• APT LE LAPEROUSE CRUISE
  • APT LE JACQUES CARTIER CRUISE
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  • CORAL ADVENTURER
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  • PACIFIC EXPLORER
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  • QUEEN ELIZABETH
  • REEF PRINCE
  • SEABOURN PURSUIT NEW!!!
  • SCENIC ECLIPSE II NEW!!!
  • SILVER CLOUD
  • TRUE NORTH II
  • RAIL & SAIL PACKAGES
  • GHAN 2025 PRICES
  • THE GHAN HOLIDAY PACKAGES NEW!
  • INDIAN PACIFIC
  • INDIAN PACIFIC 2025 PRICES
  • INDIAN PACIFIC HOLIDAY PACKAGES NEW!
  • GREAT SOUTHERN
  • GREAT SOUTHERN HOLIDAY PACKAGES NEW!
  • SENIOR PENSIONER DISCOUNTS
  • RAIL JOURNEYS BROCHURES
  • KINGS CANYON TO AYERS ROCK TRANSFER
  • KINGS CANYON RESORT TO ALICE TRANSFER
  • AYERS ROCK TO KINGS CANYON TRANSFER
  • AYERS ROCK TO ALICE SPRINGS TRANSFER
  • ALICE SPRINGS TO AYERS ROCK TRANSFER
  • ULURU SUNRISE & KATA TJUTA
  • BEST OF ALICE SPRINGS
  • KINGS CANYON & OUTBACK PANORAMAS
  • BROOME TOWN SCENIC TOUR
  • APT KIMBERLEY COMPLETE TOUR
  • APT KIMBERLEY AND TOP END TOUR
  • APT ESSENCE OF THE KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • BROOME TO DARWIN LUXURY KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • BROOME ABORIGINAL TOUR
  • BROOME TOWN TOURS
  • BROOME – FOOD & DRINKS TOURS
  • BROOME – 3 in 1 TOURS
  • BROOME WHALE WATCHING
  • CROCODILE PARK
  • DAY CRUISE ex BROOME
  • FLAVOURS OF BROOME
  • HORIZONTAL FALLS SEAPLANE ADVENTURES
  • MATSOS BREWERY
  • KIMBERLEY CAMPING TOURS NEW!!!
  • MITCHELL FALLS EXPLORER TOUR
  • ROEBUCK BAY TOURS
  • ROMANTIC HELICOPTER FLIGHT
  • ROWLEY SHOALS FISHING
  • SEAFOOD TOUR
  • ORCAELLA BROOME SNUBFIN DOLPHIN TOUR
  • BROOME SNUBFIN DOLPHIN TOUR ON CONTESSA C
  • WILLIE CREEK PEARL FARM
  • AVIAIR ADVENTURER
  • BROOME TO BUNGLES 4WD TOUR
  • BUNGLE BUNGLE DAY TOUR
  • BUNGLE BUNGLE AIR ADVENTURE
  • BUNGLE BUNGLE STAYOVER
  • BUNGLE BUNGLE & LAKE ARGYLE
  • CYGNET BAY EXPLORER FLIGHT
  • CYGNET BAY – DAY CRUISE NEW
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  • CYGNET BAY PEARL FARM TOUR
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  • CYGNET BAY OVERNIGHT HORIZONTAL FALLS CRUISE
  • BLUE TEAM CAMELS
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  • CAPE LEVEQUE DAY TOUR
  • GIANT TIDES
  • GORGEOUS GORGES
  • INCREDIBLE ISLANDS
  • DARWIN TO BROOME LUXURY KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • DARWIN DINNER CRUISE
  • DARWIN – FISHING
  • DARWIN SHORT BREAKS
  • GAZE AND GRAZE SUNSET CRUISE
  • DARWIN – SHORT BREAKS
  • GOURMET WALKING FOOD TOURS
  • HISTORY WARTIME TOURS
  • TIWI ISLAND ABORIGINAL TOUR
  • GREAT ESCAPE 5 DAYS FISHING TOUR
  • BROOME DAY FISHING
  • BROOME HALF DAY
  • DARWIN – FISHING CHARTERS
  • HELIFISHING
  • MUD CRABBING
  • ROWLEY SHOALS
  • HORIZONTAL FALLS AND CYGNET BAY OVERNIGHT PACKAGE NEW
  • BUCCANEER EXPLORER
  • WILDERNESS SAFARI
  • DAY CRUISES – HORIZONTAL FALLS
  • FLY BROOME HORIZONTAL
  • HORIZONTAL DISCOVERER
  • HORIZONTAL FALLS HIGHLIGHTS TOUR
  • HELICOPTER SCENIC FLIGHT
  • SUNDAY ISLANDS TOUR
  • KAKADU TOURS
  • KIMBERLEY DAY CRUISE New!
  • HORIZONTAL FALLS AND CYGNET BAY OVERNIGHT PACKAGE
  • 2 NIGHT GETAWAY
  • 4 NIGHT GETAWAY
  • APT BUNGLE BUNGLE EXPLORER TOUR
  • APT BUNGLE BUNGLE COMPLETE TOUR
  • APT KIMBERLEY EXPRESS TOUR
  • GREAT ESCAPE FISHING TOUR
  • KIMBERLEY QUEST SHORT KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • DIVERSITY II KIMBERLEY SHORT CRUISE
  • ORD RIVER LUNCH CRUISE (J2)
  • ORD RIVER SUNSET CRUISE (J3)
  • BEST OF LAKE ARGYLE – ex KUNUNURRA
  • BEST OF LAKE ARGYLE – ex LAKE ARGYLE
  • LAKE ARGYLE SEAPLANE SUNSET DRINKS TOUR
  • LAKE ARGYLE SUNSET CRUISE – Ex KUNUNURRA
  • LAKE ARGYLE SUNSET CRUISE – Ex LAKE ARGYLE
  • LAKE ARGYLE MORNING CRUISE
  • BUNGLE BUNGLE & LAKE ARGYLE ISLAND TOUR
  • LITCHFIELD PARK WATERFALL TOUR
  • CUNARD LUXURY KIMBERLEY
  • HERITAGE EXPEDITIONS KIMBERLEY CRUISES
  • PONANT NORTHERN KIMBERLEY
  • PONANT SOLAR ECLIPSE 2023
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  • PONANT BROOME TO DARWIN LUXURY KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • PONANT DARWIN TO BROOME LUXURY KIMBERLEY CRUISE
  • SCENIC BROOME TO DARWIN KIMBERLEY
  • SCENIC DARWIN TO BROOME KIMBERLEY
  • SEABOURN KIMBERLEY BROOME TO DARWIN
  • SEABOURN KIMBERLEY CRUISE DARWIN TO BROOME
  • SILVERSEA DARWIN TO BROOME
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  • MITCHELL FALLS COASTAL ADVENTURE
  • MITCHELL FALLS DISCOVERER
  • MITCHELL FALLS HIKE ADVENTURE
  • MITCHELL FALLS ULTIMATE
  • MONTGOMERY REEF & HORIZONTALFALLS
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  • ORD RIVER WITH LUNCH (J2)
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  • SUNSET DINNER CRUISE
  • CYGNET BAY TO HORIZONTAL FALLS SEAPLANE TOUR
  • HALF DAY – EX BROOME
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  • LUXURY 24 HOUR STAY – EX DERBY
  • OVERNIGHT TOUR – EX DERBY
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  • BUNGLE BUNGLE AEROPLANE & HELICOPTER
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  • BUNGLE ADVENTURER
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  • BUNGLE BUNGLE (2HR)
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  • DAY BOAT TOUR – ex CYGNET BAY New!
  • FLY HORIZONTAL
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  • KIMBERLEY DAY CRUISE
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  • BALLENA – SUNSET SAIL CRUISE
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  • GIFT VOUCHERS
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DARWIN HISTORY WARTIME TOURS slider copy

DARWIN HISTORY MARITIME TOURS

Take a step back in time to the 1940s with our Darwin History Maritime Tours.

LIFE IN DARWIN DURING WORLD WAR II

Join our Darwin History Wartime Tours to experience and sample Darwin during World War II. These were extraordinary and exciting times and you will get to share them.

Take the Darwin Tour!

Join us on a journey back through time in a genuine WW2 army truck to relive Darwin’s exciting and historic past.

Discover, relive, learn and explore Darwins exciting and historic past!

See historic sights such as:

  • Government House
  • Fort hill Wharf & Harbour
  • Parliament House
  • Charles Darwin National Park
  • Ammunitions storage bunkers
  • East Point Gun Battery & Military precinct
  • Anti-aircraft gun emplacements
  • 1934 QANTAS hangar

Learn about:

  • Pre-war Darwin
  • The WW2 bombing of Darwin
  • The devastation of cyclone Tracy
  • The colourful characters of the past that made Darwin what it is today!

Call or email us now for  the latest information on our Darwin History Wartime Tours .

1300 799 758

Tours from darwin .

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Darwin’s only marine-based Bombing of Darwin Tour

Sea Darwin | Bombing of Darwin Cruises & Tours

  • The Naked Gunner
  • Bombing of Darwin Cruise
  • Bombing of Darwin Double
  • Bombing of Darwin Australia’s Frontline: WWII Half Day Tour
  • WWII Attractions

Bombing of Darwin Cruise with knowledgeable local guides

Australia's Frontline WWII

Bombing of darwin, hear the stories, see the sights, explore with a local..

On 19 February 1942 lives changed forever, none more so than for the crews of the 27 Allied ships that had been at anchor in Darwin Harbour. Hear the stories of that fateful day and see the remnants of the war along the Darwin shoreline.

Sea Darwin offers Darwin’s only marine based Bombing of Darwin cruise, with the fastest vessels on Darwin Harbour. Let our experienced guides take you on an unforgettable journey of what happened in February 1942 via real time commentary about Darwin Harbour and Darwin’s importance as Australia’s frontline port, all while getting up close and personal with the historic Darwin seascape.

Visit Stokes Hill and Fort Hill Wharf, the oil tanks, see the wreck sites of the SS Neptuna and USS Peary, the old flying boat base at Doctors Gully, HMAS Coonawarra and the Emery Point gun emplacement.

