Australia in the World

Ep. 182: Another wild 48 hours on Iran, plus the Australian lens

Apr 1, 2026
Stephen Dziedzic, Senior ABC foreign affairs reporter with on‑the‑ground Asia‑Pacific experience, breaks down a frantic 48 hours in global diplomacy. He walks through US signals about Iran and the Strait of Hormuz. He examines implications for Australia’s alliance choices, regional reactions in Southeast Asia, and the role of LNG and energy statecraft in shaping strategic options.
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INSIGHT

Desalination Threat Crosses Legal Red Line

  • Donald Trump threatened to target desalination and civilian water infrastructure in Iran, which would amount to potential war crimes under the Geneva Conventions.
  • Darren Lim highlighted the legal red line and Stephen Dziedzic called the rhetoric "lunacy," noting erosion of institutional civilian-harm safeguards in the US administration.
INSIGHT

Go Get Your Own Oil Signals Death Of Carter Doctrine

  • Within 12 hours of threats, Trump posted that allies should "go get your own oil," effectively repudiating the Carter Doctrine that the US will defend free flow through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Stephen Dziedzic warned this doctrinal shift could unravel the Gulf security architecture underpinning alliances with energy-importing partners like Australia, Japan and Korea.
INSIGHT

Whipsaw Policy Makes Allied Planning Impossible

  • The Trump administration's rapid policy whipsaw makes medium- and long-term planning by allies almost impossible because of unpredictable reversals.
  • Stephen Dziedzic said capitals like Seoul, Tokyo and Canberra are re-evaluating what US guarantees actually mean while still largely relying on the alliance in the near term.
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