submarines out of itā€.

ā€œAustralian taxpayers are [currently] building the United States a nuclear submarine attack baseĀ at the cost of $1.7 billion dollars on Garden Island in WA … to provide a forward base for American nuclear-poweredĀ , so that they can more readily engage in the United States containment program against China.ā€

What does Shoebridge make of the war on peaceful protest against genocide, war crimes and bottomless defence budgets?

ā€œYou would hope that the government was on the side of those millions of Australians who just want to end a genocide,ā€ he said. ā€œThey see the images of kids being killed and whole communities being threatened with annihilation and hospitals, schools, universities being destroyed. They want it to end … and they’re out in the streets demanding that.

ā€œInstead of seeing where the real violence lies, which is the Israeli military campaign in Gaza, the Anthony Albanese government and the NSW Chris Minns government have regularly tried to make out that the peaceful protesters, the people trying to call for an end to the genocide, are the problem.ā€Ā 

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