Bombing of Darwin Tour Highlights

Whether you choose the Bombing of Darwin Cruise , the Bombing of Darwin Double or the WWII Half Day by Land & Sea Tour , you will be entranced by the rich war history that remains embedded in the Harbour, coastline and on land – a living memory within modern urban life in the Top End.

Your Australia's Frontline Journey map

Tours and more information

  1300 065 022    info@seadarwin.com

Departure location

  Dock 2 Stokes Hill Wharf, Darwin

  • 1300 065 022

Darwin History Cruise Bombing of Darwin Cruise

On 19 February 1942 lives changed forever, none more so than for the crews of the 27 Allied ships that had been at anchor in Darwin Harbour. Hear the stories of that fateful day and see the remnants of the war along the Darwin shoreline.

Bombing of Darwin Cruise

Brolga NT Tourism Awards: Ecotourism

Your experience tour highlights.

Guided cruise

Guided cruise

Visit historic landmarks along the Darwin shoreline aboard our state of the art vessel.

Historic landmarks

Historic landmarks

Visit Stokes Hill and Fort Hill Wharf, oil tanks, and see the wrecks of the SS Neptuna and USS Peary as well as many other significant sites.

Hear the stories

Hear the stories

Let our experienced guides take you on a journey of what happened in February 1942.

A unique experience

A unique experience

Your Sea Darwin vessel is comfortable and uses the latest technology to give you an amazing experience.

Ready to go? Book now

$ 65 per adult

Children and family rates available at time of booking.

Operation Dates

Tour operates daily April to September and Wednesday and Saturday from October to March. Year-round group departures can be arranged. The cruise can also be combined with discounted admission to the RFDS's Bombing of Darwin display at Stokes Hill Wharf.

Boarding commences at either 09.20am or 10.50 am with the tour underway by 09:30am or11:00am.

Tour departs and concludes at: Dock 2 Stokes Hill Wharf Darwin 0800

"The cruise was really great. The stories Rob told and the information he had about the war really made it. Highly recommend." Bet and Ron, from New Zealand

About the tour Let us take you back in time

Your journey

Your journey

Board your vessel at 0930 or 11am at Dock 2 Stokes Hill Wharf, one of Darwin’s iconic locations that was centre stage during the Bombing of Darwin. This hour long Bombing of Darwin cruise takes you back in time on a journey along Darwin’s seascape as you hear the stories and take in Darwin’s WWll maritime sites.

Real time commentary

Real time commentary

You’ll be treated to real time commentary by local guides about Darwin Harbour and Darwin’s importance as Australia’s frontline port, as you get up close and personal with the historic Darwin seascape.

"This gave me a perspective on the Bombing of Darwin from the sea. There are still several wartime installations to be seen, and we paused over the remaining wreckage of the USS Peary, which was sunk with the loss of 88 lives. Our friendly skipper, Jim, was happy to share his extensive knowledge of Darwin past and present, which added to the interest." Margaret, from the UK

Experience the history

Experience the history

Starting at Stokes Hill Wharf your journey on the water takes in the historic wharf areas, the Pearling Luggers, the oil tanks, the wreck sites of the SS Neptuna and USS Peary, the old flying boat base at Doctors Gully, HMAS Coonawarra and the Emery Point gun emplacement before arriving at Cullen Bay at noon.

Story Telling + Story Living:  

Story Telling + Story Living:  

Your Bombing of Darwin cruise can be combined with admission to the RFDS Bombing of Darwin virtual reality attraction on Stokes Hill Wharf.  For a discounted price, you can enjoy the BOMBING OF DARWIN DOUBLE - a definitive Bombing of Darwin experience.  Your visit to the RFDS Tourist facility first, with life size holograms, interactive story telling mini ghosts, WW2 aircraft replicas and an aerial view of the bombing raids can be either before or after your cruise, or on another day entirely.   

Your journey on water is in a comfortable fast open boat with a canopy, and fully equipped with state of the art digital technology to allow you to view the remnants of the wreck of the USS Peary on the sea floor. At the culmination of this Bombing of Darwin cruise you can choose to disembark at Cullen Bay, or stay aboard for a fast boat journey back to Stokes Hill Wharf arriving back around 12.15pm.  The  Bombing of Darwin Double can be booked here. 

Cancellation Policy and Terms and Conditions

General Terms and Conditions for Tiwi Enterprises Ltd T/As Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi:

  • Sea Darwin Sea Tiwi reserves the right to make subtle changes to advertised cruises or charters
  • Dietary requirements must be requested at the time of booking
  • Sea Darwin -Sea Tiwi reserves the right to change or cancel your booking in accordance with operating requirements or circumstances beyond its control
  • If change or cancellation prove necessary, we will give you reasonable notice based on the circumstances and will offer you a comparable alternative.
  • If an alternative is not available or acceptable you will be entitled to a full refund or a credit.
  • If a customer cancels a cruise a full refund (less $20 administration fee and 1.5% credit card fees) will be available unless it is within 48 hours where the ticket will be non-refundable.
  • Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi is not responsible for the costs of any other travel arrangements affected due to our cancellation or rescheduling of a cruise.
  • Minimum numbers apply for all our cruises and events.
  • Full payment is required at the time of booking for cruises and events, and a 25% deposit is required for all Private Charters.
  • Seating is allocated on most tours, to ensure that customers cruising together can sit together. If you are travelling with customers on a different booking, please notify at the time of booking.
  • Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi reserves the right to refuse passage to any person who presents for boarding in an intoxicated or substance affected state.
  • Customers are required to present for boarding 15 minutes prior to cruise scheduled departure time. Boarding will close 5 minutes prior to scheduled departure time. Customers not at the boarding location at that time will forfeit their ticket.
  • While every effort will be made to ensure your comfort and safety, Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi will not be held responsible for any personal injury or any equipment or clothing lost or damaged.

Release & Indemnity:

Boating can be a hazardous activity, particularly noting the vagaries of the wind, waves and tide.

You hereby waive, release, forgive, discharge and relinquish any and all claims (including, without limitation, any claims for death or personal injury) that you now have or may have in the future against Tiwi Enterprises Ltd T/As Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi, its related bodies corporate, directors, officers, masters, skippers, and employees, shareholders, agents and representatives which are connected with, arise out of, relate to or are incidental to any transaction or services with Tiwi Enterprises Ltd T/As Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi.

You hereby agree to indemnify, defend and hold Tiwi Enterprises Ltd T/As Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi, its related bodies corporate, directors, officers, masters, skippers, employees, shareholders, agents and representatives harmless from and against any and all claims, loss, damage, tax, liability and/or expense that may be incurred by Sea Darwin – Sea Tiwi Pty Ltd, its related bodies corporate, directors, officers, employees, shareholders, agents and representatives arising out of or in connection with the performance of its duties as described in these Terms and Conditions including the legal costs, fees and expenses of defending itself against any claim by any or all of the parties to any transaction and/or by any other person and/or as a result of you taking any action or refraining from taking any action or instituting or defending any action or legal proceeding.

Your questions answered Frequently asked questions

Do you offer children/family pricing.

Yes, we offer children prices (3-15 years) and family passes (2 adults + 2 children). Click on the book now button for details.

How long is the tour?

The Bombing of Darwin Cruise is a 1 hour guided tour from Stokes Hill to Cullen Bay. You can disembark at Cullen Bay at 12 noon, or stay on the boat to return to Stokes Hill for 12.15pm.

Can we disembark at Cullen Bay?

Yes! You can board this cruise at Dock 2 Stokes Hill Wharf (Big Bus Stop 10) at 11am and disembark at Cullen Bay (Big Bus Stop 4) at 12 noon. Or you can stay on the boat and return to Stokes Hill Wharf to disembark at 12.15pm.

Can this tour be combined with other experiences?

Yes! You can book the Bombing of Darwin Double, which includes entrance to the RDFS Bombing of Darwin virtual reality display at Stokes Hill Wharf and the cruise for a discounted price.

Do you offer group discounts?

Yes, please contact us directly for a quote for your group.

Will I be allocated a seat?

Yes, our crew allocate seats on all tours. This is to ensure that people who book together, are seated together. If your group has booked separately, please contact us on 1300 065 022 to ensure that we seat you together.

Enjoy a beautiful day in Darwin with us Book your tour

  • Bombing of Darwin Cruise

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We run up to 4 times daily – 7 days a week​ (dry season only)

10:00am, 11:30am, 1:00pm, 2:30pm

We drop off at the East Point Military museum (Tour 1 – 10:00am, tour 2 – 11:30am and tour 3 – 1pm only)

To book – it’s easy!

Just drop in and book with us at our kiosk outside TOURIST INFORMATION (Tourism Topend), this is where most of our Tours start from or phone us on 0455 998 346.

Tours can also be booked at the tourist office.

Alternatively, send us an email (at least the day before).

See the ‘contact us’ link – and we’ll book you a spot!

tour-times

Bombing of Darwin World War II Tour with Harbour Cruise

war tours darwin

  • Get a fresh perspective on Darwin with a World War II history tour
  • Learn about the city’s strategic importance on a harbor cruise
  • Travel back in time as you explore WWII underground bunkers
  • No transport hassles: Includes 2-way transfers from the port and CBD hotels
  • See itinerary
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off (selected hotels only)
  • Transport by air-conditioned vehicle
  • Local guide/driver
  • Live onboard commentary
  • Entry/Admission - Sea Darwin
  • Entry/Admission - Darwin Military Museum
  • Entry/Admission - Defence of Darwin Experience
  • Entry/Admission - Charles Darwin National Park
  • Food and drinks
  • Aquascene Fish Feeding Sanctuary & Cafe, 28 Doctors Gully Rd, Larrakeyah NT 0820, Australia
  • Pick up is limited to Darwin CBD hotels. Please contact us if you require pick up from a CBD location not listed above. Pick up time for CBD hotels is between 0730 and 0800. Please be ready in your hotel foyer 20 minutes prior to tour start time of 0800.
  • Darwin Cruise Ship Terminal
  • Not wheelchair accessible
  • Near public transportation
  • Infants must sit on laps
  • Confirmation will be received at time of booking
  • Travellers should have a moderate physical fitness level
  • This experience requires good weather. If it’s cancelled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund
  • This experience requires a minimum number of travellers. If it’s cancelled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund
  • This tour/activity will have a maximum of 10 travellers
  • All sales are final and incur 100% cancellation penalties.
  • Defence of Darwin Experience
  • Darwin Military Museum
  • Cullen Bay Marina

