
Americans might have ceded government to corrupt oligarchs, but not Australians
Looking for something engaging, I briefly considered getting around to the final season of Succession - the HBO series inspired by the Murdochs.
A discussion ensued in which I explained, as much to myself as to my partner, that in past episodes, I kept wishing that a giant concrete block would drop from above silencing the vulgar combatants - Two Ronnies-style.
There was not a single likeable character and virtually every sentence was an exercise in cruelty and sexual depravity. Of course, this was the satirical point. Here was a vast media company owned by one disgustingly rich family wantonly controlling public discourse and distorting political outcomes. Here, too, was deep unhappiness, familial brutality and toxic competition.
There is no disputing, however, that Succession had tapped into the zeitgeist, just as there is no denying that we, as a culture, derive pleasure from horrible things. Try looking for series that don't feature murder and violence. Most of it, directed at women.
If anything, politics in the US increasingly mimics the ruthless nihilism, shameless cynicism and power-lust of the Roys.
After the Democrats' colossal deceit of installing a decompensating Joe Biden in 2020, American voters have opted for chaos, for tearing down the rotten edifice of orthodox, institution-based politics and replacing it with things wholly more believable - ego, revenge, self-enrichment and power. They didn't elect Trump in spite of the January 6, insurrection, but because of it.
There may not be a single likeable character in which they can feel genuinely invested, but in Trump, there is a superior level of authenticity. He wasn't installed to be restrained or empathetic, or a more politically conservative version of Biden or Obama. Their tinkering proceduralism was the central problem.
Trump is the wrecker of worlds, defier of courts, commander in chief in America's new (un)civil war.
Rules and standards are for breaking. Everything has become about doubling down, obliterating elite outrage on this or that scandal, with something bigger.
Trump's intellectual Svengali, Steve Bannon, invoking his best Successionist imagery, had previously described this as "flooding the zone with shit". And so it is.
Little more than a week ago, the world had been agog at the spectacular - if long-expected - public bust-up between the President and Elon Musk. With all the dignity this pair is known for, they had attacked each other as liars, egomaniacs and moral degenerates.
Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" (seriously, that is its name) was going to add something like US$2.4 trillion to the federal deficit through tax cuts - wiping out the meagre $100 billion or so Musk had tallied by slashing government agencies and sacking "non-patriots". Musk called Trump's spending a disgrace.
Via this glimpse of satire-like insight, there was also truth - a backstage episode of government as reality TV. Musk became the apprentice who had been "fired!".
Yet the whole thing was suddenly washed from the front pages by Trump's militarisation of his immigration crackdown via the federalisation of the National Guard in a Democrat state and the deployment of another 700 United States marines. This, to control a crisis he, the President, had manufactured.
G7 leaders, and invitees such as Australia, are gathering in Canada to discuss the world economy and an increasingly fractious global security environment. Israel has chosen the moment to dramatically ratchet up its aggression, launching missile and drone attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and on civilian structures. Suddenly, even the illegality of a permanent occupation and the unspeakable horror a manufactured famine in Gaza is second-order news.
Trump had let it be known that he had asked the Netanyahu government to hold off launching strikes on Iran as he was close to a deal on nuclear non-proliferation and verification.
No matter. In response to the attacks, he said on Truth Social "I gave Iran chance after chance to make a deal ... certain Iranian hardliners spoke bravely but they didn't know what was about to happen. They are all DEAD now, and it will only get worse!"
In Ukraine - the war Trump was to resolve in a day - Russia's attacks on Kyiv are said to be the most massive of the two-and-half-year invasion.
Trump has apparently lost interest.
MORE MARK KENNY:
The Israel-Iran conflagration may see the American withdraw from the Canada summit, potentially robbing world leaders, including Anthony Albanese, of a chance to hold one-on-one talks on trade, security, and specifically, AUKUS.
The Albanese government has been in damage-control mode in recent days following the announcement of a snap 30-day Pentagon review of the tripartite defence technology partnership in which Australia is already heavily out of pocket.
Between that development (or is it an opportunity?), Australia's non-embrace of Trump administration stipulations that partners spend vastly more of their GDP in defence, and the Albanese government's participation in sanctions on two Israeli ministers, there are new frictions in the US-Australia relationship.
While Albanese may yet be snubbed in Canada - cue opposition outrage - he can take comfort from his recent mandate and from the fact that, unlike Americans, voters here still value the separation of powers, social cohesion, and a free press.
