Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said Australia supports the United States’ efforts to secure a negotiated outcome in the Middle East.
During an interview with Sky News Australia, Wong said the Australian government was working closely with the United States, with expectations of an achievable outcome.
“Ultimately, we continue to work with the Americans and engage with them very closely, particularly military to military, but also diplomatically,” she said.
“We also want to see, as they do, a negotiated outcome that resolves the passage through the Strait so that the world economy and global energy markets and Australians at the bowser can get back to normal.”
When asked whether she had confidence in Trump’s handling of the situation, Wong did not give a direct answer, saying the United States under his presidency would be “a very different America.”
“We know that power President Trump envisages, the role of America in the world differs very greatly from many past administrations,” she said.
“And I’ve also said one of the things that President Trump himself has said is one of his characteristics and one of his tactics is unpredictability. And we’ve certainly seen unpredictability.”
The minister was also asked whether she thought the conflict could spiral out of control. Wong responded: “This is an inherently risky situation.”
“Of course it is. I think we’ve seen that. We’ve seen announcements of the Strait opening, announcements of the Strait closing. We’ve seen a fragile ceasefire. The point I have made is that ceasefire is fragile,” she said.
Trump Signals Hard Line Ahead of Ceasefire Deadline
On April 20 (U.S. time), Trump warned that he may not extend the ceasefire unless a deal is reached before it expires on April 22.He also expressed optimism that an agreement is achievable and could be stronger than the 2015 nuclear deal struck under former President Barack Obama.
Meanwhile, Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a U.S. delegation alongside Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and special envoy Witkoff for talks in Pakistan ahead of the deadline.
Trump recently told reporters at the Whitehouse he was not happy with Australia because “they were not there when we asked them to be there.”
“I’m not happy, I’m not happy with them.”