Similar experiences

war tours darwin

  • You'll start at Aquascene Fish Feeding Sanctuary & Cafe Or, you can also get picked up See departure details
  • 1 Sea Darwin Stop: 60 minutes - Admission included See details
  • 2 Cullen Bay Marina Stop: 5 minutes See details
  • 3 Darwin Military Museum Stop: 45 minutes - Admission included See details
  • 4 Defence of Darwin Experience Stop: 45 minutes - Admission included See details
  • 5 Charles Darwin National Park Stop: 20 minutes - Admission included See details
  • You'll return to the starting point

war tours darwin

  • ChristineP2074 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Stunning! Very relaxed and interesting, excellent barramundi and chips from Fusion, fabulous sunset, Kerry certainly knew how to position us for the best view. Read more Written 23 April 2024
  • taste74 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Amazing Darwin sunset fish and chips cruise was fantastic the staff were all amazing. The fish and chips were also top notch .. highly recommend to everyone Read more Written 5 March 2024
  • jessbI9711WC 0 contributions 1.0 of 5 bubbles Unprofessional and not understanding. Due to serious unforeseen circumstances my friends and I had to cancel. We received no opportunity to rebook or get a refund. The company were unresponsive and non understanding of our situation. One was dealing with a police matter (teacher) and the other was in hospital. We were told we would at least get a refund but were told later on that it wouldn’t be possible. The company displayed no compassion or understanding. Read more Written 16 February 2024
  • Y671SNdianneb 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Great cruise - awesome staff Extremely happy to give a 10/10 review for our cruise this evening. The views were great. The fish and chips were delicious. The staff were awesome - knowledgeable, super friendly and obliging. We were a party of three and we all thoroughly enjoyed our cruise. Read more Written 10 February 2024
  • petermU8631QD 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles July Cruise This was an excellent tour, thoroughly enjoyable night & we even got to walk out on the harbour sandbar as it was very low tide. Fabulous & highly enjoyable. Thank you I cruise again with you Read more Written 5 February 2024
  • jdrew43 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Well worth a visit Well worth a visit. Very informative . Virtual reality of bombing of Darwin, going inside RFD plane all great experiences. . Read more Written 4 November 2023
  • V3839VOpaulr 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Fantastic way to end the day in Darwin! Fantastic way to end the day in Darwin. From the moment we touched base with the staff we were treated as guests & taken care of. The fish n chips were great & super fresh. The highlight for me was to see some of Darwin Harbour & learn just a little about this fascinating place. Staff were simply 10/10. We could not be happier. Initially I thought the cruise a bit expensive but by the time we disembarked, I felt we certainly got our moneys worth. I highly recommend taking this cruise or any other this becomes provides. Knowledgeable, friendly, informative & fun. Read more Written 28 October 2023
  • 679mareea 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Worth the price. Very well organized. The narrator spoke very clearly and we could hear everything he said. There were couple of naval ships in the bay so it created more atmosphere. I would definitely recommend this tour as we really enjoyed it. Good price as you get to see the RFDS also which is very interesting. Read more Written 20 October 2023
  • JudithPerth 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles What fun! Best fish and chips rivalled only by great fun experience in boat. Went with my 82 yr old Dad... Greatest grin ever.thanks Sea Darwin Read more Written 20 October 2023
  • V8530JFlisap 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles The whole trip was amazing. The cruise was amazing, especially loved the sunset. The food was yummy, and hot. The crew members were awesome, so nice and friendly. Read more Written 17 October 2023
  • kenfD1515CZ 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Cruising the harbour with an historical highlight. A great experience combining a harbour cruise with very interesting information about the bombing of Darwin. The tour operators were very knowledgeable, friendly and full of interesting anecdotes. Read more Written 17 October 2023
  • L6983BVjaker 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles A must do! Exceeded our expectations!! Highly recommend. The tour guides were knowledgeable, friendly and funny. A wonderful relaxing atmosphere. Read more Written 11 October 2023
  • 548jacquieb 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Bombs, Boats and Planes Super interesting. The guides were very knowledgeable. The RFDS display was interesting and the WW11 3D experience was informative and fun. Great way to start our discovery of Darwin history. Read more Written 1 October 2023
  • O3135VGnaomim 0 contributions 2.0 of 5 bubbles Disappointing not value for money . Interesting tour which could been great but not as advertised . One of the main reasons we took the tour was for the underwater camera to see the ship wreckage. The camera was not working and appeared it had not been working for some time the guide made some comment about it not working last few days . Not the guides fault but we feel this should have been made clear prior to our tour. This is really one of the main reasons for taking the tour as most other things can be viewed from shore . Secondly we shared a tour with a large school tour group who were given prime seats up the front of the boat and we were stuck up the back despite having been at the dock earlier than the group arrived . I do not feel they should have sold the additonal seats on this tour if we were going to be treated as less favoured guests . It effected the experience of my five year old as up the back the boat is higher and so the structure of the boat makes it harder to see and despite the guides saying we could sit on coaches towards front it had no sun coverage and they were low and facing wrong way . I just don’t agree that as paying guests we should have been treated this way. Normal protocol on a cruise is guests are let on in order they arrive . I think the guide could tell I was not impressed and tried to accomodate us but really I think the combo of the camera not working and then being stuck at back would mean I wouldn’t recommend this as value for money . For a family of 4 it’s an expensive hour $180 and for that price these things should be taken care of . Particularly the camera it was not as advertised and we should have been offered another tour or something Read more Written 30 September 2023
  • Pagimp 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Bonus Sandbar Recommend this tour, to get a history of the harbour and its previous history and current business. Great city views, delicious fish. Friendly welcoming crew, bonus view of the sunset disembarking onto a sandbar Read more Written 25 September 2023

More to explore in Darwin

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Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order.

Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as waiting time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.

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Bombing of Darwin World War II Tour with Harbour Cruise provided by Sea Darwin

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SMALL GROUP PERSONALISED TOUR

COMFORTABLE AIRCONDITIONED VEHICLE

CBD HOTEL PICK UP

TAKE A GLIMPSE INTO THE PAST

AND WALK IN THEIR FOOTSTEPS

Bombing of Darwin C ity Sights Tour

8.30am - 12.30pm.

Adults : $135

Concession: $120

Children (5-15): $65

Entry Fee to the museum

Tour includes

Visible evidence of the attack

Untold Stories

Original Photos

Fully airconditioned comfortable transport

CBD Hotel Pickup

Entry Fee to Museum

Light snacks

Cold drinking water

BONUS see Darwin's beautiful sights at the same time

Please bring: Comfortable walking shoes, Hat, Camera, an Open mind

war tours darwin

CUSTOMER REVIEW (one of many)

G'day Garry the Legend,

Just a quick note to say thanks for making our stay in Darwin quite memorable, Nicky and I have been sharing with everyone what a top day we had with you.

Pat and Angela went on the tour after us and there telling everyone as well.

How the local uni hasn't snapped you up to teach on the subject has me buggered.

Anyway have a great wet season and we hope to see you again in the dry.

Cheers from

The Sgt Major and Missus.

Dr. Peter.H.Broxham, PhD

Garry's ORIGINAL Bombing Of Darwin World War II Heritage Tour

DARWIN was devastated and AUSTRALIA seriously threatened by the JAPANESE BOMBINGS in WWII.

Why did the Curtin Government deliberately manipulate the truth?

Why was there a cover up by successive Governments for decades after?

What REALLY did happen?

Find out the answers to these fascinating questions, plus much more in this unique personalised tour.

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See different aspects of Darwin Harbour

To all my loyal and future customers

my book has FINALLY ARRIVED!

war tours darwin

inc postage

Royal Australian Navy

Letter of Appreciation

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The Darwin History and Wartime Experience - Darwin City Sights Tour

The Darwin History and Wartime Experience - Darwin City Sights Tour

  • Duration: 80 Minutes (approx.)
  • Location : Darwin, Northern Territory
  • Product code: PG0U5C

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Darwin city sights including key attractions

Includes guides, transportation, lunch, snacks and hotel pickup and drop-off 5 hours coach sightseeing tour of Darwin Parliament house, Palmerston town and the Darwin Botanical Gardens Defence of Darwin experience to learn about Darwin’s experience during WWII Museum and Art Gallery  Fannie Bay Goal and Darwin Aviation Heritage Centre  

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Kakadu Full-Day Tour from Darwin

Includes guide, transportation, lunch, snacks, hotel pickup and drop-off Kakadu full-day tour Tabletop Range Rock art at Ubirr Rock in Kakadu National Park Cruise tour in the East Alligator river Florence falls, Tolmer falls and Wangi falls Arnhem land

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Litchfield National Park Day Tour

Includes guide, transportation, lunch, snacks and hotel pickup and drop-off Litchfield National Park  Tabletop Range  Florence Falls, Tolmer Falls and Wangi Falls Buffet lunch at Litchfield cafe in the national park

2 days 1 nights

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Bombing of Darwin World War II Tour with Harbour Cruise

Includes guide, transportation, lunch, snacks and hotel pickup and drop-off Half-day World War II historical city and cruise tour in Darwin Tour the East Point Military Precinct  Military Museum  Small-boat cruise to see bomb and wreck sites of Japan’s 1942

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Private Tour – Jumping Crocodile Experience

There are few ways of getting close to 19-foot (6-meter) long saltwater crocodile safely, but the Jumping Croc Cruise is one. On a sturdy boat with well-trained staff you’ll cruise out onto the Adelaide River, looking for crocs. Staff will entice the animals with food, causing them to jump high in the air. This is […]

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Broken Beach, Angel’s Billabong, Kelingking Beach & Crystal Bay : Nusa Penida West

Immerse yourself in the breathtaking landscapes of Nusa Penida West, a paradise tucked away in the Indonesian archipelago. This tour package will take you on an unforgettable journey to explore the mesmerizing natural wonders of Broken Beach, Angel’s Billabong, Kelingking Beach, and Crystal Bay. Prepare to be captivated by the sheer beauty and tranquility of […]

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Rolling Stones members Ronnie Wood (L), Mick Jagger and Keith Richards rock out in concert.