Americans might have ceded government to corrupt oligarchs with the fluid morals of TV scriptwriters, but Australians still believe in sound government.
Logan Roy would hate it.
Looking for something engaging, I briefly considered getting around to the final season of Succession - the HBO series inspired by the Murdochs.
A discussion ensued in which I explained, as much to myself as to my partner, that in past episodes, I kept wishing that a giant concrete block would drop from above silencing the vulgar combatants - Two Ronnies-style.
There was not a single likeable character and virtually every sentence was an exercise in cruelty and sexual depravity. Of course, this was the satirical point. Here was a vast media company owned by one disgustingly rich family wantonly controlling public discourse and distorting political outcomes. Here, too, was deep unhappiness, familial brutality and toxic competition.
There is no disputing, however, that Succession had tapped into the zeitgeist, just as there is no denying that we, as a culture, derive pleasure from horrible things. Try looking for series that don't feature murder and violence. Most of it, directed at women.
If anything, politics in the US increasingly mimics the ruthless nihilism, shameless cynicism and power-lust of the Roys.
After the Democrats' colossal deceit of installing a decompensating Joe Biden in 2020, American voters have opted for chaos, for tearing down the rotten edifice of orthodox, institution-based politics and replacing it with things wholly more believable - ego, revenge, self-enrichment and power. They didn't elect Trump in spite of the January 6, insurrection, but because of it.
There may not be a single likeable character in which they can feel genuinely invested, but in Trump, there is a superior level of authenticity. He wasn't installed to be restrained or empathetic, or a more politically conservative version of Biden or Obama. Their tinkering proceduralism was the central problem.
Trump is the wrecker of worlds, defier of courts, commander in chief in America's new (un)civil war.
Rules and standards are for breaking. Everything has become about doubling down, obliterating elite outrage on this or that scandal, with something bigger.
Trump's intellectual Svengali, Steve Bannon, invoking his best Successionist imagery, had previously described this as "flooding the zone with shit". And so it is.
Little more than a week ago, the world had been agog at the spectacular - if long-expected - public bust-up between the President and Elon Musk. With all the dignity this pair is known for, they had attacked each other as liars, egomaniacs and moral degenerates.
Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" (seriously, that is its name) was going to add something like US$2.4 trillion to the federal deficit through tax cuts - wiping out the meagre $100 billion or so Musk had tallied by slashing government agencies and sacking "non-patriots". Musk called Trump's spending a disgrace.
Via this glimpse of satire-like insight, there was also truth - a backstage episode of government as reality TV. Musk became the apprentice who had been "fired!".
Yet the whole thing was suddenly washed from the front pages by Trump's militarisation of his immigration crackdown via the federalisation of the National Guard in a Democrat state and the deployment of another 700 United States marines. This, to control a crisis he, the President, had manufactured.
G7 leaders, and invitees such as Australia, are gathering in Canada to discuss the world economy and an increasingly fractious global security environment. Israel has chosen the moment to dramatically ratchet up its aggression, launching missile and drone attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and on civilian structures. Suddenly, even the illegality of a permanent occupation and the unspeakable horror a manufactured famine in Gaza is second-order news.
Trump had let it be known that he had asked the Netanyahu government to hold off launching strikes on Iran as he was close to a deal on nuclear non-proliferation and verification.
No matter. In response to the attacks, he said on Truth Social "I gave Iran chance after chance to make a deal ... certain Iranian hardliners spoke bravely but they didn't know what was about to happen. They are all DEAD now, and it will only get worse!"
In Ukraine - the war Trump was to resolve in a day - Russia's attacks on Kyiv are said to be the most massive of the two-and-half-year invasion.
Trump has apparently lost interest.
MORE MARK KENNY:
The Israel-Iran conflagration may see the American withdraw from the Canada summit, potentially robbing world leaders, including Anthony Albanese, of a chance to hold one-on-one talks on trade, security, and specifically, AUKUS.
The Albanese government has been in damage-control mode in recent days following the announcement of a snap 30-day Pentagon review of the tripartite defence technology partnership in which Australia is already heavily out of pocket.
Between that development (or is it an opportunity?), Australia's non-embrace of Trump administration stipulations that partners spend vastly more of their GDP in defence, and the Albanese government's participation in sanctions on two Israeli ministers, there are new frictions in the US-Australia relationship.
While Albanese may yet be snubbed in Canada - cue opposition outrage - he can take comfort from his recent mandate and from the fact that, unlike Americans, voters here still value the separation of powers, social cohesion, and a free press.
