Published: 13:49, December 21, 2023 | Updated: 16:58, December 21, 2023
Australia rebuffs US request for warship in Red Sea
By Xinhua

Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles speaks during a joint press conference with the US Defense Secretary and the British Defense Secretary during the AUKUS Defense Ministerial Meeting in Mountain View, California, on Dec 1, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)

CANBERRA - The Australian government has announced that it will not send a warship to the Red Sea but will deploy additional troops to the region.

Richard Marles, the minister for defense, on Thursday said the Australian government had denied a request from the United States for military hardware to help protect shipping lanes in the Red Sea following attacks from Yemen's Houthi militia on commercial vessels in the area.

Instead, Richard Marles, the minister for defense, said that additional Australian Defence Force officers would be deployed to the Combined Maritime Force headquarters in Bahrain in 2024

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Instead, he said that additional Australian Defence Force (ADF) officers would be deployed to the Combined Maritime Force (CMF) headquarters in Bahrain in 2024.

"We won't be sending a ship or a plane," Marles told Sky News Australia television.

There are currently five ADF personnel based at CMF headquarters. Under Operation Manitou Australia had previously committed to sending five more officers to promote maritime security and stability.

READ MORE: Egypt monitoring Red Sea tension as ships avoid Suez Canal

Marles said on Thursday that another six would now also be deployed under the US-led Operation Prosperity Guardian, taking the total contribution to 16 officers.