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The US president’s radical international agenda is undermining Australians’ trust in one of their most reliable allies.
Anthony Albanese is set to discuss the impact of Donald Trump’s increasingly aggressive trade war and conflict in the Middle ...
The global backdrop will be inescapable for the Treasurer as he lays out the Albanese government's second term economic ...
Former US Republican congressman and military intelligence officer Mike Gallagher says it is in the US national interest to ...
Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he would meet with U.S. President Donald Trump at the Group of Seven summit ...
A key U.S. warship arrived in Australia on Saturday ahead of joint war games and the first summit between Prime Minister ...
Australia's defence minister woke up to a nightmare earlier this week - and it's one that has been looming ever since the ...
Donald Trump will celebrate his birthday with a massive military parade, but at the same time is reassessing military defence ...
The 200 wealthiest Australians now control $667 billion, $42 billion more than last year. This amounts to over 36 percent of Australia’s annual gross domestic product.
Trump may push Albanese on defence spending, but America needs its allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific perhaps more than anywhere else in the world.
The Trump administration may try to squeeze more concessions out of Australia as part of “the art of the deal,” but it does ...
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