Australian planes will risk anti-aircraft fire from Islamic State militants to land on Iraqi soil to deliver arms and munitions to Kurdish fighters.
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Appearing alongside Prime Minister Tony Abbott at a press conference in Canberra on Sunday, the Chief of the Defence Force, Air Chief Marshal Mark Binskin, told reporters the weapons would not be dropped from the air, but the aircraft would land so that the arms could be handed over to Peshmerga officials.
"We will be doing the missions in a controlled manner and making sure that we know who we are handing the arms and munitions to," he said.
Air Chief Marshal Binskin admitted Islamic State forces had anti-aircraft weapons, but said Australia would take this into account in planning the mission, which will be flown by C-130 Hercules and C-17 Globemaster aircraft.
He said the arms, which would supplied by "eastern bloc" countries, included rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and various calibres of ammunition.
Asked how Australia would ensure the arms did not fall into the hands of the Kurdistan Workers Party or PKK, which has been fighting alongside the Peshmerga but is registered in Australia as a terrorist organisation, Air Chief Marshal Binskin said "the greater risk here is actually doing nothing, to be honest with you".
Earlier on Sunday, independent MP Andrew Wilkie and the Greens expressed anger that the Abbott government committed Australia to weapon drops without consulting Parliament.
Mr Abbott said Australia did not wish to become involved in the conflict, but it was important to do what it could to avert potential genocide.
"While we understandably shrink from reaching out to these conflicts, the truth is that these conflicts reach out to us. There are about 60 Australians that we know to be involved with terrorist groups in the Middle East.
There is another 100 or so who are actively supporting those who are involved with these terrorist groups.
The problem with significant numbers of Australians being involved with these terrorist groups is that they are radicalised, they are brutalised and they are accustomed to kill in the name of God.
If it is right to kill in the name of God in Iraq, there is no reason to think that the same people won't do likewise, if they get the chance, elsewhere, including in Australia."
Mr Abbott said described the situation in Iraq as "severe" and said it would remain so as long as Islamic State fighters retained control over large swathes of northern and western Iraq and parts of eastern Syria.
Air Chief Marshal Binskin revealed that on Sunday morning, Sydney time, an Australian C-130 aircraft had participated in a humanitarian air drop to the besieged town of Amirli in north-eastern Iraq.
The drop, which was assisted by US airstrikes, consisted of 15 pallets of food, water and hygiene packs, enough for 2600 people for a day.
Australian C-17 aircraft would transport equipment and supplies to Erbil in the Kurdish part of Iraq in coming days.
Mr Abbott said Australia had not received any request from the US to take part in airstrikes, but would consider any such request. Asked to guarantee Australian combat troops would not be deployed, Mr Abbott refused to do so, adding "none of us want to get involved in another Middle Eastern war but it is important to do what reasonably can be done to avert potential genocide."
The Prime Minister suggested Greens proposals to require parliamentary authority for military deployments were unworkable.
"This idea that Australian forces cannot be deployed until the Parliament has met and approved the mission, I think, is novel to say the least when it comes to the deployment of military forces by Australia," Mr Abbott said.
"There are all sorts of circumstances in which Australian forces could be deployed, must be deployed, where you couldn't have a parliamentary debate prior to their deployment."
Asked whether Australia's support for anti-Islamic State fighters would increase the risk of terrorist activity in Australia, Mr Abbott pointed to comments made last week by spy chief David Irvine, who said there was no specific correlation between Australian government activity in the Middle East and domestic terrorist threats.
"There is a certain type of terrorist organisation which hates us not because of what we do but because of who we are and how we live," Mr Abbott said. "Who we are and how we live, I hope, will never change."
'We are part of the war': anger at arms drop
Independent MP Andrew Wilkie and the Greens are fuming the Abbott government has committed Australia to weapons air drops in Iraq without consulting parliament.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has agreed to a United States government request for Australia to transport arms and munitions to Kurdish fighters battling Islamic State militants in Iraq.
"The situation in Iraq represents a humanitarian catastrophe," Mr Abbott said.
He was due to address the media in Canberra at 2.45pm on Sunday.
The decision has received bipartisan support from Labor.
But Mr Wilkie condemned the cabinet national security committee call saying federal parliament should have had a say on the matter.
"If Tony Abbott wants us to be gun runners for the Kurds at the behest of the United States then we are part of the war," Mr Wilkie told reporters in Hobart.
"We've taken sides."
A former senior intelligence analyst turned whistleblower, Mr Wilkie resigned from his post at the Office of National Assessments in 2003 in protest at Australia's role in the Iraq war.
Greens leader Christine Milne called on Mr Abbott to suspend all other matters in parliament on Monday to debate Australia's involvement in Iraq.
Senator Milne asked if the transportation of arms was a sign of "mission creep", and whether it would lead to troops on the ground.
"If we're going to start, where is it going to end?" she told reporters in Hobart.
"It is more important that ever that the prime minister tells Australians what is the strategy here, what are we going to commit to."
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said the decision was not easy but it was for the best of reasons - humanitarian relief to prevent genocide against beleaguered minorities in northern Iraq.
"These are vulnerable people who need help and need it now," he told reporters in Melbourne.
The global coalition was conscious that on balance the greater risk was to allow the IS to succeed in Iraq, he said.
Mr Shorten said Labor had received advance notice of the decision and was receiving timely briefings on the matter.
The Royal Australian Air Force C-130J Hercules and C-17A Globemaster aircraft will conduct the arms airlifts alongside aircraft from Canada, Italy, France, the United Kingdom and the United States.
The move follows RAAF humanitarian supply airdrops to thousands of people stranded on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq.
Independent MP Andrew Wilkie and the Greens are fuming the Abbott government has committed Australia to weapons air drops in Iraq without consulting parliament.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has agreed to a United States government request for Australia to transport arms and munitions to Kurdish fighters battling Islamic State militants in Iraq.
"The situation in Iraq represents a humanitarian catastrophe," Mr Abbott said.
He will address the media in Canberra at 2.45pm (AEST).
The decision has received bipartisan support from Labor.
But Mr Wilkie condemned the cabinet national security committee call saying federal parliament should have had a say on the matter.
"If Tony Abbott wants us to be gun runners for the Kurds at the behest of the United States then we are part of the war," Mr Wilkie told reporters in Hobart.
"We've taken sides."
A former senior intelligence analyst turned whistleblower, Mr Wilkie resigned from his post at the Office of National Assessments in 2003 in protest at Australia's role in the Iraq war.
Greens leader Christine Milne called on Mr Abbott to suspend all other matters in parliament on Monday to debate Australia's involvement in Iraq.
Senator Milne asked if the transportation of arms was a sign of "mission creep", and whether it would lead to troops on the ground.
"If we're going to start, where is it going to end?" she told reporters in Hobart.
"It is more important that ever that the prime minister tells Australians what is the strategy here, what are we going to commit to."
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said the decision was not easy but it was for the best of reasons - humanitarian relief to prevent genocide against beleaguered minorities in northern Iraq.
"These are vulnerable people who need help and need it now," he told reporters in Melbourne.
The global coalition was conscious that on balance the greater risk was to allow the IS to succeed in Iraq, he said.
Mr Shorten said Labor had received advance notice of the decision and was receiving timely briefings on the matter.
The Royal Australian Air Force C-130J Hercules and C-17A Globemaster aircraft will conduct the arms airlifts alongside aircraft from Canada, Italy, France, the United Kingdom and the United States.
The move follows RAAF humanitarian supply airdrops to thousands of people stranded on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq.
AAP