logo
'Doing business' at the White House has become a fool's errand

'Doing business' at the White House has become a fool's errand

The Advertiser5 hours ago

Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras.
From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win.
First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands.
Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand.
In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated.
Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power.
While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks.
The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown.
It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two.
Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas.
That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious.
That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous.
The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic.
Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both.
Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats.
MORE MARK KENNY:
It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples.
Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison".
Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism.
In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective.
Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity.
Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop".
He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind.
If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it".
Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all".
Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships.
That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart."
This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings.
"That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship".
No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment.
Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras.
From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win.
First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands.
Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand.
In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated.
Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power.
While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks.
The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown.
It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two.
Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas.
That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious.
That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous.
The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic.
Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both.
Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats.
MORE MARK KENNY:
It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples.
Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison".
Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism.
In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective.
Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity.
Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop".
He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind.
If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it".
Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all".
Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships.
That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart."
This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings.
"That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship".
No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment.
Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras.
From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win.
First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands.
Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand.
In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated.
Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power.
While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks.
The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown.
It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two.
Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas.
That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious.
That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous.
The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic.
Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both.
Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats.
MORE MARK KENNY:
It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples.
Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison".
Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism.
In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective.
Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity.
Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop".
He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind.
If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it".
Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all".
Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships.
That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart."
This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings.
"That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship".
No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment.
Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras.
From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win.
First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands.
Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand.
In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated.
Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power.
While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks.
The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown.
It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two.
Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas.
That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious.
That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous.
The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic.
Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both.
Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats.
MORE MARK KENNY:
It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples.
Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison".
Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism.
In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective.
Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity.
Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop".
He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind.
If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it".
Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all".
Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships.
That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart."
This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings.
"That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship".
No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Toby Mann
Toby Mann

