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US-Iran war as it happened: Trump tells Iran to ‘make a deal before it’s too late’ as US strikes bridge; states agree to cut fuel prices further with GST windfalls

Emily Kaine, Sarah McPhee and Liam Mannix
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 5.00am on Apr 3, 2026
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What you need to know

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Thank you for joining our continuing live coverage of the war in the Middle East.

Here’s a recap of the latest developments:

  • In a prime-time address yesterday, US President Donald Trump repeated his estimate that the war would last another two to three weeks, and said he would bomb Iran “back to the Stone Ages [sic].”
  • Trump, in a post on Truth Social overnight, shared a video of a bridge collapsing in Iran, stating there was “much more to follow” and it was time for Iran to “make a deal before it is too late”.
  • French President Emmanuel Macron has called for less “chatter” from the US president about the war and a more “serious” approach.
  • Opposition Leader Angus Taylor followed up Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s address to the nation with one of his own. “We must dig and we must drill. We need more Australian oil for Australians,” Taylor said.
Video shared by Donald Trump shows a bridge collapsing outside of Tehran.Truth Social

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Recession a possibility for Australia: Westpac

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Westpac’s chief executive officer Anthony Miller has warned the conflict in the Middle East has raised the risk of a recession in Australia, saying that it was unclear how long supply chain disruptions from the Iran war could take to work their way through the economy.

Miller, who leads one of the nation’s big four banks, said in an interview with the ABC that “circumstances have changed so much that a recession is a chance”.

“The key is how long is this war going to go on, but more importantly how long does it take for supply chain consequences to be resolved,” Miller told an ABC podcast released on Friday.

Australia’s most recent GDP figures for the fourth quarter of 2025 came in higher than expected at 2.6 per cent year on year, however the war in Iran has seen cascading impacts across the nation’s economy over the past month.

The price of diesel on which the country is heavily reliant has risen sharply, with shortages reported in every state, while freight costs have risen globally, a headache for the island trading nation. Speaking in mid-March, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said Australia was not “anticipating or expecting” a recession.

Bloomberg

Fees for ships to pass Hormuz boost Chinese payment stocks

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Shares of Chinese companies that offer cross-border payments rose, after the commerce ministry noted that the yuan is being used to pay tolls for passage through the Strait of Hormuz.

CNPC Capital Co, a financial services unit of China National Petroleum Corp., jumped by as much as the 10 per cent daily limit in Shenzhen. Lakala Payment Co, a leading Chinese third-party payments provider, climbed as much as 7.9 per cent, while financial-technology firm Shenzhen Forms Syntron Information Co rose 9.4 per cent before paring gains.

While China has long been striving for yuan internationalisation, actual application in the Hormuz provides a concrete-use case that markets have been waiting for. Analysts said the development reinforces expectations that geopolitical conflicts may channel incremental capital toward China.

A post on the Ministry of Commerce website, which cited a recent Lloyd’s List report, said that vessels are paying $US2 million ($2.92 million) fees to Iran for transit of the key energy transportation waterway, and that these can be paid in yuan.

“As the Iran war continues, the yuan is emerging as a key alternative for global capital due to China’s good relationship with Iran,” said Shen Meng, a director at Beijing-based investment bank Chanson & Co. “Thus, related sectors such as oil and gas capital companies and electronic payment stocks will receive more capital flows.”

Bloomberg

North Korea expanding missile, satellite launch facilities: report

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North Korea appears to have razed towns near the country’s main missile and satellite launching station in a sign of possible expansion plans, adding to security concerns in a region already facing uncertainties as the war in Iran drags on.

Two villages, including hundreds of buildings, bordering the Sohae satellite launching station on the country’s western coast were demolished in March, the 38 North program at the Stimson Centre said in the report released Thursday.

Kim Jong Un delivers a speech during a session of the Supreme People’s Assembly at parliament in Pyongyang, North Korea last month.AP

“Given how satellites and anti-satellite weaponry are in the country’s new five-year plan, expansion of North Korea’s main space centre may be underway,” Martyn Williams, a senior fellow for the Stimson Centre, said in the report.

North Korea announced its new strategic plan for the country in February, covering the period through 2030 and setting out key strategic goals including putting additional spy satellites in orbit.

The report comes just days after North Korea said it tested a new solid-fuel engine to upgrade its military’s strategic strike capabilities. North Korea has been accelerating its push to develop its nuclear and missile capabilities as leader Kim Jong Un emerged as a key ally of Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Bloomberg

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Unverified reports Iran has shot down US F-35

By Liam Mannix

Several news sources, including Al Jazeera, are now reporting claims from Iran’s Mehr News Agency that the country has shot down a US F-35 fighter jet. At this stage, we’re treating those claims as unverified.