Americans might have ceded government to corrupt oligarchs with the fluid morals of TV scriptwriters, but Australians still believe in sound government.
Logan Roy would hate it.
Looking for something engaging, I briefly considered getting around to the final season of Succession - the HBO series inspired by the Murdochs.
A discussion ensued in which I explained, as much to myself as to my partner, that in past episodes, I kept wishing that a giant concrete block would drop from above silencing the vulgar combatants - Two Ronnies-style.
There was not a single likeable character and virtually every sentence was an exercise in cruelty and sexual depravity. Of course, this was the satirical point. Here was a vast media company owned by one disgustingly rich family wantonly controlling public discourse and distorting political outcomes. Here, too, was deep unhappiness, familial brutality and toxic competition.
There is no disputing, however, that Succession had tapped into the zeitgeist, just as there is no denying that we, as a culture, derive pleasure from horrible things. Try looking for series that don't feature murder and violence. Most of it, directed at women.
If anything, politics in the US increasingly mimics the ruthless nihilism, shameless cynicism and power-lust of the Roys.
After the Democrats' colossal deceit of installing a decompensating Joe Biden in 2020, American voters have opted for chaos, for tearing down the rotten edifice of orthodox, institution-based politics and replacing it with things wholly more believable - ego, revenge, self-enrichment and power. They didn't elect Trump in spite of the January 6, insurrection, but because of it.
There may not be a single likeable character in which they can feel genuinely invested, but in Trump, there is a superior level of authenticity. He wasn't installed to be restrained or empathetic, or a more politically conservative version of Biden or Obama. Their tinkering proceduralism was the central problem.
Trump is the wrecker of worlds, defier of courts, commander in chief in America's new (un)civil war.
Rules and standards are for breaking. Everything has become about doubling down, obliterating elite outrage on this or that scandal, with something bigger.
Trump's intellectual Svengali, Steve Bannon, invoking his best Successionist imagery, had previously described this as "flooding the zone with shit". And so it is.
Little more than a week ago, the world had been agog at the spectacular - if long-expected - public bust-up between the President and Elon Musk. With all the dignity this pair is known for, they had attacked each other as liars, egomaniacs and moral degenerates.
Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" (seriously, that is its name) was going to add something like US$2.4 trillion to the federal deficit through tax cuts - wiping out the meagre $100 billion or so Musk had tallied by slashing government agencies and sacking "non-patriots". Musk called Trump's spending a disgrace.
Via this glimpse of satire-like insight, there was also truth - a backstage episode of government as reality TV. Musk became the apprentice who had been "fired!".
Yet the whole thing was suddenly washed from the front pages by Trump's militarisation of his immigration crackdown via the federalisation of the National Guard in a Democrat state and the deployment of another 700 United States marines. This, to control a crisis he, the President, had manufactured.
G7 leaders, and invitees such as Australia, are gathering in Canada to discuss the world economy and an increasingly fractious global security environment. Israel has chosen the moment to dramatically ratchet up its aggression, launching missile and drone attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and on civilian structures. Suddenly, even the illegality of a permanent occupation and the unspeakable horror a manufactured famine in Gaza is second-order news.
Trump had let it be known that he had asked the Netanyahu government to hold off launching strikes on Iran as he was close to a deal on nuclear non-proliferation and verification.
No matter. In response to the attacks, he said on Truth Social "I gave Iran chance after chance to make a deal ... certain Iranian hardliners spoke bravely but they didn't know what was about to happen. They are all DEAD now, and it will only get worse!"
In Ukraine - the war Trump was to resolve in a day - Russia's attacks on Kyiv are said to be the most massive of the two-and-half-year invasion.
Trump has apparently lost interest.
MORE MARK KENNY:
The Israel-Iran conflagration may see the American withdraw from the Canada summit, potentially robbing world leaders, including Anthony Albanese, of a chance to hold one-on-one talks on trade, security, and specifically, AUKUS.
The Albanese government has been in damage-control mode in recent days following the announcement of a snap 30-day Pentagon review of the tripartite defence technology partnership in which Australia is already heavily out of pocket.
Between that development (or is it an opportunity?), Australia's non-embrace of Trump administration stipulations that partners spend vastly more of their GDP in defence, and the Albanese government's participation in sanctions on two Israeli ministers, there are new frictions in the US-Australia relationship.
While Albanese may yet be snubbed in Canada - cue opposition outrage - he can take comfort from his recent mandate and from the fact that, unlike Americans, voters here still value the separation of powers, social cohesion, and a free press.
