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Iran-Israel conflict live: Iranian state broadcaster hit with Israeli airstrike during live broadcast

Iran-Israel conflict live: Iranian state broadcaster hit with Israeli airstrike during live broadcast

For the fifth straight day Iran and Israel have attacked each other with waves of missile strikes.
An Iranian state television broadcaster was bombed mid-broadcast, with the explosion and aftermath caught on live TV.
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US President Donald Trump leaves G7 Summit early, snubbing meeting with Anthony Albanese
US President Donald Trump leaves G7 Summit early, snubbing meeting with Anthony Albanese

News.com.au

time17 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

US President Donald Trump leaves G7 Summit early, snubbing meeting with Anthony Albanese

In a brutal snub to Australia, Donald Trump has said he will leave the G7 meeting in Canada a day early, missing his first face-to-face meeting with Anthony Albanese. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the US President would leave on Monday, local time, evening after only meeting the G7 leaders and no other nations including Australia. 'President Trump had a great day at the G7, even signing a major trade deal with the United Kingdom and Prime Minister Keir Starmer,' she wrote on X. 'Much was accomplished, but because of what's going on in the Middle East, President Trump will be leaving tonight after dinner with Heads of State.' Shortly before the announcement, Mr Trump warned 10 million Iranians to evacuate Tehran 'immediately' as a second US aircraft carrier made its way to the Middle East. Extraordinarily, Ms Leavitt's post came in the middle of a press conference in Calgary by Mr Albanese talking up the meeting and his main aims for it, including tariffs and AUKUS. The PM was asked if he was worried that due to the planned meeting being at the end of the day on Tuesday, right at the end of the G7, he might not get his 'full timeslot' with Mr Trump. 'I look forward to the meeting, I look forward to it taking place,' the PM said. It suggests the US had not informed Australia of the early departure. has reached out to Mr Albanese's office for comment. While the White House cited the Middle East crisis as the primary reason for bailing, he is not leaving immediately and will stick around long enough for dinner with other leaders and the so-called 'family photo'. It's not just Australia which will miss out on Trump face time. He was also set to meet the leaders of South Korea, South Africa, Mexico and India as well as the European Union. Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky will be bitterly disappointed he will also not get to meet Mr Trump. And while he met all the G7 leaders at various meetings on Monday, he only held in depth one-on-one discussion with Canada's PM Mark Carney – who is hosting – and the UK's Sir Kier Starmer. It is not clear of any nations, k such as Australia, will have the rushed opportunity to meet Mr Trump before he leaves on Monday night. Trump's form at the G7 summit It's not the first time Mr Trump has thrown G7 summit plans into chaos. In 2016, the forum ended in acrimony with the US President refusing to sign up to the joint communique. The Group of Seven, or G7, is group of democratic advanced economies. Along with this year's hosts Canada the G7 consists of the US, UK, Japan, Italy, France and Germany. Every year, the G7 leaders get together for a high-powered pow wow to try and set the world to rights. Australia is not part of the G7 but it's been invited along by Canadian PM Mark Carney as a special guest star. It's definitely a welcome invite for Mr Albanese but there are a lot of special guest stars this year vying for attention including South Korea, Ukraine and India. All the non-G7 leaders will be clamouring for a face-to-face sit-down with the big boys – and the hottest date in town is with Donald Trump. Mr Albanese met Canada's Mark Carney on Monday. The PM wouldn't be drawn on whether his Canadian counterpart had given him any tips on how to deal with Mr Trump. Mr Carney met the US president in the White House last month and was widely lauded for firmly pushing back on Mr Trump's '51 state' comments which have rattled its neighbour. Chief executive of the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney Michael J Green said Mr Albanese should model himself not on Mr Carney but on another leader. 'The most successful Trump whisperer in the first term was the late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. 'He rarely debated Trump or rushed to defend Japan's contributions.' Mr Green said the then Japanese PM 'brought every conversation back to what the US and its allies had to do together to keep ourselves secure, and how Japan was stepping up'. Albo's plans before snub Before the snub, Mr Albanese said he didn't want to pre-empt the outcomes of the meeting'. 'A successful meeting is one where I, as the Australian Prime Minister, am able to put forward our position,' he said to Essentially, Mr Albanese's elevator pitch to Mr Trump was set to be around two issues: tariffs and AUKUS. The Trump administration has whacked 10 per cent tariffs on Australian goods. That's the lowest, but no country is happy with that, especially Australia which buys more from the US than it sells to it. Then there's the far steeper tariffs Mr Trump has imposed on steel and aluminium. 'We see tariffs as acts of economic self-harm by the country imposing them' said Mr Albanese, referring to the US. 'I would hope that over a period of time the United States revisits that position'. The PM added that when it came to metal tariffs 'no new steel production facilities have appeared since January 20 in the United States, the exports are still going in there, they're just paying more for them'. Bringing down these tariffs would be a win but Canberra will be less certain they can get the US to budge on the 10 per cent 'baseline' import tax. Notably the UK, the only country so far to have done a deal with the US, didn't manage to entirely wipe out the baseline tariffs Talking to PM Carney on Monday in Kananaskis, Mr Trump pointedly said he was 'a tariff person'. That doesn't sound like someone who will scrap them altogether. AUKUS could be choppy waters with the US announcing a review of the three-way submarine pact with Australia and the UK. Conceivably, although Canberra insists it's unlikely, the US could withdraw from the deal altogether. That would see Australia lost at sea with just ageing subs. Mr Albanese indicated – prior to the meeting with Mr Trump being scrapped – that he would be stressing the importance of the AUKUS deal for the US to project power against China. 'AUKUS is very much in the interests of all three (nations),' he said. 'What AUKUS offers the United States is support that we're providing for their industrial capacity. 'Secondly, the increased capacity to have their subs in the water because of the maintenance facilities that will take place at Henderson (submarine base near Perth). 'In addition to that there's all of the support that we give to the United States including fuel reserves in the Northern Territory and the presence of US forces in Darwin. 'Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States all having increased nuclear powered submarines is something that will make the Indo Pacific area more secure and that is in the interests of the United States, and I will indicate that very clearly'.

Trump may be ‘forced to end the war' between Israel and Iran if he doesn't step in
Trump may be ‘forced to end the war' between Israel and Iran if he doesn't step in

Sky News AU

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Trump may be ‘forced to end the war' between Israel and Iran if he doesn't step in

Quincy Institute Executive Vice President Trita Parsi claims US President Donald Trump may be 'forced to end' the Israel-Iran war if he doesn't step in to stop the fighting. 'The question is when does Trump realise that unless he steps in to stop the war, he may be forced to end the war, and that would be devastating for the United States,' he told Sky News Australia. 'And it would be devastating for Trump's own presidency because his own base, the America First base, is dead set against entering this war.'

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