Can Labor stop Trump's tariff assault on Australia?
Donald Trump's decision to double tariffs on steel imports to 50 per cent puts Australia back on the front line of the escalating global trade war, which has already soured America's relations with trading partners and roiled global markets.
Australian steel and aluminium producers sell approximately 10 per cent of their output to the US, and account for 0.5 per cent of total exports to America. Australian producers sold more than $800 million worth of iron, steel and aluminium to the United States in 2024.
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Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Convicted Bali bombmaker Umar Patek behind the deadly plot which killed 88 Australians launches cafe business
Convicted terrorist Umar Patek, who was the main bomb maker in the 2002 Bali bombings which killed more than 200 people, including 88 Australians, has launched a new café business, just a few hundred kilometres away from the devastating barbarism. Patek, whose real name is Hisyam bin Alizein, was released from prison in 2022 after serving 11 of a 20-year sentence, has claimed he has chosen 'another way' by launching his new coffee roasting business 'RAMU Coffee 1966 by Umar Patek', Ramu being a reversal of his own name. The former member of Indonesian Islamist group Jemaah Islamiyah said he had been known for something that 'hurt the world', but had now 'chosen a different path', as he plans to unveil his business on Tuesday in the Indonesian city of Surabaya. 'Now, I am brewing flavours and brewing peace,' he told South China Morning Post. Patek spoke to the outlet at the Hedon Estate café, which will stock his beans, and said before 'bitterness used to destroy', but now the 'bitterness (of coffee) heals'. 'Once, I concocted bombs, and now I concoct coffee,' Patek said. Patek told This Week in Asia he had told Indonesian media of his dream to build a business, with the owner of Hedon Estate reaching out and making it a reality. The café in Surabaya will be the base for his business launch, with Hedon Estate donating his equipment and the coffee beans to make his products. 'I thought it was so humanitarian of them to help me, particularly as the owner of the café is not Muslim. I hope that my new business will be a success and I will be able to be independent again,' he said. However, Sandra Thompson, the mother of 29-year-old Australian Clint Thompson, who was killed in the Bali bombings, questioned whether Patek had 'repented' for his crimes. 'Has this man repented? Does he still think what he did was morally right? Or has he just served a sentence then moved on?' Ms Thomson told the South China Morning Post. 'Two hundred and two lives plus an unborn baby and survivors still living with the effects of their injuries. Has he paid for that? Never, if he has no remorse.' Mr Clint was a promising rugby league player and president of the Coogee Dolphins squad when he and five other teammates were killed in the blast. Patek maintained he had apologised both publicly and privately. 'If I apologise, people say that I am pretending and being strategic… if I don't apologise people will say I am arrogant and don't care,' he said. 'This is not just about coffee. It is about change. It is about me choosing a new life.' Ms Thomspon said Patek was 'not important' in her life, but while she thought she could forgive, 'another one is allowed to live a normal life'. 'A life he took from all those families. My life has never been the same,' she said. Patek's impending café launch comes months after Sydney man, Erik de Haart, credited with saving lives in the immediate aftermath of the Bali bombings, died at the age of 67. Mr De Haart was with the Coogee Dolphins rugby league team in Kuta when the terrorists detonated the bombs. In 2023, two men convicted of conspiring in the Bali bombings, Mohammed Farik bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir bin Lep, were released from Guantanamo Bay following a plea deal in which they provided evidence against the alleged mastermind Hambali. Following his arrest, Patek, claimed he helped make the last 50 kilograms of the near one-tonne bomb which was placed in a van outside the Sari Club in Kuta. Patek was also convicted in connection to the 2000 Christmas Eve bombing at a church, which killed 18 people. He evaded capture for almost a decade after the Bali bombings, and moved between Pakistan and the Philippines, where he was affiliated with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) militant group, before he was finally extradited in 2011 from Abbottabad, Pakistan, the same place Osama bin Laden was killed in a raid by US Navy SEALs.