The Rolling Stones have decided who will “Start Them Up” on tour this year.

However, unlike most tours, the Rock and Roll Hall of Famers are mixing things up and bringing different opening acts to each city they’re hitting on the spring and summer  ‘The Stones Tour ’24 Hackney Diamonds.’

Just a few of the big names joining them include Gary Clark Jr. ( April 28 in Houston ), Joe Bonamassa ( May 15 in Seattle ), Tyler Childers ( June 3 in Orlando ), KALEO ( June 11 in Philadelphia ) and Lainey Wilson ( June 30 in Chicago ).

As for their MetLife Stadium gigs, pop-soul outfit Lawrence is slated to kick things off at their Sunday, May 26 concert ; no opener has been announced for the Thursday, May 23 show .

And if you’ve been on the fence about catching Mick, Keith and Ronnie live because you fear exorbitant ticket prices, we’re happy to report that some shows have cheaper seats available than one might imagine.

At the time of publication, the lowest price we found on tickets was just $21 before fees on Vivid Seats.

Yes, you read that right. Just $21. We couldn’t believe it either.

Other nights have seats starting anywhere from $44 to $109 before fees (excluding festival dates).

Curious how much tickets cost and who will be opening for the Stones at the show nearest you this year?

While we can’t guarantee we’ll give you what you want, we promise you’ll get what you need.

Our team has all the details you’re looking for and more about the Rolling Stones’ 2024 ‘Hackney Diamonds Tour’ below.

All prices listed above are subject to fluctuation.

Rolling Stones tour schedule 2024

A complete calendar including all tour dates, venues, opening acts and links to the cheapest tickets available can be found below.

(Note: The New York Post confirmed all above prices at the publication time. All prices are in US dollars, subject to fluctuation and include additional fees at checkout .)

Vivid Seats is a verified secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand. 

They offer a 100% buyer guarantee that states your transaction will be safe and secure and your tickets will be delivered prior to the event.

New Orleans Jazz Festival 2024

The musically diverse New Orleans Jazz Festival — they don’t do just jazz, contrary to popular belief — returns to the Big Easy on April 25-28 and May 2-5 next year.

At the two-weekend fest, Mick and co. will be joined by fellow Rock Hall of Famers Neil Young , Earth Wind and Fire , Heart , The Beach Boys and Foo Fighters .

Want to go?

Click here to check out single and multi-day general admission options.

Rolling Stones openers on tour

Many of the big names joining the Stones on the road have quite a few more shows lined up this year.

For a clearer picture, here are all the Rolling Stones opening acts who are on tour these next few months.

Gary Clark Jr. Carin León Joe Bonamassa

Lawrence The Red Clay Strays Tyler Childers KALEO Widespread Panic Lainey Wilson The War and Treaty The Beaches

The Rolling Stones set list

This 16-concert run will be the group’s first official North American trek since 2019’s ‘No Filter Tour,’ which concluded two years later due to COVID-related postponements.

Here’s what the band played at their last run, courtesy of  Set List FM .

01.) “Street Fighting Man” 02.) “Let’s Spend the Night Together” 03.) “19th Nervous Breakdown” 04.) “Tumbling Dice” 05.) “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” 06.) “Living in a Ghost Town” 07.) “Start Me Up” 08.) “Honky Tonk Women” 09.) “Connection” 10.) “Slipping Away” 11.) “Miss You” 12.) “Midnight Rambler” 13.) “Paint It Black” 14.) “Sympathy for the Devil” 15.) “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”

16.) “Gimme Shelter”

17.) “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”

Most recently, the band surprised New Yorkers when they performed a set at  Racket  in the Meatpacking District with Lady Gaga.

You can find their seven-song set list from the October 2023 one-off show  here .

The Rolling Stones new music

On Oct. 20, the Stones released their 26th American studio album,  “Hackney Diamonds,”  featuring special guests Paul McCartney, Elton John, Lady Gaga and Stevie Wonder.

Comprised of 12 hard-rocking tracks that wouldn’t be out of place alongside their singalong stadium anthems of yore, “Diamonds” shows that Mick, Keith and Ronnie still have their sticky fingers on rock and roll’s pulse.

“We wouldn’t have put this album out if we didn’t really like it,” Jagger, 80, told Jimmy Fallon. “We must say that we are quite pleased with it. We’re not big-headed but we hope you like it.”

If you’re looking to sample the record, we suggest starting with the fierce lead track “Angry” and the wistful ballad “Dreamy Skies.”

Prefer to listen in full? You can find “Hackney Diamonds”  here .

The Rolling Stones band members

No joke — the upcoming tour is sponsored by AARP.

Rather than shy away from their age, the legendary rockers are embracing their elder statesman status.

To give you a peek at who’s in the group these days, take a look below.

Mick Jagger   (80-years-old)   lead and backing vocals, harmonica, rhythm guitar, percussion, keyboards, bass guitar  (1962–present)

Keith Richards   (80-years-old)   rhythm and lead guitars, bass guitar, keyboards, percussion, backing and lead vocals  (1962–present)

Ronnie Wood   (76-years-old)   lead and rhythm guitars, bass guitar, backing vocals, pedal steel guitar  (1975–present)

Backing musicians include Chuck Leavell, Bernard Fowler, Matt Clifford, Darryl Jones, Tim Ries, Karl Denson, Chanelle Haynes and Steve Jordan.

Their longtime drummer Charlie Watts passed away in August 2021.

Classic rockers on tour in 2024

Many AARP card-carrying icons will take the stage this year and next.

Here are just five of our favorite acts you won’t want to miss live in the near future.

•  Neil Young

•  Bob Dylan with Robert Plant and Willie Nelson

•  Electric Light Orchestra

•  Ringo Starr

•  Justin Hayward of The Moody Blues

Need more ’60s and ’70s hitmakers in your life? Check out our list of the 52 biggest classic rockers on tour in 2024 to find the show for you.

Why you should trust ‘Post Wanted’ by the New York Post

This article was written by Matt Levy , New York Post live events reporter. Levy stays up-to-date on all the latest tour announcements for your favorite musical artists and comedians, as well as Broadway openings, sporting events and more live shows – and finds great ticket prices online. Since he started his tenure at the Post in 2022, Levy has reviewed Bruce Springsteen and interviewed Melissa Villaseñor of SNL fame, to name a few. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.

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Anzac Day is this Thursday. Here's where to watch a service and how to make Anzac biscuits

Three wreath laid at a memorial

This week Australians and New Zealanders will stop to commemorate Anzac Day. 

But while the date is specific to the Gallipoli landing in 1915, it's a day to pay respect to all Australians who have served and died in military operations throughout history. 

When is Anzac Day?

Anzac Day is on April 25 every year. 

This year, that falls on a Thursday. 

Is Anzac Day a public holiday?

Anzac Day is a public holiday across Australia and New Zealand. 

In years where April 25 falls on a weekend, some states and territories may hold the public holiday on the Monday or Friday — but because it's on a weekday this year, that's not the case. 

What does Anzac stand for?

Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. 

What is Anzac Day?

It's a national day of remembrance, commemorating those who have served and died in military operations.

Or, as the Australian War Memorial puts it, it's a time for the nation to "reflect on the many different meanings of war".

Poppies at the Australian War Memorial

What's an Anzac biscuit?

These days, an Anzac biscuit (or bickie, depending on how casual you want to be) is typically a sweet oaty biscuit made with desiccated coconut and golden syrup. 

Freshly baked Anzac biscuits cooling on a rack.

But in a summary of Australia's Anzac Day traditions written for the federal government , David Watt points out that this wasn't always the case. 

"The original Anzac biscuit, also known as the Anzac wafer or tile, was a hardtack biscuit or long shelf-life biscuit substitute for bread," he says. 

"These were not necessarily popular with soldiers at Gallipoli, but there are now recipes for more edible domestic versions."

The Australian War Museum has three historical Anzac biscuit recipes on its website , which we've reproduced here:

Anzac tile/wafer recipe

The army biscuit, also known as an Anzac wafer or Anzac tile, is essentially a long shelf-life, hardtack biscuit, eaten as a substitute for bread. Unlike bread, though, the biscuits are very, very hard. Some soldiers preferred to grind them up and eat them as porridge. The following recipe has been supplied courtesy of Arnott's Biscuits Limited, through Frank Townsend, chief chemist. Originally, the biscuits were baked in large industrial ovens but the recipe has been altered so that one can bake them in a domestic oven. Ingredients sufficient for six biscuits: 200gm/1.5cups/300mls flour 400 gm/3 cups/600 mls wholemeal flour 40 gm/5 tbls sugar 20 gm/3 tbls milk powder 1.5 gm/good pinch salt 220 mls water (Use self-raising flour. If self-raising flour is not available, sieve 10 grams of baking powder together with plain flour before adding other ingredients.) Method Place flour, sugar, and milk powder in a large bowl and blend with your fingertips. Form into a pile and scoop out a hole (well) in the centre. Add all of the water in which the salt has been dissolved. Thoroughly work the flour from the inside of the well into the water until the whole is a mass of lumps of flour and water. Once the dough is formed, transfer it to a tabletop or pastry board. The dough should now be torn apart, rubbed into balls, and thrown together, and the process repeated until the mass is well mixed and in the form of a hard dough. The dough is then rested for about half an hour. Now roll the dough in 8mm–thick sheets using a rolling pin and two 8mm thick guides (wooden slats are ideal), the dough being rolled down between the two guides until the rolling pin rests on the guides during each traverse. The rolled sheet of dough is then cut into 90 mm squares, preferably by pressing with the edge of a steel rule rather than slicing with a knife. The pressing action helps to join the top and bottom surfaces and will improve the lift on baking. A cardboard square, 90 mm on each side, can be used as a pattern to ensure uniformity in your tiles. Next, the biscuit squares should be docked by having a regular horizontal and vertical pattern of holes pushed into them at about 18 mm spaces with a flat-ended pin or rod. Push it in until it bottoms, twist slightly, and then withdraw. Repeat at the next position. Each biscuit should have five vertical and five horizontal rows of docker holes, 25 holes in all. There are those at the Memorial who argue for 49 holes (7 x 7) as the authentic number of docker holes. Place on a lightly greased steel baking sheet, with the biscuits about 6 mm apart, and form a wall around the load with scrap dough to avoid burning the edges of the biscuits. Bake at about 200 degrees centigrade for 30 to 40 minutes on a low shelf in the oven. Take care not to burn them. To achieve a suitable hardness in your biscuits, store for a time in an air-tight container.

