Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Lots of non-corporate nuclear news this week.

TOP STORIES.

From Risk to Target: The New Reality for Journalists in War Zones-https://www.youtube.com/watchv=0YhrSX6QRZs 

The Empire Backs Down, For Now. 

Norwegian Nuclear Committee says no to nuclear power in Norway.

Trump accelerates new nuclear warhead production, nearly doubles funding for plutonium “pit” bomb core production. 

Trump and Netanyahu: Two Madmen Playing God.    Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Statement Condemning Trump. 

The unforeseen consequences of Iranian resistance. 

Can Prospects for Nuclear War Get Any Worse?- Sure, We Can Put AI in Charge. 

US War Machine Is Built on Decades of Lies – The Assault on Iran Is No Exception.

Climate‘Non-survivable’: heatwaves are already breaching human limits, with worse to come, study finds. 

AUSTRALIA. 

NUCLEAR-RELATED ITEMS

ART and CULTURE. Trump’s Genocidal Threats on Iran Are Enabled by a Vast Apparatus of Destruction. Trump, Hegseth and the Language of War Crimes.
CLIMATE. John Gibbons: I’ve changed my mind on nuclear power — we don’t need it any more
ECONOMICS.
All Wars Are Bankers’ Wars: Iran and the Bankers’ Endgame.
Anas Sarwar’s ‘nuclear plot would hammer Scottish bill payers’
Could a New Nuclear Reactor Double or Triple Electricity Rates in New Brunswick?
Audit cites DOE oversight failures on NuScle nuclear project.
Cenovus pulled the plug on its much-ballyhooed ‘multi-year’ study of ‘small modular reactors’ in 2024 after a year.
Trillions Hidden, Humanity Starving: The Super-Rich vs. the Rest of Us.
The Myth that Won’t Die: “War is Good for the Economy”.

ENERGY. Faced with new energy shock, Europe asks if reviving nuclear is the answer

ETHICS and RELIGION

LEGAL
International law or foreign military bases: a choice must be made.NuScale Power Corporation Class Action Reminder – Robbins LLP Encourages SMR Stockholders to Contact the Firm for Information About Their Rights .“Locked and Loaded”: Hegseth Says Trump’s War‑Crime Warnings Were Dead Serious.
MEDIA. U.S. Media finally acknowledging Israel’s central role in Trump’s criminal war on Iran .A good documentary on Chernobyl on SBS available On Demand for the next 4 weeks.100 Strikes in 10 Minutes: Lebanon Bombed as Gaza Burns and Journalists Are Killed.Tony Blair’s latest deceit-riddled column vilifies the UK left to justify genocide.The Mass Media Are Evil But They’re Also Really Dumb.The Iranian people achieved decisive victory against America’s criminal war on them.
OPPOSITION to NUCLEAR . Anti-nuclear group to continue fight against Sellafield plan.Making London councils allies in the campaign to oppose Britain’s nuclear expansion.Arrests at Lakenheath nuclear base blockade.

POLITICS.

POLITICS INTERNATIONAL and DIPLOMACY.

PLUTONIUMBlocking Iran’s Other Option: A Plutonium Bomb.
SAFETY. WHO warns of catastrophic risks after strike on Bushehr nuclear plant.TEPCO halts cooling of spent fuel pool at Fukushima Daini plant.Incident. 60 Years Nuclear Accident of Palomares – Lost hydrogen bombs and their consequences. Defra plots faster planning process for Sizewell C nuclear plant.
SECRETS and LIES. THE “SPIES” WHO CRIED GENOCIDE.US Satellite Firm Blacks Out Iran War Images Per US Government Request.The Ambassador of Duplicity: How Israel’s UN Representative Blames Others for the Crimes His State Commits.
SPACE. EXPLORATION, WEAPONS. As Rocket Launches Increase, They May Be Polluting the Skies. Creating military bases on the Moon.Mysterious Flashes in 1950s Skies Linked to Nuclear Tests and UAP Sightings: Study.
TECHNOLOGY. Nuclear fusion – triumph of hope over expectation – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/04/09/1-b1-nuclear-fusion-triumph-of-hope-over-expectation/
URANIUM. Secrets and Shortcuts: The US Uranium Enrichment Rush.Canada’s government faces calls to begin enriching uranium-Should it?     Protecting Our Wells: The Rural Costs of Uranium Exploration in Rural Nova Scotia .
WASTES. Finland’s plan to bury spent nuclear waste carries risk to future generations.