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Toby Mann

Israeli forces took command of the charity vessel that had tried to break a naval blockade of the Gaza Strip and has detained its crew as it is steered to a port in Israel, officials said. 9m ago 9 minutes ago Mon 9 Jun 2025 at 7:40am Vladimir Putin's online army is normally supportive, but some accounts have been boldly outspoken and willing to question, even blame, the Russian establishment for not protecting the country's prized strategic bomber fleet. Fri 6 Jun Fri 6 Jun Fri 6 Jun 2025 at 9:49pm After another Signal controversy, there is mounting pressure on US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and reports of "dysfunction" and "mass chaos" inside the Pentagon. Tue 22 Apr Tue 22 Apr Tue 22 Apr 2025 at 12:39am Nationwide protests are rocking Türkiye as its jailed presidential alternative issues a message from jail. Fri 28 Mar Fri 28 Mar Fri 28 Mar 2025 at 11:37pm Israel has formally identified the remains of children Ariel and Kfir Bibas, but says a third body handed over by Hamas alongside them is not that of their mother. Fri 21 Feb Fri 21 Feb Fri 21 Feb 2025 at 2:47am There might be a ceasefire, but the people of Gaza are far from free. This is a brief look beyond Israel's fortified border wall. Thu 6 Feb Thu 6 Feb Thu 6 Feb 2025 at 7:01pm In a press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, US President Donald Trump announced a surprising plan for the Middle East and the future of Gaza. These are the key takeaways. Mon 3 Mar Mon 3 Mar Mon 3 Mar 2025 at 2:08am As flight 5342 prepared to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport it was in one of the most secure airspaces in the world. So, how did it collide with a military helicopter? Sat 1 Feb Sat 1 Feb Sat 1 Feb 2025 at 3:55am First responders have recovered the bodies of 28 passengers from the American Airlines jet that collided with the helicopter, US officials said. Thu 30 Jan Thu 30 Jan Thu 30 Jan 2025 at 2:51pm It appears as if both Joe Biden and Donald Trump are staking their foreign policy legacies on the Israel Hamas ceasefire agreement. And analysts believe both men were crucial to getting both sides to finally reach a deal. Fri 17 Jan Fri 17 Jan Fri 17 Jan 2025 at 7:06pm Once dismissed as "the Paris Hilton of Canadian politics", Justin Trudeau defied expectations by holding onto power for almost a decade. But his tumultuous period in office was often defined by scandals of his own making. Tue 7 Jan Tue 7 Jan Tue 7 Jan 2025 at 6:44pm From Bashar al-Assad's abandoned palace to the site of one of the country's most horrific massacres, the ABC spent three days in Syria, uncovering the fallen dictator's secrets. Wed 18 Dec Wed 18 Dec Wed 18 Dec 2024 at 6:42pm A lawyer for the miners sheltering inside an abandoned goldmine says they are suffering from a lack of food, with police poised to arrest them when they surface. Wed 20 Nov Wed 20 Nov Wed 20 Nov 2024 at 7:29pm While Australia struggles to tackle the rising cost of living, other countries have the opposite problem. What is deflation and why can it be bad for the economy? Sun 27 Oct Sun 27 Oct Sun 27 Oct 2024 at 7:54pm Two gunmen opened fire on passengers travelling in Tel Aviv's light rail and continued their attack on foot until they were "neutralised" by armed members of the public, Israeli police say. Wed 2 Oct Wed 2 Oct Wed 2 Oct 2024 at 5:33am The leader of the region's most powerful militia and Iran's strongest ally is gone, and Hezbollah, the group he headed, has been decimated by intense Israel attacks. But that doesn't mean it will die with him. Sat 28 Sep Sat 28 Sep Sat 28 Sep 2024 at 8:07pm After his failed attempt to take power by storming parliament with armed supporters in 2000, George Speight was initially sentenced to death by hanging but that was later commuted to a life sentence. Wed 25 Sep Wed 25 Sep Wed 25 Sep 2024 at 8:09pm Kiingi Tuheitia Pootatau Te Wherowhero VII is laid to rest alongside generations of ancestors at Mount Taupiri after his funeral procession wraps up days of mourning. Fri 6 Sep Fri 6 Sep Fri 6 Sep 2024 at 2:02am Spanish authorities have been after fugitive Catalonian separatist leader Carles Puigdemont for seven years, but when he openly returned to Barcelona, police didn't have a plan to nab him and he vanished again. Thu 29 Aug Thu 29 Aug Thu 29 Aug 2024 at 7:06pm Their Italian holiday was meant to celebrate winning a mighty battle between corporate heavyweights, but the Bayesian luxury yacht was in "the wrong place at the wrong time". Tue 20 Aug Tue 20 Aug Tue 20 Aug 2024 at 7:02pm Allegedly dodgy doctors teamed up with an LA dealer known as the "Ketamine Queen" and the Friends' star's personal assistant to use his addiction issues to "enrich themselves", US authorities say after charging five people following a wide-ranging investigation. Fri 16 Aug Fri 16 Aug Fri 16 Aug 2024 at 7:04pm Iran blames Israel for the assassination of a Hamas leader in Tehran this week, saying it has a "duty" to seek revenge. So, what might Iran do next? Sun 1 Sep Sun 1 Sep Sun 1 Sep 2024 at 10:58pm Voting in the UK's general election began on Thursday as a media blackout descended across the country and silenced its political hopefuls. Thu 4 Jul Thu 4 Jul Thu 4 Jul 2024 at 8:14pm Under the new arrangement announced by Chinese Premier Li Qiang, Australians will be able to travel to China for up to 15 days without the need to apply and pay for a visa, and for those looking to visit family the plan has been well received even though many details are still to emerge. Thu 20 Jun Thu 20 Jun Thu 20 Jun 2024 at 1:11am Popular with manufacturers and consumers across South-East Asia, single-use sachets are a nightmare for recyclers and the environment. Tue 28 May Tue 28 May Tue 28 May 2024 at 1:08am

Musk's father says Elon made a mistake 'under stress'
Musk's father says Elon made a mistake 'under stress'

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Musk's father says Elon made a mistake 'under stress'

The row between Elon Musk, the world's richest man, and US President Donald Trump was triggered by stress on both sides and Elon made a mistake by publicly challenging Trump, Musk's father says. Musk and Trump began exchanging insults last week on social media, with Musk denouncing the president's sweeping tax and spending bill as a "disgusting abomination". "You know they have been under a lot of stress for five months - you know - give them a break," Errol Musk told Russia's Izvestia newspaper during a visit to Moscow. "They are very tired and stressed, so you can expect something like this. "Trump will prevail - he's the president. He was elected as the president. "So, you know, Elon made a mistake, I think. But he is tired, he is stressed." Errol Musk also suggested the row "was just a small thing" and would "be over tomorrow". Neither the White House nor Musk could be reached for comment outside normal US business hours. Trump said on Saturday his relationship with billionaire donor Musk was over and warned there would be "serious consequences" if Musk decided to fund US Democrats running against Republicans who vote for the tax and spending bill. Musk, the world's richest man, bankrolled a large part of Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. Trump named Musk to head a controversial effort to downsize the federal workforce and slash spending.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store