Source: Australian War Memorial

Anzac biscuits (without coconut)

The popular Anzac biscuit is a traditional, eggless sweet biscuit. Early recipes did not include coconut. The following recipe (without coconut) was published in The Capricornian (Rockhampton, Queensland) on Saturday, 14th August 1926. Ingredients 2 cups rolled oats 1/2 cup sugar 1 cup plain flour 1/2 cup melted butter 1 tbsp golden syrup 2 tbsp boiling water 1 tsp bicarbonate soda (add a little more water if mixture is too dry) Method Combine dry ingredients. Mix golden syrup, boiling water and bicarbonate of soda until they froth. Add melted butter. Combine butter mixture and dry ingredients. Drop teaspoons of mixture onto floured tray, allowing room for spreading. Bake in a slow oven.

Anzac biscuits (with coconut)

The Country Women's Association of New South Wales Calendar of Cake and Afternoon Tea Delicacies: a recipe for each day of the year (Sydney: The Association, 1933) included two recipes for Anzac biscuits, one without coconut and the following version which included coconut. Anzac biscuits, No. 2 Ingredients: 1 cup each of rolled oats, sugar and coconut 1 tablespoon syrup 3/4 cup flour 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda (dissolved in 2 tablespoons boiling water) Method Melt butter. Add syrup to dissolved soda and water. Combine with melted butter. Mix dry ingredients and stir in liquid. Place small balls on to a buttered tray and bake in a moderate oven. Lift out carefully with a knife as they are soft till cold.

Why is Anzac Day on April 25?

It's the anniversary of the first major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand armed forces during World War I. 

On April 25 1915, the soldiers landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula, in what was then known as Turkey (which is now officially known as Türkiye).

The ultimate objective was to capture Constantinople (now Istanbul), which was the capital of the Ottoman Empire. 

This was when Australia and New Zealand were fighting as part of the Commonwealth for Britain, which had declared war against Germany. 

The Ottoman Empire was, at the time, an ally of Germany. 

The Gallipoli campaign was supposed to be a fast victory, but it ended up dragging on for eight months, with heavy casualties on both sides. 

More than 8,000 Australian soldiers died during the campaign.

It had a profound impact on Australians at home and the first day of the campaign "became the day on which Australians remembered the sacrifice of those who died in the war", the Australian War Memorial website says. 

"Although the Gallipoli campaign failed in its military objectives, the actions of Australian and New Zealand forces during the campaign left a powerful legacy," the website says. 

"What became known as the 'Anzac legend' became an important part of the identity of both nations, shaping the ways in which they viewed both their past and their future."

How is Anzac Day commemorated?

There are many traditions associated with the day, but the two key events are a memorial service at dawn and a march later in the day. 

Dawn services are symbolic of the time Anzac forces originally landed on the shores of Gallipoli.

These ceremonies typically involve the laying of floral wreaths, a moment of silence and a rendition of The Last Post — which is a specific tune played on a bugle. 

Later in the day, former and current military personnel and family representatives march in a parade and gather with the public for a formal memorial service. 

Anyone can go to the public services , which are typically held in central areas. 

Silhouettes of military personnel at the national Anzac Day dawn service

How can I find Anzac Day service near me?

Head to the RSL Australia official website to find out what events are happening near you .

But if you're unable to make it there in person, you can watch the services on ABC TV and the station's streaming service ABC iview. 

The Sydney Dawn Service will be broadcast live on ABC TV, ABC NEWS channel, ABC iview and on the ABC listen app from 4:20am AEST, followed by the Canberra Dawn Service at 5:30am.

ABC TV and ABC NEWS channel will broadcast the Gallipoli Dawn Service live from 12:30pm AEST, the Villers-Bretonneux Dawn Service from 1:30pm AEST and the governor-general's address from 6:55pm AEST.

But there will be broadcasts for each of the nation's capital cities. 

Capital city broadcasts

Every capital city will have live TV coverage of a local march, however coverage of capital city dawn services varies.

State TV broadcasts of capital city marches and dawn services will also be streamed live on ABC iview.

The Adelaide Dawn Service will be broadcast live on ABC TV, ABC iview, ABC Radio Adelaide, ABC Radio SA and on the ABC listen app from 6am to 7am (CST).

The Adelaide March will be broadcast on ABC TV and ABC iview from 9am to 12pm (CST) and will include highlights of the Adelaide Dawn Service.

  • ABC TV South Australia Live Stream

The Brisbane March will be broadcast live between 10am and 12.30pm (AEST) on ABC TV and ABC iview. 

  • ABC TV Queensland Live Stream

The Darwin Dawn Service will be broadcast live on ABC TV, ABC iview, ABC Radio Darwin, ABC Radio NT and on the ABC listen app from 6am to 7am (CST).

The Darwin March will be broadcast on ABC TV from 9am to 10am (CST).

  • ABC TV Northern Territory Live Stream

The Canberra Dawn Service will be broadcast live on ABC TV, ABC NEWS channel, ABC iview, Radio National, ABC Local Radio and on the ABC listen app from 5.30am (AEST).

  • ABC TV ACT Live Stream

The Hobart March will be broadcast live between 11am and 12.30pm (AEST) on ABC TV and ABC iview. This will include highlights of the Hobart Dawn Service .

  • ABC TV Tasmania Live Stream

The Melbourne March which will include Dawn Service highlights and will be broadcast on ABC TV and ABC iview from 9am to 12pm (AEST). 

The Melbourne Dawn Service  will be broadcast live on ABC Radio Melbourne and on the ABC listen app  from 5.30am.

  • ABC TV Victoria Live Stream

The Perth March will be broadcast live between 9am and 10:30am (AWST) on ABC TV and ABC iview. This will include highlights of the Perth Dawn Service .

  • ABC TV Western Australia Live Stream

The Sydney Dawn Service will be broadcast live on ABC TV, ABC NEWS channel, ABC iview, ABC Radio Sydney, ABC Radio NSW and on the ABC listen app from 4:20am (AEST).

The Sydney March will be broadcast on ABC TV and ABC iview from 9am (AEST).

  • ABC TV New South Wales Live Stream

All Anzac Day TV programming will be added to the Australia Remembers collection on ABC iview.

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Lainey Wilson, Tyler Childers, The War and Treaty & More to Open Shows for The Rolling Stones

Other artists opening for the rock band's upcoming shows include KALEO and Ghost Hounds.

By Jessica Nicholson

Jessica Nicholson

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Lainey Wilson

The Rolling Stones will launch the group’s Hackney Diamonds North American tour on April 28 at NRG Houston, and the lineup of openers for various dates on the tour includes a few heavy-hitters from country and Americana circles.

The Rolling Stones 2024 ‘Hackney Diamonds’ Tour: Where to Get Tickets for…

Wilson will open for The Rolling Stones on June 30 at Soldier Field in Chicago, while Childers, who released his sixth album Rustin in the Rain in 2023, will perform June 3 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando. The Red Clay Strays, who earned their first major Billboard Hot 100 entry this year with “Wondering Why,” will open for the rockers on May 30 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass. Grammy-nominated duo The War and Treaty, who just released the video for their song “Stealing a Kiss,” will open for The Stones on July 10 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

The tour supports The Rolling Stones’ album Hackney Diamonds , their first project of new, original material in nearly two decades.

Notably, Wilson and The War and Treaty were part of a 2023 tribute album to The Rolling Stones, Stoned Cold Country, which featured several country artists performing Stones classics.

See the full list of tour dates below:

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Muted Reactions to Israeli Strikes on Iran Hint at De-Escalation

Israel had vowed retaliation for Iran’s attack last weekend, but the strikes reported overnight were limited, and Iran downplayed them.

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A crowd of people at a rally. Many are carrying flags and signs.

Farnaz Fassihi ,  Ronen Bergman and Patrick Kingsley

Here are the latest developments.

The Israeli military struck Iran early on Friday, according to two Israeli and three Iranian officials, in what appeared to be Israel’s first military response to Iran’s attack last weekend but one whose scope, at least initially, appeared to be limited.

The Iranian officials said that a strike had hit a military air base near the city of Isfahan, in central Iran. Initial reaction in both Israel and Iran was muted , which analysts said was a sign that the rivals were seeking to lower the temperature of their conflict. World leaders, who for nearly a week have urged Israel and Iran to avoid starting a broader war in the region, called for both sides to de-escalate tensions on Friday.

The Israeli military declined to comment on the strike. A senior U.S. official said that Israel had notified the United States through multiple channels shortly before the attack. All the officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

The explosions came less than a week after Iran fired more than 300 missiles and drones at Israel — nearly all of which were shot down — in response to an April 1 strike on an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria that killed seven Iranian officials. That attack brought the decades-long shadow war between Israel and Iran — waged on land, at sea, in air and in cyberspace — more clearly into the open.

Here’s what else to know:

A Western official and two Iranian officials said that Israel used both missiles fired from warplanes and drones in the strike , suggesting that the attack included more advanced firepower than initial reports indicated. Iranian officials initially told The New York Times that the attack had been carried out only by small drones, possibly launched from inside Iran, and that radar systems had not detected unidentified aircraft entering Iranian airspace. They said that a separate group of small drones was shot down in the region of Tabriz, roughly 500 miles north of Isfahan.

In public, Iranian officials sought to downplay the strike. Maj. Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi, the commander in chief of Iran’s army, said explosions heard early Friday in Isfahan “were from our air defense firing at a suspicious object,” and that there had been “no damage.” Iranian news agencies appeared keen to show that things were “back to normal” in the city.

President Ebrahim Raisi of Iran had warned that “the tiniest act of aggression” on his country’s soil would draw a response. But in the hours after Israel’s strike, there have been no public calls for retribution by Iranian officials. One lawmaker, Seyed Nezamedin Mousavi, called the strike “ridiculous,” saying it showed Israel “is content with these ineffective actions.”

Isfahan is one of Iran’s most famous and historic cities . The area also hosts a number of Iranian military sites. Iranian media reported that nuclear facilities in Isfahan had not been hit.

