Spy Agency: Iran Link to Australian Synagogue Attack Uncovered Via Funding Trail

Debris from damage following an attack at the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, December 9, 2024. AAP/Yumi Rosenbaum via REUTERS
Debris from damage following an attack at the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, December 9, 2024. AAP/Yumi Rosenbaum via REUTERS
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Spy Agency: Iran Link to Australian Synagogue Attack Uncovered Via Funding Trail

Debris from damage following an attack at the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, December 9, 2024. AAP/Yumi Rosenbaum via REUTERS
Debris from damage following an attack at the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, December 9, 2024. AAP/Yumi Rosenbaum via REUTERS

Australia's intelligence agency traced the funding of hooded criminals who allegedly set fire to a Melbourne synagogue, linking the antisemitic attack to Iran, officials said, even as those charged with the crime were likely unaware Tehran was their puppet master.

A 20-year-old local man, Younes Ali Younes, appeared in Melbourne's Magistrates Court on Wednesday charged with the December 6 arson attack on the Adass Israel synagogue and theft of a car. He did not enter a plea and did not seek bail. His lawyer declined to comment to Reuters.

A day earlier Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia's intelligence agencies had shown the attack, and another in Sydney last year, were directed by the Iranian government, and expelled Tehran's ambassador, becoming the latest Western government to accuse Iran of carrying out hostile covert activities on its soil.

Security services in Britain and Sweden warned last year that Tehran was using criminal proxies to carry out its violent attacks in those countries, with London saying it had disrupted 20 Iran-linked plots since 2022. A dozen other countries have condemned what they called a surge in assassination, kidnapping, and harassment plots by Iranian intelligence services.

Australia's spy chief Mike Burgess said a series of "cut outs", an intelligence term for intermediaries, were used to conceal Iran's involvement in the attacks, and warned that it may have orchestrated others.

Security forces "have done rather extraordinary work to trace the source of the funding of these criminal elements who've been used as tools of the Iranian regime," Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Tuesday.

The investigation worked backwards through payments made onshore and offshore to "petty and sometimes not so petty criminals", he said in parliament on Wednesday.

Albanese was briefed by the Australian Security Intelligence Organization on Monday on evidence of a "supply chain" that he said linked the attacks to offshore individuals and Tehran's Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Australia's diplomats in Iran were discreetly told to leave, making it out of Iranian airspace just after midnight, he said.

A public announcement, with Albanese flanked by his spy chief and foreign and home affairs ministers, came on Tuesday, prompting accolades from Israel. Iran's Foreign Ministry said it "absolutely rejected" Australia's accusation.

The turning point in the investigation came weeks earlier, as Australian Federal Police and the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) seized mobile phones and digital devices from suspects arrested in Victoria state over the synagogue attack - and highlighted a stolen blue Volkswagen Golf sedan used in unrelated attacks.

CCTV footage of the night of December 6 released by police shows three hooded figures unloading red jerry cans of fuel from the boot of the car, one of whom was wielding an axe, at the entrance of the synagogue and setting it alight before speeding away.

Victoria's Joint Counter Terrorism Team alleged Younes, 20, stole the car to carry out the attack and recklessly endangered lives by setting fire to the A$20 million synagogue when people were inside, a charge sheet shows. No one was wounded in the attack.

A co-accused, Giovanni Laulu, 21, appeared in court last month on the same charges.

Police have referred to the sedan as a "communal crime car" linked to other attacks that were not politically motivated.

In a press conference on July 30 to announce seven search warrants had been executed and a man arrested over the synagogue attack, the Australian Federal Police's then deputy commissioner Krissy Barrett said it was politically motivated and involved offshore criminals.

"We suspect these criminals worked with criminal associates in Victoria to carry out the arson attack," she said, also confirming a major Australian crime figure deported to Iraq in 2023 was "one of our ongoing lines of inquiry."

Police were working with the Five Eyes intelligence network that also includes Britain, the United States, Canada and New Zealand, she said.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke told ABC Radio on Wednesday that those involved locally would not have necessarily known "who had started it".

"You have a series of intermediaries so that people performing different actions don't in fact know who is directing them or don't necessarily know who is directing them," he said.