Americans might have ceded government to corrupt oligarchs with the fluid morals of TV scriptwriters, but Australians still believe in sound government.
Logan Roy would hate it.
Looking for something engaging, I briefly considered getting around to the final season of Succession - the HBO series inspired by the Murdochs.
A discussion ensued in which I explained, as much to myself as to my partner, that in past episodes, I kept wishing that a giant concrete block would drop from above silencing the vulgar combatants - Two Ronnies-style.
There was not a single likeable character and virtually every sentence was an exercise in cruelty and sexual depravity. Of course, this was the satirical point. Here was a vast media company owned by one disgustingly rich family wantonly controlling public discourse and distorting political outcomes. Here, too, was deep unhappiness, familial brutality and toxic competition.
There is no disputing, however, that Succession had tapped into the zeitgeist, just as there is no denying that we, as a culture, derive pleasure from horrible things. Try looking for series that don't feature murder and violence. Most of it, directed at women.
If anything, politics in the US increasingly mimics the ruthless nihilism, shameless cynicism and power-lust of the Roys.
After the Democrats' colossal deceit of installing a decompensating Joe Biden in 2020, American voters have opted for chaos, for tearing down the rotten edifice of orthodox, institution-based politics and replacing it with things wholly more believable - ego, revenge, self-enrichment and power. They didn't elect Trump in spite of the January 6, insurrection, but because of it.
There may not be a single likeable character in which they can feel genuinely invested, but in Trump, there is a superior level of authenticity. He wasn't installed to be restrained or empathetic, or a more politically conservative version of Biden or Obama. Their tinkering proceduralism was the central problem.
Trump is the wrecker of worlds, defier of courts, commander in chief in America's new (un)civil war.
Rules and standards are for breaking. Everything has become about doubling down, obliterating elite outrage on this or that scandal, with something bigger.
Trump's intellectual Svengali, Steve Bannon, invoking his best Successionist imagery, had previously described this as "flooding the zone with shit". And so it is.
Little more than a week ago, the world had been agog at the spectacular - if long-expected - public bust-up between the President and Elon Musk. With all the dignity this pair is known for, they had attacked each other as liars, egomaniacs and moral degenerates.
Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" (seriously, that is its name) was going to add something like US$2.4 trillion to the federal deficit through tax cuts - wiping out the meagre $100 billion or so Musk had tallied by slashing government agencies and sacking "non-patriots". Musk called Trump's spending a disgrace.
Via this glimpse of satire-like insight, there was also truth - a backstage episode of government as reality TV. Musk became the apprentice who had been "fired!".
Yet the whole thing was suddenly washed from the front pages by Trump's militarisation of his immigration crackdown via the federalisation of the National Guard in a Democrat state and the deployment of another 700 United States marines. This, to control a crisis he, the President, had manufactured.
G7 leaders, and invitees such as Australia, are gathering in Canada to discuss the world economy and an increasingly fractious global security environment. Israel has chosen the moment to dramatically ratchet up its aggression, launching missile and drone attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and on civilian structures. Suddenly, even the illegality of a permanent occupation and the unspeakable horror a manufactured famine in Gaza is second-order news.
Trump had let it be known that he had asked the Netanyahu government to hold off launching strikes on Iran as he was close to a deal on nuclear non-proliferation and verification.
No matter. In response to the attacks, he said on Truth Social "I gave Iran chance after chance to make a deal ... certain Iranian hardliners spoke bravely but they didn't know what was about to happen. They are all DEAD now, and it will only get worse!"
In Ukraine - the war Trump was to resolve in a day - Russia's attacks on Kyiv are said to be the most massive of the two-and-half-year invasion.
Trump has apparently lost interest.
MORE MARK KENNY:
The Israel-Iran conflagration may see the American withdraw from the Canada summit, potentially robbing world leaders, including Anthony Albanese, of a chance to hold one-on-one talks on trade, security, and specifically, AUKUS.
The Albanese government has been in damage-control mode in recent days following the announcement of a snap 30-day Pentagon review of the tripartite defence technology partnership in which Australia is already heavily out of pocket.
Between that development (or is it an opportunity?), Australia's non-embrace of Trump administration stipulations that partners spend vastly more of their GDP in defence, and the Albanese government's participation in sanctions on two Israeli ministers, there are new frictions in the US-Australia relationship.