Israeli leaders came close to ordering widespread strikes in Iran on the night Iran attacked, officials said, but the war cabinet postponed a decision. Mr. Biden and other world leaders urged Israel for days not to retaliate in a way that would inflame a wider Middle East war while it fights Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, both allies of Iran.

Alissa J. Rubin

Alissa J. Rubin

An explosion damages a military base in Iraq used by an Iran-backed armed group.

Iraq’s joint military command says one person was killed and eight were injured in an explosion early Saturday at a base used by an Iranian-backed armed group, Harakat al Nujaba, in Iraq’s Babylon Province.

In a carefully worded statement, Iraq’s military did not attribute the explosion to an air attack with a missile or a drone. “Air Defense Command confirmed that there was no drone or jet fighter in the airspace of Babylon Province before and during the explosion,” the statement said.

Privately, however, military officials say it appears that at least one projectile hit inside the Kalsu base’s perimeter. A video taken shortly after the event and posted on social media showed damaged buildings and a large rubble-filled crater. A second video showed several parts of the base on fire.

According to Iraq’s joint command, the base is used by several elements of the Iraqi security forces including the Iraqi Army and police as well as the Popular Mobilization Forces , or P.M.F., an umbrella organization.

The P.M.F. includes some brigades that are backed by Iran. The one stationed at this base, Harakat al Nujaba, has participated in attacks on U.S. installations in Iraq and Syria. More recently it has joined with other Iranian-backed forces in Syria and Lebanon to attack Israeli territory.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the strike.

The U.S. military, which has carried out strikes on Iranian-backed armed groups in Iraq in the past, said in a statement released shortly after the attack that it had not participated in strikes on locations in Iraq. The Israeli military declined to comment.

The explosion came a day after Israel attacked a military air base near the city of Isfahan in central Iran, according to two Israeli and three Iranian officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. That attack, on Friday, appeared to be Israel’s first military response to Iran’s huge drone and missile attack on Israeli soil nearly a week ago.

Falih Hassan contributed reporting from Baghdad.

Farnaz Fassihi

Farnaz Fassihi

Iran’s foreign minister, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, who is in New York attending U.N. meetings, told Iran’s state news agency that the small quadcopter targeting a military base in Isfahan did not have casualties or damage. “Israel is determined to portray its defeat as a victory,” Mr. Amir Abdollahian said, the most senior official to comment on the attacks and draw a link to Israel publicly.

Christoph Koettl

Christoph Koettl and Christiaan Triebert

Satellite imagery shows that a precision attack damaged an air defense system at an Iranian base.

The Israeli attack on an Iranian air base in Isfahan hit a crucial part of an air defense system, a New York Times analysis of satellite imagery found.

Images showed that the precision attack at the Eighth Shekari Air Base damaged or destroyed the “flap-lid” radar , which is used in S-300 air defense systems to track incoming targets.

The Times used several satellite images in its analysis; the location of the damaged area was first pointed out on the social media platform X by Aurora Intel , and the findings have also been confirmed by a former U.S. government imagery analyst, Chris Biggers.

The radar is typically surrounded by several vehicles, including four trucks carrying missiles. Before the strike, the missiles were seen positioned next to the radar. After the strike, they had been moved and did not appear visibly damaged. It was not clear why the missiles had been moved. However, the fact that they appear undamaged indicated that the attack had a very precise target, according to Mr. Biggers.

Other areas of the air base and adjacent airport also appeared to be undamaged. The precision of the strike, deep within Iran and with several sensitive sites close by, suggested Israel chose the specific and narrow target, the air defense system.

According to the Missile Defense Project of the Washington think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies, Iran has acquired Russian-made S-300 air defense systems to deter Israeli and other airstrikes.

Kayla Guo

Reporting from the Capitol

Liberal Democrats urge ‘no’ vote on Israel aid to pressure Biden on Gaza.

A group of left-leaning House Democrats is urging its colleagues to oppose the $26 billion aid package for Israel, hoping to maximize the number of “no” votes from the party and send a warning to President Biden about the depth of his political coalition’s discontent over his support for Israel’s tactics in Gaza.

Framing the upcoming vote as a make-or-break moral choice akin to Congress’s votes to authorize and fund the Iraq war, progressive leaders in the House are working to muster a sizable bloc of Democratic opposition to the aid measure, which is expected to pass on Saturday and become law in the coming days.

“In the wake of those votes, people came around much, much later and said, ‘We shouldn’t have allowed that to go forward,’” Representative Pramila Jayapal, Democrat of Washington and the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said of the decades-ago debate over Iraq. “And I think that this is that moment.”

Representative Joaquin Castro, Democrat of Texas, called it a “defining vote,” adding, “We’re either going to participate in the carnage, or we’re not.”

There is little doubt that the bill, which would send roughly $13 billion in military assistance to Israel as it continues its offensive in Gaza, will pass the House, along with money for Ukraine, Taiwan and other American allies.

But progressive Democrats estimated that 40 to 60 members of their party may oppose it on the House floor on Saturday. That would be a striking signal from Congress, where ironclad bipartisan backing for Israel has long been the norm. And it would highlight the fraught divisions the war in Gaza has sown within the Democratic Party, even as more Democrats including Mr. Biden have begun to criticize Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the conflict and urge him to better protect civilians.

The legislation would allocate $5 billion to Israel’s defense capabilities and $9 billion for “worldwide humanitarian aid,” including for civilians in Gaza. But it would not place further conditions on how Israel could use American military aid, nor block future arms transfers from the United States as an increasing number of Democrats have sought to do.

Democrats who are leading the push against the Israel aid bill said they strongly supported the Jewish state and its right to defend itself, and would vote in favor of sending military aid that supports Israel’s defense capabilities, such as by replenishing the Iron Dome, David’s Sling and Iron Beam defense systems. They also denounced the Oct. 7 terrorist attack by Hamas that prompted the war, and said the hostages taken by Hamas must be released.

But they argued that approving more offensive weaponry without conditions was an untenable moral and political position that would amount to an endorsement of Mr. Netanyahu’s prosecution of the war, including his intention to invade Rafah over the objections of the Biden administration. More than 33,000 people in Gaza have been killed since the start of the conflict, according to the health ministry there, and the population is facing a hunger crisis.

“I understand the need for defensive weapons for Israel, particularly in light of the attack by Iran,” said Representative Ro Khanna, Democrat of California, who ran his first campaign on an antiwar platform and helped lead efforts to end U.S. participation in the war in Yemen. “But there is no justification to provide bombs and weapons to Netanyahu to continue the war in Gaza that is killing thousands of innocent Palestinian women and children.”

Saturday’s vote will recall a similar situation from 2007, when the speaker at the time, Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California, split a piece of spending legislation to allow Democrats to register their opposition to funding the Iraq war while backing a domestic funding bill. Speaker Mike Johnson, Republican of Louisiana, similarly divided the foreign aid package to be considered on Saturday in order to get each element across the finish line in the face of distinct coalitions of resistance to different pieces of the bill.

In a critical test vote on Friday , the House agreed, 316 to 94, to bring up the package, with 39 Democrats — mostly progressives — joining 55 Republicans in opposition.

“This is a moment for members of Congress who support a safe and secure Israel to send a message that giving Netanyahu more offensive weapons is not a path for peace and security for Israelis and Palestinians,” Representative Becca Balint, Democrat of Vermont and the first Jewish member of Congress to call for a cease-fire, said in an interview. “To give Netanyahu more offensive weapons at this stage, I believe, is to condone the destruction of Gaza that we’ve seen in the last six months. And it’s also a green light for an invasion of Rafah.”

Representative Lloyd Doggett, a Texas Democrat who led the opposition to funding for the Iraq war in 2007, said the conversations among Democrats in Congress opposing continued U.S. backing for the war in Gaza were “not unlike” those that took place 17 years ago.

“We may well be casting the vote on whether a much wider war takes place, and whether American weapons go that result in the death of thousands of innocent people,” Mr. Doggett said.

The Democrats who oppose the aid package for Israel represent a minority of their caucus. But they see a “no” vote as part of a strategy to pressure Mr. Biden to condition aid and halt future offensive weapons transfers. Through many meetings, text chains and conversations with the administration, they have worked to shift the president’s approach to Israel, while underscoring the electoral risks Mr. Biden faces among voters who helped power him to the White House in 2020 and are now furious over his handling of the war.

“The only way to get a course correction is for a sizable number within the Democratic caucus to say it must shift,” Ms. Balint said.

Representative Dan Kildee, a Michigan Democrat who has been pressing Mr. Biden to withhold offensive weapons from Israel, said a big “no” vote would strengthen the president’s hand to do so.

“It helps the administration to have some number of Democrats express ourselves in this way,” he said.

Representative Greg Casar, Democrat of Texas, said he hoped a substantial number of Democrats opposing the bill would give the Biden administration greater leverage to influence the Israeli government’s approach to the war.

“I hope this vote will show the world that there is a really significant segment of the United States that doesn’t want to see expanded and widening wars,” he said.

Farnaz Fassihi

Farnaz Fassihi and Eric Schmitt

Israel used missiles as well as drones in its overnight strike on Iran, officials say.

Israeli warplanes fired missiles on Iran during a retaliatory strike early Friday morning, one Western official and two Iranian officials said, suggesting that the attack included more advanced firepower than initial reports indicated.

It was not immediately clear the types of missiles used, from where they were fired, whether any were intercepted by Iran’s defenses or where they landed.

The Western official and the Iranian officials requested anonymity to discuss classified information.

Previously, Iranian officials said Friday’s attack on a military base in central Iran was conducted by small aerial drones, most likely launched from inside Iranian territory. A separate group of small drones, they said soon after the attack, was shot down in the region of Tabriz, roughly 500 miles north of Isfahan.

Israel has not publicly claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack and would not comment on the use of planes or missiles.

Israel’s strike came in response to an Iranian attack last weekend in which Iran fired hundreds of missiles and drones at Israel. A majority of the weapons used in that salvo were fired from Iranian territory and intercepted by Israel and its allies before causing any damage.