WAR and CONFLICT.

WEAPONS and WEAPONS SALES. Inside Iran’s ‘underground fortress’: How Iran’s missile bases survive most powerful US and Israeli bombs,

April 12, 2026 Posted by | Weekly Newsletter | Leave a comment

“Genocide Grants.” Government awards millions to F-35 suppliers

by Stephanie Tran | Apr 8, 2026 , https://michaelwest.com.au/genocide-grants-government-awards-millions-to-f-35-suppliers/

The Federal Government has awarded $78 million in grants to Australian companies that make parts for F-35 fighter jets used by the IDF in the Gaza genocide. Stephanie Tran investigates.

An investigation by MWM has found the federal government has awarded more than $78m in taxpayer-funded grants to Australian companies participating in the global F-35 fighter jet program, with the majority of these grants awarded during Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

The same parts are now likely deployed in the US and Israeli illegal bombing campaign in Iran.

Analysis of government grant records shows that since 2011, at least $78m has been distributed to companies to support their involvement in the multinational Joint Strike Fighter program.

Of that total, $48.5m has been awarded since October 7, 2023.

The funding forms part of a suite of industry support programs designed to help Australian companies secure work on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Program, a US-led global supply chain for the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II fighter jet.

The F-35 has been widely deployed by Israel in its genocide in Gaza, and assaults on Lebanon, Iran and elsewhere.

The analysis reveals that a relatively small number of firms have received a significant share of the funding, with grants targeted at expanding Australia’s role in the maintenance and sustainment of the F-35 fleet.

The largest recipient was Rosebank Engineering (formerly RUAG Australia), which received $30.2m across multiple grants. This included $16.3m awarded in April 2025 to establish an Asia-Pacific depot to repair F-35 power and thermal management systems, and a further $9.1m to develop a regional repair capability for landing gear.

Rosebank Engineering “provides over 150 components for the Landing Gear and Weapons Bay Systems” on the F-35 fighter jet.

The second-largest recipient was Northrop Grumman Australia, which received $13.4m in June 2024 to support the activation of a depot for the maintenance and overhaul of F-35 components for the Asia-Pacific region, with potential to service European assignments.

Other major recipients include Moog Australia, Quickstep Technologies and Ferra Engineering, alongside a network of specialist manufacturers.

In total, more than 75 Australian companies are now involved in the F-35 program, collectively securing contracts worth more than $5 billion.


The full list of grants can be accessed in the document below. [on original]

How the grant programs work

The grants have been delivered through three key programs administered by the Department of Defence.

The Joint Strike Fighter Industry Support Program Sustainment Grants, which remains open until June 2028, provides funding to companies seeking to expand their role in maintaining and servicing F-35 aircraft.

To be eligible for a grant, companies must have a contract with the United States Government for “maintenance and repair activities for existing components used in the Joint Strike Fighter Program”.

Applicants are required to produce a congressional letter from the US Department of Defense confirming their F-35 part number assignment and/or repair technology group as part of their application.

Initially launched with $4m in funding in 2020, the program was expanded to $60m in 2021 and extended to 2028. To date, $49.5m in JSF Sustainment Grants have been awarded.

A second stream, the Joint Strike Fighter Industry Support Program Production and Modernisation Grants, operated between December 2021 and August 2024, providing $4m to help companies “develop new or improved capabilities to win work in the production and modernisation phases of the Joint Strike Fighter Program”.