While Albanese may yet be snubbed in Canada - cue opposition outrage - he can take comfort from his recent mandate and from the fact that, unlike Americans, voters here still value the separation of powers, social cohesion, and a free press.
Americans might have ceded government to corrupt oligarchs with the fluid morals of TV scriptwriters, but Australians still believe in sound government.
Logan Roy would hate it.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
33 minutes ago
- West Australian
Amazon mega deal underscores economic relationship with US, minister says
Amazon's $20bn investment into Australian data centre infrastructure underscores the economic relationship with the US ahead of Anthony Albanese's first face-to-face with Donald Trump, Labor's industry tsar says. The Prime Minister announced the mega deal with Amazon at the tech giant's headquarters in Seattle overnight. Speaking to media, Mr Albanese also said he and the US President had 'scheduled' a meeting on the sidelines of the G7 in Canada after Mr Trump confirmed he would attend the summit. Pressure has been mounting on Mr Albanese to secure a carve out from sweeping US tariffs and shore up Washington's support for AUKUS after the Trump administration launched a review of the $368bn defence pact. Industry and Innovation Minister Tim Ayres said on Sunday the deal was 'not designed' to send a message to Mr Trump but that 'it certainly does underscore the depth of the economic and strategic and technological relationship' with the US. 'It's not just about trading in goods and services,' Senator Ayres told Sky News. 'It's about collaboration around science and research and development and in industrial terms.' He singled out AUKUS as 'offering opportunities for Australian and United States firms … to invest in each other's economy', highlighting it as 'a real counterpoint to the position that the United States has adopted around tariff announcements'. 'They are not the act of a friend, as has been said repeatedly by me and my colleagues,' Senator Ayres said. 'They are not in Australia's interest, but they're not in the United States' interest either. 'Australian steel, for example, exported to the United States, feeds into American supply chains and supports competitive industry that provides good jobs for American workers. 'Why on Earth would anybody want to make Australian steel in the United States more expensive? 'That's what the tariff measures do.' He said Mr Albanese would be putting that 'position directly to the President of the United States' when they meet next week. 'But the Amazon announcement does underscore how vital the direct economic relationship really is,' Senator Ayres said. At his Seattle press conference announcing the deal, Mr Albanese said he would raise tariffs and AUKUS with Mr Trump. Though he stopped short of saying the Amazon announcement was a message to the US leader. 'The US (Free Trade Agreement) has been important,' Mr Albanese told reporters. 'It's enjoyed bipartisan support in Australia and indeed in the United States. 'And so we welcome very much American investment in Australia.' He added it was 'important to recognise as well that the United States has a two for one surplus when it comes to the trading relationship in not just in goods, but in services as well'. 'And we want to grow the economic relationship between our two countries,' Mr Albanese said. 'And I'm sure that when I have the opportunity to have discussions with President Trump, we will speak about the important economic relationship between our two countries, which is in the interests of both Australia and the United States.' Under the deal, Amazon has committed to pumping cash into developing data centres in Melbourne and Sydney over the next five years, focusing on storage, networking, analytics, and secure services supporting cloud and AI. The firm will build renewable energy sources to support its operations. Speaking alongside Mr Albanese, Amazon Web Services chief executive Matt Garman dismissed concerns Australia's grid lacked the power needed for AI. 'I think definitely the explosion of AI requires a lot of power, so that's one of the things we're thinking about,' Mr Garman told reporters. 'I think here in the United States, we see nuclear as part of that portfolio. 'Our investments in Australia are wind and solar, but I think depending on the local setup and economies and other things, it's a global question, but there's no question that we will continue to need more and more power going forward.'