By contrast, the Iranian officials said, Iran’s military did not detect anything entering Iran’s airspace on Friday, including drones, missiles and aircraft. Iran’s state news agency IRNA reported that no missile attacks occurred and that Iran’s air defense system was not activated.

Iran’s decision to launch its strike primarily from its own soil last week was perceived by Israel as an escalation in the countries’ long-simmering shadow war. The Iranians believe the large salvo is helping with deterrence. Throughout the yearslong conflict, the two countries have traded clandestine attacks, including targeted assassinations, cyberattacks and conventional strikes conducted from and within third countries.

Iran’s attack last week was itself prompted by an Israeli strike on April 1, in which Israeli aircraft killed several Iranian armed forces commanders in Syria.

By using drones seemingly launched from inside Iran’s territory rather than its own, Israel hinted at a willingness to turn down the temperature on the conflict while also demonstrating an ability to conduct attacks that Iran could not detect.

One Iranian official, a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, said that even though the strike did little damage, the likelihood that drones were fired from under Iran’s nose sent a message about Israel’s capabilities.

A guided missile fired from an undetected warplane, even if it landed outside Iranian territory, would most likely deliver a similar threat.

Officials from both countries remained largely quiet about Friday’s attack, a gesture that appeared aimed at de-escalating a conflict some fear could spiral into a broader regional war. Israel’s silence on the attack, an Iranian official said, would allow Tehran to treat the strike as it had comparable previous attacks and not prompt an immediate response.

Mahdi Mohammadi, a senior adviser to Iran’s Parliament speaker, said that Israel’s limited attack on Iran showed that Iran had achieved its goal of deterrence. Israel’s refusal to openly claim responsibility, he said, amounts to a victory for Iran.

Israel’s attack, he said on the messaging app Telegram, was meant to show that it had the “capability to access Iran but in practice it also showed that it has accepted that it should not repeat its miscalculation.”

Peter Baker

Peter Baker

The White House maintained public silence about the Israeli strike on Iran. “I’m not going to speak or speculate about any of the reports that are out there,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said at her daily briefing. John Kirby, the national security spokesman who typically speaks on foreign policy issues, did not join the briefing.

Jean-Pierre did repeat the president’s standard position urging against widening the war: “We do not want to see this conflict escalate. We continue to consult with our allies and partners, including in the region, to reduce further risk of escalation in the region.”

Raja Abdulrahim

Raja Abdulrahim

Israel reportedly strikes an air defense site in Syria.

The Israeli military struck a Syrian air defense site in southern Syria with missiles early Friday, causing material damage, though no casualties were reported, according to Syrian state news media.

Syria’s official news agency, SANA, provided no other details and Israel did not comment on whether it was responsible for the attack, in keeping with its usual practice.

The strike happened around the same time that Israel carried out a strike on a military air base near the city of Isfahan, in central Iran.

That strike came less than a week after Iran fired more than 300 missiles and drones at Israel — nearly all of which were shot down — in retaliation for an April 1 attack on an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria that killed seven Iranian military officers.

Friday’s strike in Syria targeted a radar system in the southern province of Dara’a, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group based in Britain.

The Syrian military detected Israeli aircraft entering Syrian airspace, but its air defenses did not try to intercept the strikes, the Observatory said.

Iranian-backed armed groups throughout Syria have been on high alert since Iran’s strikes on Israel last weekend, the Observatory said. The groups obscured their positions and gave some of their leaders a week of leave.

Iran is closely allied with Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia, and with the Syrian government, and both Hezbollah and Iran’s Quds Force operate in Syria. For years, Iranian proxies like Hezbollah have launched strikes at northern Israel.

Israel has repeatedly targeted Iran and its allies with strikes in Syria, including in Damascus, the capital, and Aleppo.

Attacks across Israel’s borders with Syria and Lebanon have escalated since the Oct. 7 assault by Hamas on Israel.

Since the first of the year, Israel has carried out nearly three dozen attacks in Syria, destroying buildings, military headquarters and weapon and ammunition warehouses, the Observatory said. The strikes have killed 129 fighters and 12 civilians, the group said.

Adam Rasgon

Adam Rasgon

Jordan will not allow its airspace to be violated by either Israel or Iran, Jordan’s foreign minister told his Iranian counterpart in a phone call, the official Jordanian news agency, Petra, reported.

Jordan lies between the two enemies, and it played a key role in helping shoot down the barrage of missiles and drones Iran fired at Israel on Saturday.

Leily Nikounazar

Leily Nikounazar and Gaya Gupta

Residents of Isfahan describe their fears of an escalated war.

Daily life appeared to return to normal in Isfahan on Friday, according to Iranian state news media and a resident who was interviewed, hours after Israel’s attack on a nearby military base continued the cycle of strikes and counterstrikes between the two countries.

But tensions from the overnight attack reverberated through the city, and some residents described the threat of full-fledged war as crippling — despite analysts’ assessment that both nations were trying to avoid further escalation.

Mehrdad, 43, an engineer from Isfahan, said the latest retaliation left him and his pregnant wife feeling stressed and unwell. He asked that his last name not be used for fear of retribution.

“The future of this country concerns me,” he said. “I believe nothing good is expected.”

Though he said that the city had returned “back to its normal” and reactions from officials were muted — which he believed was to help make people feel at ease — many residents remain scared after a stressful night of explosions.

For the first six months of the war between Israel and Hamas, Iran’s involvement in fighting had been limited to its proxies, including the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and the Yemeni Houthi militia. But after Iran’s first direct strike on Israel last weekend, Mehrdad said, “things are coming to the surface.”

He hoped that diplomatic mediation would put an end to the threat of war, and he worried that the county’s infrastructure would be “ruined” by further Israeli attacks.

“Our economic situation is awful. We have 50 percent annual inflation,” he said. “Now guess what would happen if the war materialized. What would happen to our living conditions in this country?”

Mahsa, 34, an accountant from Isfahan who also asked that her last name not be used for fear of retribution, described a tense atmosphere of fear and instability. The economy is often the main topic of conversation when people gather, she said, and many are worried about the consequences of a wider war.

“When Iran attacked, we were all worried and we really didn’t know what to expect,” she said, describing the cycle of retaliation between Israel and Iran as a “show game.”

“Of course, after this Israeli attack, the direction of the game will be determined,” she added. “Either a full-scale war, or the end of this line, or just threats.”

The distress is crushing. Mahsa said her mental health had deteriorated, describing an instance last week when she broke down sobbing in the middle of the street for seemingly no reason while on a run. Dreams seem “more impossible to achieve, day by day,” she said.

“We don’t have much mental energy left,” she added.

An earlier version of this article misstated the gender of Mahsa, an accountant from Isfahan, Iran. She is female, not male.

How we handle corrections

The seemingly small scale of Israel's attack may give both countries an exit from the cycle of escalation. “It appears we are out of the danger zone and, because Israel’s strike was limited, it has allowed both countries to back down for now,” said Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa program at Chatham House.

The few Iranian officials who have talked publicly about the attack have downplayed it, suggesting a bid to de-escalate. A lawmaker, Seyed Nezamedin Mousavi, called the strike "ridiculous,” saying it showed Israel “is content with these ineffective actions.” A former foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, dismissed it as "fireworks."

Cassandra Vinograd

Cassandra Vinograd

Here is a look at the recent history of Iran-Israel hostilities.

For decades, Israel and Iran have fought a shadow war across the Middle East , trading attacks by land, sea, air and in cyberspace. A recent round of strikes — mainly an aerial barrage by Iran against Israel last weekend — has brought the conflict more clearly into the open and raised fears of a broader war.

A retaliatory Israeli strike on an Iranian air base on Friday, however, appeared limited in scope, and analysts said it suggested an effort to pull back from the dangerous cycle and potentially move the war back into the shadows.

Here is a recent history of the conflict:

August 2019: An Israeli airstrike killed two Iranian-trained militants in Syria, a drone set off a blast near a Hezbollah office in Lebanon and an airstrike in Qaim, Iraq, killed a commander of an Iran-backed Iraqi militia. Israel accused Iran at the time of trying to establish an overland arms-supply line through Iraq and northern Syria to Lebanon, and analysts said the strikes were aimed at stopping Iran and signaling to its proxies that Israel would not tolerate a fleet of smart missiles on its borders.

January 2020: Israel greeted with satisfaction the assassination of Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani , the commander of the foreign-facing arm of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, in an American drone strike in Baghdad.

Iran hit back by attacking two bases in Iraq that housed American troops with a barrage of missiles, wounding about 100 U.S. military personnel .

2021-22: In July 2021, an oil tanker managed by an Israeli-owned shipping company was attacked off the coast of Oman, killing two crew members, according to the company and three Israeli officials. Two of the officials said that the attack appeared to have been carried out by Iranian drones.

Iran did not explicitly claim or deny responsibility, but a state-owned television channel described the episode as a response to an Israeli strike in Syria.

In November 2021, Israel killed Iran’s top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh , and followed up with the assassination of a Revolutionary Guards commander, Col. Sayad Khodayee , in May 2022.

December 2023: After Israel’s bombardment of Gaza began in response to the Oct. 7 Hamas-led assault, Iranian-backed militias stepped up their own attacks . And late last year, Iran accused Israel of killing a high-level military figure, Brig. Gen. Sayyed Razi Mousavi , in a missile strike in Syria.

A senior adviser to the Revolutionary Guards, General Mousavi was described as having been a close associate of General Suleimani and was said to have helped oversee the shipment of arms to Hezbollah. Israel, adopting its customary stance, declined to comment directly on whether it was behind General Mousavi’s death.

January 2024: An explosion in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, killed Saleh al-Arouri , a Hamas leader, along with two commanders from that group’s armed wing, the first assassination of a top Hamas official outside the West Bank and Gaza in recent years. Officials from Hamas, Lebanon and the United States ascribed the blast to Israel , which did not publicly confirm involvement.

Hezbollah, which receives major support from Iran, stepped up its assaults on Israel after Mr. al-Arouri’s death. Israel’s military hit back at Hezbollah in Lebanon, killing several of the group’s commanders .

March: An Israeli drone strike hit a car in southern Lebanon, killing at least one person. Israel’s military said it had killed the deputy commander of Hezbollah’s rocket and missile unit. Hezbollah acknowledged the death of a man, Ali Abdulhassan Naim, but did not provide further details.