EU Aviation Agency Tells Operators to Avoid Iran, Iraq and Lebanon Airspaces Until August 31

Motorbikes and cars pass through an intersection in downtown Tehran, Iran, May 17, 2026. (AP)
Motorbikes and cars pass through an intersection in downtown Tehran, Iran, May 17, 2026. (AP)
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EU Aviation Agency Tells Operators to Avoid Iran, Iraq and Lebanon Airspaces Until August 31

Motorbikes and cars pass through an intersection in downtown Tehran, Iran, May 17, 2026. (AP)
Motorbikes and cars pass through an intersection in downtown Tehran, Iran, May 17, 2026. (AP)

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency said on Wednesday that airlines should not operate within the airspace of Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon, amid ongoing tensions and the potential for further military action, as the US and Iran exchanged fresh attacks.

The EASA said its bulletin for the airspaces of ‌Iran, Iraq ‌and Lebanon was valid until ‌August ⁠31.

The ‌agency's latest advisory comes after Iran's Revolutionary Guards ‌said they targeted US military sites ‌in Bahrain and Kuwait on Wednesday.

Those attacks followed a wave of US military strikes on Iran after tankers were hit in the Strait ‌of Hormuz.

President Donald Trump had said on Monday that the US ⁠would either ⁠reach a deal with Iran or "finish the job," renewing his threat of military action.

EASA said the implementation of the US-Iran ceasefire remained fragile, and its advisory decision was based on "ongoing high level of tensions and the potential for further military action."

The European agency also added that should the existing truce break down, Iranian airspace was likely to be exposed to "imminent threats".


New Attacks Complicate Talks to End Iran War, EU’s Kallas Says

EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas arrives at the NATO Defense Industry Forum in Ankara, Türkiye , 07 July 2026. (EPA)
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas arrives at the NATO Defense Industry Forum in Ankara, Türkiye , 07 July 2026. (EPA)
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New Attacks Complicate Talks to End Iran War, EU’s Kallas Says

EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas arrives at the NATO Defense Industry Forum in Ankara, Türkiye , 07 July 2026. (EPA)
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas arrives at the NATO Defense Industry Forum in Ankara, Türkiye , 07 July 2026. (EPA)

The new attacks by Iran and the United States in the Middle East have complicated talks to end the war, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Wednesday.

"The exchanges of ‌fire between ‌the US and ‌Iran ⁠further complicate already fraught ⁠talks to end the war. Iran's attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait are unacceptable," Kallas said in a post on ⁠X.

"Next Monday, EU Foreign ‌Ministers ‌will meet with their ‌Gulf counterparts to discuss how ‌we can work together to support the implementation of the agreement and preserve freedom ‌of navigation in the Strait as well as ⁠the ⁠Red Sea."

The US military unleashed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Tuesday and revoked a license allowing Iran to sell oil after three tankers were hit by projectiles in the Strait of Hormuz.

US President Donald Trump said an interim agreement to end the ‌war with ‌Iran was "over" on Wednesday after ‌Tehran ⁠carried out new attacks.

Asked before a NATO summit in Türkiye ⁠whether the ⁠memorandum of understanding reached last month was over, Trump said: "It's a very interesting question. To me, I think it's over. I don't want to deal with them."⁠


New US Attacks on Iran Were Absolutely Necessary, NATO Chief Says

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks upon arrival at the 2026 NATO summit in Ankara, Türkiye, 08 July 2026. (EPA)
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks upon arrival at the 2026 NATO summit in Ankara, Türkiye, 08 July 2026. (EPA)
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New US Attacks on Iran Were Absolutely Necessary, NATO Chief Says

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks upon arrival at the 2026 NATO summit in Ankara, Türkiye, 08 July 2026. (EPA)
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks upon arrival at the 2026 NATO summit in Ankara, Türkiye, 08 July 2026. (EPA)

The new attacks by the US on Iran were "absolutely necessary," NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Wednesday.

The US military unleashed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Tuesday and revoked a license allowing Tehran to sell oil after three tankers were hit by projectiles in the Strait ‌of Hormuz, putting pressure ‌on an already fragile ‌ceasefire.

"When ⁠you have a ⁠ceasefire and Iran is basically violating the ceasefire, I think it is totally crucial that the US forcefully react," Rutte told reporters before a summit of NATO leaders in Ankara.

At their summit, European ⁠leaders aim to convince Donald Trump ‌to re-commit ‌to the military alliance, after the US president revived ‌his disputes with them over the ‌Iran war and Greenland.

Rutte said there could be no doubt over the "complete commitment of the United States to NATO," which he said ‌also works to protect the United States.

"But there's also the expectation ⁠that ⁠the Europeans and the Canadians will equalize their spending with the United States, which I think is completely fair," he added.

"The good news is that this is the big win today. It's the loss for Putin, it is a win for President Trump that the Europeans and the Canadians are doing exactly that."