Perth Now
37 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Albo's $20bn boon ahead of Trump meet
Amazon's $20bn investment into Australian data centre infrastructure underscores the economic relationship with the US ahead of Anthony Albanese's first face-to-face with Donald Trump, Labor's industry tsar says. The Prime Minister announced the mega deal with Amazon at the tech giant's headquarters in Seattle overnight. Speaking to media, Mr Albanese also said he and the US President had 'scheduled' a meeting on the sidelines of the G7 in Canada after Mr Trump confirmed he would attend the summit. Pressure has been mounting on Mr Albanese to secure a carve out from sweeping US tariffs and shore up Washington's support for AUKUS after the Trump administration launched a review of the $368bn defence pact. Industry and Innovation Minister Tim Ayres said on Sunday the deal was 'not designed' to send a message to Mr Trump but that 'it certainly does underscore the depth of the economic and strategic and technological relationship' with the US. Industry and Innovation Minister Tim Ayres says Amazon's $20bn investment underscores Australia's economic relationship with the US. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia 'It's not just about trading in goods and services,' Senator Ayres told Sky News. 'It's about collaboration around science and research and development and in industrial terms.' He singled out AUKUS as 'offering opportunities for Australian and United States firms … to invest in each other's economy', highlighting it as 'a real counterpoint to the position that the United States has adopted around tariff announcements'. 'They are not the act of a friend, as has been said repeatedly by me and my colleagues,' Senator Ayres said. 'They are not in Australia's interest, but they're not in the United States' interest either. 'Australian steel, for example, exported to the United States, feeds into American supply chains and supports competitive industry that provides good jobs for American workers. 'Why on Earth would anybody want to make Australian steel in the United States more expensive? 'That's what the tariff measures do.' He said Mr Albanese would be putting that 'position directly to the President of the United States' when they meet next week. 'But the Amazon announcement does underscore how vital the direct economic relationship really is,' Senator Ayres said. At his Seattle press conference announcing the deal, Mr Albanese said he would raise tariffs and AUKUS with Mr Trump. Though he stopped short of saying the Amazon announcement was a message to the US leader. 'The US (Free Trade Agreement) has been important,' Mr Albanese told reporters. 'It's enjoyed bipartisan support in Australia and indeed in the United States. 'And so we welcome very much American investment in Australia.' He added it was 'important to recognise as well that the United States has a two for one surplus when it comes to the trading relationship in not just in goods, but in services as well'. 'And we want to grow the economic relationship between our two countries,' Mr Albanese said. 'And I'm sure that when I have the opportunity to have discussions with President Trump, we will speak about the important economic relationship between our two countries, which is in the interests of both Australia and the United States.' Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) and Amazon Web Services chief executive Matt Garman (right) announced the data centre investment. NewsWire / PMO Credit: News Corp Australia Under the deal, Amazon has committed to pumping cash into developing data centres in Melbourne and Sydney over the next five years, focusing on storage, networking, analytics, and secure services supporting cloud and AI. The firm will build renewable energy sources to support its operations. Speaking alongside Mr Albanese, Amazon Web Services chief executive Matt Garman dismissed concerns Australia's grid lacked the power needed for AI. 'I think definitely the explosion of AI requires a lot of power, so that's one of the things we're thinking about,' Mr Garman told reporters. 'I think here in the United States, we see nuclear as part of that portfolio. 'Our investments in Australia are wind and solar, but I think depending on the local setup and economies and other things, it's a global question, but there's no question that we will continue to need more and more power going forward.'

Sky News AU
41 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Middle East conflict, Ukraine-Russia war: What Donald Trump discussed with Vladimir Putin during 'birthday' call
Donald Trump says he and Russian President Vladimir Putin both agree the war between Israel and Iran "should end" amid rising tensions in the Middle East. President Trump has confirmed the Russian leader called him on Saturday to wish him a happy 79th birthday, with the phone chat lasting about one hour. The president said during the phone call he and Putin discussed various issues, including the escalating conflict in the Middle East as well as the Ukraine-Russia war. "President Putin called this morning to very nicely wish me a happy birthday, but to more importantly, talk about Iran, a country he knows very well," President Trump wrote via Truth Social. "We talked at length. Much less time was spent talking about Russia (and) Ukraine, but that will be for next week. "He is doing the planned prisoner swaps - large numbers of prisoners are being exchanged, immediately, from both sides. "The call lasted approximately one hour. He feels, as do I, this war in Israel-Iran should end, to which I explained, his war should also end." The phone call comes as Iran and Israel exchange rocket fire on the weekend. Kremlin spokesperson Yuri Ushakov said Putin condemned the Israeli military operation against Iran and "expressed serious concern about the possible escalation of the conflict". Before Israel's attack on Iran, the White House were in the midst of negotiations to seal a nuclear deal with Tehran. President Trump looked at negotiating a fresh new deal on his terms after his first-term administration pulled out of Obama's backed Iran nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. A planned meeting between the US and Iran was supposed to go ahead on Sunday in Muscat, Oman. The talks have now been stalled following Israel's attack. Meanwhile, Mr Trump has tried to get peace talks rolling on another front with Mr Putin to end the war in Ukraine. After Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, the ongoing war has no signs of stopping, with an escalation of attacks continuing. In May, a meeting was planned for discussions between Russia and Ukraine in Turkey. However, Mr Putin refused to show up, leading to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.