The same day, airstrikes killed soldiers near Aleppo, northern Syria, in what appeared to be one of the heaviest Israeli attacks in the country in years. The strikes killed 36 Syrian soldiers, seven Hezbollah fighters and a Syrian from a pro-Iran militia, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based group that tracks Syria’s civil war.

Israel’s military did not claim responsibility. But the country’s defense minister, Yoav Gallant, wrote on social media, “We will pursue Hezbollah every place it operates and we will expand the pressure and the pace of the attacks.”

April: A strike on an Iranian Embassy building in Damascus on April 1 killed three top Iranian commanders and four officers. Iran blamed Israel and vowed to hit back forcefully.

Two weeks later, Tehran launched a barrage of more than 300 drones and missiles at Israel, an unexpectedly large-scale attack , although nearly all the weapons were shot down by Israel and allies. Israel said for days it would respond, before a strike on Friday hit a military air base near the central Iranian city of Isfahan.

Israel has commonly used exploding drones in attacks on Iran.

Iranian officials said that the Israeli strike on Friday morning was carried out by small exploding drones, a tactic that would follow a well-established pattern in Israeli attacks on Iranian military targets.

As Israel has targeted Iranian defense and military officials and infrastructure, small drones — specifically ones known as quadcopters — have been a signature of those operations. Quadcopter drones, so named because they have four rotors, have a short flight range and can explode on impact.

The drones might have been launched from inside Iran, whose radar systems had not detected unidentified aircraft entering Iranian airspace, Iranian officials said. If the drones were launched within the country, it demonstrates once again Israel’s ability to mount clandestine operations in Iranian territory .

Israel’s military has not commented on Friday’s strike. Though it rarely claims responsibility publicly for attacks against Iranian targets, several attacks in recent years have used drones:

August 2019: Israel sent an exploding drone into the heart of a Hezbollah-dominated neighborhood in Beirut, Lebanon, to destroy what Israeli officials described as machinery used in the production of precision missiles.

June 2021: A quadcopter exploded outside Tehran at one of Iran’s main manufacturing centers for centrifuges, which purify uranium and are used at the country’s two major uranium enrichment facilities . Western officials have closely watched activity at those facilities for signs that Iran could be moving toward producing a nuclear weapon. Iran claimed that there had been no damage to the site outside Tehran, but satellite images showed evidence of significant damage.

February 2022: Six quadcopters exploded at Kermanshah, Iran’s main manufacturing and storage plant for military drones.

May 2022: A strike targeted the highly sensitive Parchin military site outside Tehran, where Iran develops missile, nuclear and drone technology. Quadcopter drones exploded into a building, killing an engineer and injuring another person, Iranians with knowledge of the attack said at the time.

January 2023: A drone attack on an Iranian military facility in January 2023 caused a large explosion in the center of Isfahan, the city near the air base that was struck on Friday. At the time, Iran made no effort to hide the fact that an attack had happened, but said it had done little damage. Iranian state media reported that drones had targeted an ammunition manufacturing plant but had been shot down by a surface-to-air defense system.

Michael Crowley

Michael Crowley

Traveling with Secretary Blinken

Blinken says the U.S. has not been involved in ‘offensive operations’ in Iran.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said on Friday that the United States “has not been involved in any offensive operations” in Iran when asked about Israel’s strike on the country on Friday, but he declined to comment further.

Mr. Blinken spoke on the last day of a meeting of Group of 7 ministers in Capri, Italy, where the agenda was dominated by the conflict in the Middle East, including the exchanges of strikes in the past week between Israel and Iran. In remarks to reporters before departing the island, Mr. Blinken said the G7 was unified in urging de-escalation between Iran and Israel to avoid a wider war.

But Mr. Blinken would not even directly confirm the Israeli strike, which appeared to be the country’s first military response to Iran’s attack last weekend, referring instead to “reported events,” and he would not say whether the United States had been notified in advance of the Israeli action. Shortly before he spoke, Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, told reporters that the United States had been “informed at the last minute” of the Israeli strike.

“But there was no involvement on the part of the United States,” Mr. Tajani said. “It was simply information which was provided,” adding that he believed the G7’s collective efforts deserved credit for “the small scale of the event.”

Mr. Tajani did not say how he knew the United States had not been notified in advance, but he had recently come from a meeting with Mr. Blinken and other G7 ministers. A senior American official said on Friday that Israel had notified the United States through multiple channels shortly before its attack on Iran.

The G7 weighed in collectively in a statement concluding the three-day meeting, urging countries to prevent further escalation “in light of reports of strikes” on Friday. The G7 includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United States and the European Union.

The statement also said that the member nations “condemn in the strongest terms Iran’s direct and unprecedented attack” on Israel.

“Israel and its people have our full solidarity and support and we reaffirm our commitment toward Israel’s security,” it added.

The G7 also issued a new warning to Tehran, demanding that “Iran and its affiliated groups cease their attacks” throughout the Middle East and saying that “we stand ready to adopt further sanctions or take other measures.”

Mr. Blinken said of Iran that “degrading its missile and drone capabilities” was a key G7 goal.

Mr. Blinken also addressed the ongoing conflict in Gaza, pointing a finger at Hamas for the failure so far to reach a cease-fire deal that would include the release of Israeli prisoners.

“The only thing standing behind the Gaza people and a cease-fire is Hamas,” he said.

But he also addressed a major friction point with Israel, warning against what Israel says is its planned attack on the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where more than a million Palestinians have sought shelter from fighting elsewhere in the enclave. Israel has said an invasion of Rafah is necessary to eliminate Hamas battalions in the city.

“We cannot support a major military operation in Rafah,” Mr. Blinken said. Mr. Blinken said that protecting and caring for civilians amid such an operation was “a monumental task for which we have yet to see a plan.”

Asked about the U.S. veto on Thursday of a United Nations Security Council resolution to recognize a Palestinian state, Mr. Blinken said that while the United States supports the creation of such a state, doing so requires negotiations and that the proposed resolution “will have no effect on actually moving things forward and achieving a Palestinian state.”

He added: “You can put something down on a piece of paper and wave it around. It has no effect. What does and can have an effect is actual diplomacy.”

Mr. Blinken also noted that, under U.S. law passed by Congress, U.N. acceptance of a Palestinian member state would require “cutting off all of our funding for the United Nations.”

Cassandra Vinograd

The Iranian news media appear keen to show that things are “back to normal” in Isfahan. The official news agency, IRNA, published a gallery of photos — people strolling, shoppers at a market, a child with a soccer ball — that it said showed “normal life” in the city today. Flights at the Isfahan airport, which had been suspended for a few hours, have resumed, it said.

Joe Rennison

Joe Rennison

S&P Global Ratings downgraded Israel’s credit rating on Thursday evening, citing the confrontation with Iran. It lowered Israel’s rating to A+ from AA-. That’s still a high rating on a scale that runs from triple-A down to D.

Maj. Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi, the commander in chief of Iran’s army, said explosions heard early Friday in Isfahan “were from our air defense firing at a suspicious object. There has been no damage from the incident.” He said that experts were investigating the episode.

Liam Stack

Reporting from Jerusalem

World leaders call for de-escalation after Israel’s strike in Iran.

World leaders on Friday urged Israel and Iran to de-escalate tensions after Israel struck an Iranian military base, the latest salvo in a cycle of retaliation that has raised fears of a broader war in recent weeks.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain, whose military participated in defending Israel last weekend against Iran’s missile and drone attack, told reporters, “Significant escalation is not in anyone’s interests — what we want to see is calm heads prevail across the region.”

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm, told reporters during a visit to China, “It is absolutely essential that the region remains stable and that all sides refrain from further action.”

Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said the Group of 7 nations — which includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States — had changed the agenda of its meeting Friday on the resort island of Capri to “address the Iran issue and put priority attention on the Middle East.”

“The political goal of the G7 is de-escalation,” Mr. Tajani said.

The government of Jordan, which has been criticized in the Arab world for playing a role in intercepting Iran’s attack last weekend, issued an especially pointed plea.

“Israeli-Iranian retaliations must end,” Ayman Safadi, Jordan’s foreign minister said on Friday. He urged the international community to turn its attention back to Gaza, where six months of Israel’s bombardment and ground invasion have killed over 33,000 people and led to extreme hunger in parts of the territory.

“The inhumane war on Gaza must end now,” Mr. Safadi said. “The focus of the world must remain on ending the catastrophic aggression on Gaza.”

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Jan 18, 2023; Melbourne, VICTORIA, Australia; Rafael Nadal during his second round match at the Australian Open.

© Mike Frey-USA TODAY Sports

Teen Tennis Pro Had Perfect Reaction to Learning He’ll Face Rafael Nadal

  • Author: Madison Williams

Rafael Nadal is scheduled to play against 16-year-old American Darwin Blanch in the first round of the Madrid Open on Tuesday, and Blanch had the most teenager response to this news.

Blanch, who's ranked No. 1,028 in the world, reacted to facing the 22-time Grand Slam winner by posting a Snapchat photo to his friends with the caption "Guys I play nadal wtf." He looked beyond shocked with his hand covering his mouth in the picture.

It's important to note that Blanch and Nadal are 21 years apart in age. Nadal had already won three Grand Slam titles by the time Blanch was born in 2007.

16 year old Darwin Blanch had a hilarious reaction when he realized he plays Rafa Nadal in the first round of Madrid “Guys I play Nadal wtf” 😂 21 year age difference. This is only his 2nd tour level match. pic.twitter.com/JWVMvsw9eN — The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 22, 2024

Tuesday's match will mark Blanch's second ATP level match in his young career. He lost in the first round at the Miami Open in March.

Nadal will be playing in just his third tournament of the season after he has been dealing with hip and abdominal injuries since the beginning of 2023. This tennis season could "probably" be his last , the 37-year-old previously hinted at, since he's been dealing with various injuries.

It will be a tough match for Blanch for many reasons, with one being that Nadal is known as the "King of Clay." He's won a record 14 French Open titles, with the Madrid Open being one of the bigger tournaments leading up to the major tournament.

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    Rafael Nadal is scheduled to play against 16-year-old American Darwin Blanch in the first round of the Madrid Open on Tuesday, and Blanch had the most teenager response to this news. Blanch, who's ...