West Australian
2 hours ago
- West Australian
In China, The Great American burger is now made with Australian beef
At his restaurant in Beijing, Geng Xiaoyun used to offer a special dish of salt-baked chicken feet — or 'phoenix talons' as they are called in China — imported from America. With prices climbing 30 per cent from March due to tariffs, the owner of Kunyuan restaurant had to pull the Chinese delicacy from the menu. 'American chicken feet are so beautiful,' Xiaoyun said. 'They're spongy so they taste great. Chinese [chicken] feet just aren't as good.' Geng can now source chicken feet from Brazil or Russia but said they just don't stand up to the American ones. He keeps a small stash for himself but hopes to serve his American phoenix talons once again. 'The price of American chicken feet will come back down,' Xiaoyun said, 'as long as there are no big changes in the world's political situation.' But the 90-day tariff pause agreed by China and the US in Geneva in May is now under threat as both sides have accused each other of breaching the terms. On Monday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry responded to President Donald Trump's claim that the country 'totally violated its agreement'. The ministry pointed at recent US artificial intelligence chip export controls as actions that 'severely undermine' the Geneva pact. As the world waits and watches, American agricultural products have been vanishing from Chinese stores and restaurants and losing ground to other imports. US Department of Agriculture grade beef has been a draw for years at Home Plate, a Beijing restaurant known locally for its American-style barbecue. However, staff said the restaurant stopped serving American beef last month. Dishes like The Great American burger are made with beef imported from Australia. Australian beef has zero duty under the terms of the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement, though China does maintain the right to a safeguard limit on those imports. Liu Li, a beef supplier at the Sanyuanli market for three decades, said the tariffs have disrupted supply, hiking the price of US beef by 50 per cent compared to before the tariff fight. 'US beef is fattier and tastier,' Li said. 'It's a shame we're in a trade war. The high price is just too much to bear.' CNBC

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Strategic expert blasts Anthony Albanese's 'bizarre' attack on defence spending report as Australia faces a 'crisis situation'
Strategic Analysis Australia Director Peter Jennings has blasted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after he lashed out at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) and refused to meet the United States halfway on defence spending. Sky News' Sunday Agenda reported Mr Albanese would not accept the US request and would stand by Labor's existing policy of increasing defence funding. Under the government's projections, defence spending is forecast to reach 2.33 per cent of GDP by 2033–34, up from about 2.05 per cent in 2025-26. The Prime Minister launched a verbal attack on ASPI last week after it published a report criticising the government's funding trajectory. 'Seriously, they need to, I think, have a look at themselves as well and the way that they conduct themselves in debates,' Mr Albanese told ABC Radio. 'We've had a Defence Strategic Review. We've got considerable additional investment going into defence – $10 billion." Mr Jennings - who worked at ASPI for years - said Mr Albanese's comments were 'bizarre' and not reflective of someone who wanted to present himself as an 'elder statesman in Australian politics'. 'You know, Anthony Albanese, he shouldn't be so glass-jawed,' he said. 'What ASPI was saying in that report is pretty much the mainstream view of that small group of people which actually looks at defence and security, which is that we are significantly underfunded.' Mr Jennings said the current defence force was being 'cannibalised' to pay for future submarines, which he said would not materialise for 10 to 15 years. The strategic expert said Australia was facing a 'crisis situation' which was acknowledged by 'almost everyone that looks at defence'. 'Even those people that don't like the American alliance say that we need to be spending more on defence,' he said. 'So for the Prime Minister to be so sort of mean in the way he picked out ASPI I thought was bizarre.' Mr Jennings claimed it was one of China's demands of Australia to have think tanks 'shut down' that are critical of them. 'Why is the Prime Minister giving this gift to the Chinese?' he said. 'You know, he really needs to be more broad-shouldered and actually look at the content of that ASPI report, which was pretty good.' Mr Jennings argued the government had made 'virtually minimal change' to the 2016 Defence White Paper projections, which outline the strategic plan for the ADF over the following decade. The SAA director said the plan no longer fits the strategic circumstances Australia now faces with the conflict in Europe and the Middle East, and the 'much greater risk of conflict' in the Asia-Pacific region. Mr Jennings said Australia had been 'riding the coattails' of American security for the past 20 to 30 years and had now been warned by US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth to increase defence spending. 'I'm sad that Australian governments haven't seen their own way to concluding that we need to spend more on defence. But the call from Pete Hegseth is timely,' he told Sky News host Peta Credlin. "We really should be paying attention to it.' Speaking at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore last week, Mr Hegseth warned the threat of China was real and potentially imminent as he pushed allies in the Indo-Pacific to spend more on their own defence needs. Mr Hegseth echoed the Trump administration's motto of maintaining 'peace through strength' and stressed the importance of restoring the 'warrior ethos'. Mr Jennings told Sky News that Mr Hegseth's plea was a 'warning from our closest ally to say we've got to get our act in order'. The strategy expert told Credlin that China's President Xi Jinping was not going to 'die wondering' about Taiwan and insisted he would make his move by the end of the decade. '(Defence Minister) Richard Marles at Shangri-La kept talking about a lack of transparency in Chinese planning. That's simply not true. Xi has been telling the military to be ready for war in 2027,' he said. 'He says it repeatedly when he gives speeches. Of course, they'd rather take over Taiwan peacefully, but I think they are more than prepared to do it militarily if they feel they have to. And something in the second half of this decade is going to happen.' Former chief of army Peter Leahy said the Prime Minister's hesitation to up defence spending was an 'abrogation of the primary responsibility' of government. 'The almost total lack of consideration of defence matters during the recent election campaign and the current focus on a far-off distant, enormously expensive force demonstrates how willing our politicians are prepared to tolerate risk,' General Leahy told The Australian. 'This is an abrogation of the primary responsibility of our elected representatives to provide for the defence and security of the nation and the safety of our servicemen and women. 'Those who wear Australia's uniform place great trust in those who task and equip them. This trust is not being honoured.' Shadow defence minister Angus Taylor said Australia must commit to increasing defence spending to at least 3 per cent, adding that Labor 'must find ways to finance it'. Mr Taylor said he worked closely with Andrew Hastie, James Paterson and Jane Hume on the Coalition's commitment to increase defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP within five years and 3 per cent withing a decade. 'The first duty of any government is to protect its citizens. Labor is failing to match this serious duty with funding and action. It needs to catch up or risk jeopardising Australia's safety,' Mr Taylor wrote in The Australian on Tuesday. 'We must move from rhetoric to readiness… We can't afford another decade of 'on-hold' projects. Every delay widens the gap between what Australia needs and what the ADF can actually deliver. 'Defence must be delivered, not just promised.'