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Australia is issued with a grim warning as Trump's former national security advisor slams Anthony Albanese about the nation's biggest threat

Australia is issued with a grim warning as Trump's former national security advisor slams Anthony Albanese about the nation's biggest threat

Daily Mail​3 days ago
Donald Trump 's former national security adviser has warned Australia needs to clarify its position on China, which had grown ambiguous under Anthony Albanese.
John Bolton this week said the Albanese government was 'less vocal about what the problem is' in comparison to its predecessors.
'It is a little hard to get used to,' Bolton said in an interview.
Just a few weeks ago, while Albanese was on Chinese soil, the Pentagon demanded to know if Australia would support the US if China attacked Taiwan.
Bolton warned that the US could treat its quieter allies with suspicion as tensions in the Pacific persist. The Trump administration is already reconsidering the AUKUS deal, which would provide Australia with nuclear submarines.
The ex-national security advisor, who was fired in a tweet by Trump during his first term in 2019 after repeated clashes, said that 'back in the Cold War days, Labour governments in Great Britain were just as anti-communist' as the right wing.
'When you see a leftist government that's not willing to talk as openly about what the real threat is, it does make some people nervous,' Bolton told The Sydney Morning Herald.
'Why the hell are we worried about talking about what the threat is? The struggle is on, and we ought to be candid about it,' he said.
Tensions between China and the West have significantly grown since the communist superpower began ramping up efforts to grow influence over the Indo-Pacific in the 2010s.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said in a recent speech that: 'No one can stop China's 'reunification' with Taiwan'.
The continued pressure from Washington for Australia to make its stance on China public comes in spite of the US remaining vague over its own position.
While former president Joe Biden repeatedly said the US would defend Taiwan from Chinese invasion, the Trump administration's style has been described as 'purposeful strategic ambiguity' to keep both friends and foes guessing.
So why should Australia, which sits much closer to the disputed region, be the first to stick its neck out?
Naval operations expert Bryan Clark, a senior fellow at the conservative Hudson Institute, believes it boils down to AUKUS.
In 2023, Australia announced it would buy three American-made nuclear submarines. Those subs are set to be delivered in the early 2030s.
From there, the US and UK will share knowledge with Australia to help it be able to build its own nuclear submarines, SSN AUKUS subs.
That submarine construction yard will be built in Adelaide's Osborne Naval Shipyard, which South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas toured alongside US congressmen on Wednesday.
Mr Clark explained the US wanted clarification on whether the submarines it sells to Australia would be used to back America, should it go to war with China.
'The Australians have been a little reticent to explicitly call out that they might use them against China,' he told the Sydney Morning Herald.
'If you're not willing to say it in public, then you're not going to put the Chinese on notice. It has been privately conveyed in the past but the US would like Australia to make it more public.
'There's definitely some questions on their part about why isn't Australia being more straightforward about why they are buying these submarines.'
But, it's not as though the US is giving Australia submarines. In fact, Australia plans to spend billions procuring them.
Australia has so far paid the US two installments of $800million twice this year, in February and July.
By the end of 2025, Australia will have paid USD$2billion to help expand America's nuclear submarine production, which is already worryingly behind schedule.
All up, Australia plans to spend $368billion over 30 years on the AUKUS submarine pact.
Another point to keep in mind, the AUKUS pact is currently being reviewed by US defence under secretary Elbridge Colby, a vocal AUKUS skeptic.
While it's widely believed AUKUS will remain intact when the review concludes in the coming months, it only served to further strain relations between the US and Australia.
Bolton conceded it was wrong for America to expect Australia to publicly defend Taiwan while it remained silent.
'To treat Australia as, 'Well, you put your situation on the line first before we do' is destructive to the relationship,' he said.
However, he supported Washington's calls for Australia to lift its defence budget to three per cent of GDP.
Labor's existing policies promise just 2.33 per cent of GDP by 2033.
'Everybody is going to have to go up, I just think that's inevitable. It's not because of Trump's pressure, it's because of what's going on in the real world,' Bolton said.
In response to the US' earlier demands for an official stance on Taiwan, Albanese said he would not bow to pressure to make 'private' discussions public.
'The sole power to commit Australia to war, or to allow our territory to be used for conflict, is the elected government of the day,' he told the ABC.
'That is our position. Sovereignty will always be prioritised and that will continue to be our position.'
Albanese has still not had a sit-down meeting with President Trump since his January inauguration.
The pair were de to meet in June but the Trump left Canada's G7 summit early citing urgent developments in the Middle East, preceding the bombing of Iran.
During the Australia America Leadership Dialogue in Adelaide this week, Democrat senator Chris Coons suggested Trump visit Australia soon.
'When you're sitting in the same room as someone you have a better conversation,' he told reporters.
Mike Turner, former chair of the House Intelligence Committee, added an in-person dialogue would be 'helpful'.
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