Home World Australia Trump’s middle-of-the-night Australian intervention drips with hypocrisy

Trump’s middle-of-the-night Australian intervention drips with hypocrisy

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SOURCE :- THE AGE NEWS

While you were sleeping, Donald Trump was on the phone with Anthony Albanese.

The US president wanted to know why Australia was going to allow members of the Iranian women’s soccer team to be forced back to Iran following their Asian Cup campaign.

US President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese spoke in the middle of the night.AP

“Australia is making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the Iran National Woman’s Soccer team to be forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed,” he wrote on social media. “Don’t do it, Mr. Prime Minister, give ASYLUM. The U.S. will take them if you won’t.”

The Australian government never said it was going to force the players to go back to Iran. It appears Trump’s knowledge of the matter was coloured by a social media post from Australian political activist Drew Pavlou, a mischief-maker best known for his criticism of the Chinese Communist Party.

The post claimed the Albanese government “inexplicably dragged their feet” on aiding the women, while also “trying to get ISIS brides back on planes to Australia”.

Fifteen minutes after Trump issued his demand, his account posted a screenshot of Pavlou’s post, adding a one-word instruction: “ASYLUM!”

US President Donald Trump’s post on Truth Social urging Australia to grant the Iranian women’s soccer team asylum.Truth Social

That post was made at 1.30am on Tuesday, Canberra time. At some point in the following 90 minutes, Trump and Albanese spoke on the phone. This masthead was told Trump initiated the call. The White House has been contacted for comment.

By the time the two leaders spoke, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke had already arrived in Brisbane, with the five escapees in police protection. On Tuesday morning, Burke announced he had granted humanitarian visas for the five players – and offered to do the same to the rest of the team.

Evidently, Albanese was able to quickly assuage Trump of his concerns. By 2.55am Canberra time, Trump was singing the PM’s praises.

“He’s on it!” Trump posted. “Five [players] have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way. Some, however, feel they must go back because they are worried about the safety of their families, including threats to those family members if they don’t return.”

He added that Albanese was doing a good job handling a delicate situation – a recognition that the government had been “on it” well before Trump took to the keyboard.

The brief, middle-of-the-night intervention by the US president is telling in a few ways. One, it underlines the power of social media in this administration, where almost everything is conducted out in the open on either X (formerly Twitter) or Trump’s own platform, Truth Social.

It is not the first time a post by Pavlou appears to have galvanised action. In January, the activist tagged US Under Secretary of State Sarah Rogers in a post complaining about elements of the Albanese government’s proposed hate speech laws. She then criticised the bill, calling it “clumsy” and likely to lead to “deeply perverse outcomes”.

Given his apparent influence in the Trump administration, it is ironic that Pavlou says he was refused entry to Trump’s America and deported last month over his posts claiming that he was going to move into singer Billie Eilish’s Los Angeles home to test “her theory of land ownership”.

An unverified picture of women believed to be members of the Iranian women’s soccer team, at their hotel room balcony at Royal Pines resort on the Gold Coast.Dan Peled

Pavlou says he was detained at LAX for 30 hours before being sent back to Australia. But a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security told The New York Post: “Claims that this individual’s admissibility was tied to external reports regarding Billie Eilish are false.”

Moreover, Trump’s attempt to intervene on behalf of the Iranian soccer players reveals a level of hypocrisy. The Trump administration has reversed decades of policy by deporting Iranians back to their country from the US, despite the persecution they will likely face there.

The first deportation flight left in late September, under a deal cut with the regime in Tehran. Of course, Trump has since waged war with that regime, killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei and dozens of other senior officials.

The administration has reportedly sent at least three plane loads of Iranians back to Iran, including Christian converts, ethnic minorities and political dissidents. “At least eight people from the first flight begged not to be sent to Iran because they were scared for their lives,” said a Senate report written by Democrats last month.

At least one deportation flight occurred in January, after the widespread anti-regime protests in Iran that led Trump to promise “help is on its way”.

According to Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, the administration nearly deported two gay men back to Iran, where they could have faced the death penalty for sodomy, but were saved by last-minute legal intervention.

In those circumstances, it would be a perverse outcome indeed if Trump were allowed to claim credit for saving the Iranian soccer players in Australia.

Read more on the US-Israel-Iran war:

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Michael KoziolMichael Koziol is the North America correspondent for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. He is a former Sydney editor, Sun-Herald deputy editor and a federal political reporter in Canberra.Connect via X or email.