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Kuwait says Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery hit by Iranian drones

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Iranian drones struck Kuwait’s Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery Friday, sparking fires at the facility.

The state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp issued a statement on the attack and said firefighters were working to control the blazes.

There were no injuries reported, the company said.

Kuwait operates three oil refineries. Mina al-Ahmadi has come under attack multiple times in the war.

Bangladesh cuts working hours to save energy amid Middle East crisis

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Bangladesh has launched fresh measures to curb energy consumption, cutting office hours and trimming public spending as conflict in the Middle East disrupts global fuel markets and strains power supply in the South Asian nation.

Officials said the steps approved by cabinet on Thursday aim to stabilise the energy situation in Bangladesh, heavily dependent on fuel imports and battered by price volatility and supply uncertainty from the US-Israeli war with Iran.

A motorcyclist gets fuel at a pump in Dhaka in early March as people form long queues, due to the Iran war.AP

Under the new rules, government offices will run from 9am to 4pm, while markets and shopping centres must shut by 6pm to reduce electricity use.

The government has also ordered cuts in non-essential public expenditure and urged lower power consumption in industry, with curbs on excessive lighting, for example.

Reuters

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Macron says France will work with South Korea to stabilise Hormuz post-war

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French President Emmanuel Macron sees scope for cooperation with South Korea to stabilise the situation in the Strait of Hormuz, but only once the bombing ends.

French President Emmanuel Macron chairs a video conference of G7 leaders to discuss the fallout of the war in Iran on the world economy, amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, at the Elysee Palace in Paris, in early March.AP

“We discussed the situation in the Middle East at length, and I believe we can do useful things to stabilise the situation in Hormuz, and more broadly once the bombardments have ceased,” Macron said after a meeting with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung in Seoul on Friday. “We want to strengthen our ties in strategic and defence matters.”

The escalating conflict in the Middle East has choked off shipping needing to traverse the waterway, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas exports normally flow. US President Donald Trump said in a social media post Wednesday that the US is “blasting Iran into oblivion” until the strait is opened.

Trump has repeatedly complained about other nations not helping out in the war against Iran. Earlier this week he said South Korea was not contributing to efforts to secure the strait, while thousands of American troops were on the Korean Peninsula, stationed there against a “nuclear” North Korea. The president has also criticised France and other European nations for not aiding the US, calling the NATO military alliance a “paper tiger”.

Macron urged all parties to be “serious” on Thursday and told reporters in Seoul that the US was undermining trust and fuelling uncertainty when casting doubts about NATO’s military commitments.

Bloomberg

White House to boost defence spending in new budget

By AP

The White House is set to release President Donald Trump’s 2027 budget on Friday, a sweeping blueprint that could boost Pentagon spending to $US1.5 trillion ($2.19 trillion), the largest of its kind in decades, as the US focuses on military investments rather than other domestic programs.

Even before the US-led war against Iran, the Republican president had indicated he wanted to bolster defence spending to modernise the military for 21st-century threats. Separately, the Pentagon last month proposed $US200 billion for the war effort and to backfill munitions and supplies.

President Donald Trump addresses the nation from the White House on Wednesday.AP

Trump, speaking ahead of an address to the nation this week about the Iran war, signalled the military is his priority, setting up a clash ahead in Congress.

“We’re fighting wars. We can’t take care of day care,” Trump said at a private White House event Wednesday, Washington time.

“It’s not possible for us to take care of day care, Medicaid, Medicare – all these individual things,” he said. “They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal [basis].”

AP

Are strikes on bridges or power plants a war crime?

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Would Donald Trump’s pledge to strike Iran’s bridges (the US military hit a bridge today) and power plants amount to a war crime? Here’s Reuters’ report on the matter.

The 1949 Geneva Conventions on humanitarian conduct in war prohibit attacks on sites considered essential for ‌civilians.

The Geneva Conventions and additional protocols say that parties involved in military conflict must distinguish between “civilian objects and military objectives”, and that attacks on civilian objects are forbidden.

“We are going to hit them extremely hard over the next two​ to three weeks. We are going to bring them back to the ​Stone Ages (sic), ⁠where they belong,” Trump said in his address on Thursday, Australian time.

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Caps on oil, gas prices a possibility if war drags on: Bowen

By Zac de Silva and Tess Ikonomou

Australia will consider imposing a cap on gas and coal prices if they skyrocket due to the Iran war, Energy Minister Chris Bowen says.

As Australians head into the Easter long weekend, hundreds of service stations across the country are without fuel.

Bowen said unlike the energy situation following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, gas and coal prices were yet to be impacted by the Iran war in the same way.

“The government will act if we see any increases in gas and coal prices further in Australia,” he told reporters in Sydney on Friday.

“We have planned for a number of eventualities.”

AP.

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