An earlier initiative, the New Air Combat Capability Industry Support Program, ran from 2010 to June 2021 and distributed $21.9m to help Australian firms integrate into the F-35 supply chain under Defence’s AIR6000 project.

According to the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO), the project aimed to ensure Australia’s air combat capability remained “lethal, survivable, deployable and available throughout its Life of Type”.

Greens Defence and Foreign Affairs Spokesperson, David Shoebridge, said the grants demonstrated misplaced government priorities.

“When you see tens of millions of dollars in Australian public grants given, not to community groups or social programs but to global weapons manufacturers like Northrop Grumman, you see the priorities of Labor and the other war parties,”

“They always have money for weapons and war.”

“The F35 fighter jet is a major weapon in Israel’s genocide in Gaza, its illegal war in Iran and its illegal occupation in Southern Lebanon. It’s obscene that it’s being propped up by public gifts from the Australian government.” 

Grants crucial to Australia’s F-35 program role

The ANAO has attributed the success of Australian firms in securing F-35 contracts to these government grants.

“Allocating financial resources and implementing the grant programs … enabled Australian industry to bid for and win work,” the ANAO found in its latest report on major defence projects.

“Without the establishment of an industry support program, Australian industry may not have been competitive enough to win contracts.”

According to the ANAO report, Australia has spent $12.6B on the F-35 program, with most expenditure flowing to contracts with the US government.

Australian companies have secured more than $5B in contracts linked to the F-35 program, with more than 75 firms involved in manufacturing components or providing sustainment services.

Because the F-35 program operates as a globalised supply chain, components manufactured or serviced in Australia are incorporated across the entire fleet.

This means parts produced locally are used in aircraft operated by multiple countries, including Israel.

Hiding it

In late 2023, the Department of Defence quietly removed details of Australian suppliers in the F-35 program from its website including a 2018 report published by the Department

Last year, an investigation by Declassified Australia revealed that F-35 components produced in Australia had been shipped directly to Israel on commercial passenger flights, despite repeated government assertions that Australia was not supplying weapons to Israel.


In a 
follow-up investigation, the outlet reported that many of the parts stored in Australia for the country’s own F-35 fleet are in fact owned and controlled by the United States, with logistics managed by the program’s prime contractor, Lockheed Martin.

This arrangement means Australia does not ultimately control how those parts are allocated. The US can direct that components held in Australia be reassigned and shipped overseas, even where those parts are needed for Australia’s own defence capability.

Violation of international law

UN report has described the F-35 program as “key” to Israel’s military operations in Gaza, with the aircraft

heavily used in the genocidal destruction of Gaza.”

The report warned that states supplying components may be engaged in indirect transfers of weapons used in violations of international law.


Shoebridge said the grants reinforced the need for Australia to impose a total arms embargo on Israel, “Given what we know about the crimes committed by the IDF using the F-35, it’s hard to see these as anything other than genocide grants,” he said.

“This data gives fresh impetus to our calls, supported by millions of Australians, to put a total arms embargo on Israel, which includes all weapons and weapons parts.”

MWM sent questions to the Department of Defence, Richard Marles (Minister for Defence) and Pat Conroy (Minister for Defence Industry) regarding whether it was appropriate to continue the F-35 grant program in light of the genocide and the due diligence the government has taken to ensure that the program is in compliance with international law.

We received no response.

Stephanie Tran

Stephanie is a journalist with a background in both law and journalism. She has worked at The Guardian and as a paralegal, where she assisted Crikey’s defence team in the high-profile defamation case brought by Lachlan Murdoch. Her reporting has been recognised nationally, earning her the 2021 Democracy’s Watchdogs Award for Student Investigative Reporting and a nomination for the 2021 Walkley Student Journalist of the Year Award.

April 12, 2026 Posted by | weapons and war | Leave a comment