logo
China was the big disruptor in our region. Now the US is determined to take that title

China was the big disruptor in our region. Now the US is determined to take that title

Australia and China, the prime minister told the secretary of the CCP's Shanghai Municipal Committee on Sunday, "deal with each other in a calm and consistent manner".
"And we want to continue to pursue our national interests, and it is in our interest to have good relations with China".
It's the sort of polite diplomatic language that can often sound eye glazing at bilateral meetings on official trips. But it had a particularly pointed resonance this time, given there is little that feels 'calm and consistent' emanating from our other major international partner: the United States of America.
There is the ongoing and escalating trade war that President Trump has unleashed upon the globe, and notably on countries that have close economic relationships with China.
And there has also been his continuing pressure on allies to increase their defence spending, facing the prospect of a US withdrawal of its forces — and military spending — around the world.
Over the weekend, the US president has made more declarations about tariffs he plans to impose on the European Union and Mexico.
To date, Australia hasn't been subjected to talk of any further punitive tariffs.
But on the strategic front, an intervention by his Under Secretary of Defence for Strategy, Elbridge Colby, signalled that pressure that has, to date, been most notably seen on NATO countries in Europe to increase their defence spending, is now turning to the Asia Pacific.
The Financial Times reported that the Pentagon is pressing Japan and Australia to make clear what role they would play if the US and China went to war over Taiwan.
Apart from being the latest attempt by the US administration to pressure all its allies on spending, the issue raises a whole set of separate issues for Australia, because of the AUKUS agreement.
The AUKUS agreement — which includes, in the shorter term, the purchases by Australia of US nuclear-powered submarines — is built on a so-called 'forward defence' strategy — one that envisages a conflict fought out in the South China Sea, rather than in the maritime approaches to Australia closer to home.
AUKUS sceptics have long argued that the increasing intermeshing of Australia's defence capability with that of the US (even before AUKUS), tied us intrinsically into whatever military operations the United States might undertake in the future.
The AUKUS deal escalated that possibility, raising the question of whether the submarine deal would link us into a conflict between our biggest trading partner and our biggest ally over Taiwan.
The leaking of news about Secretary Colby's pressure on Australia and Japan makes that question over our position on a war over Taiwan — which has tended to be fobbed off as hypothetical until now — a much sharper one.
The irony of course is that the United States has always maintained a position of 'strategic ambiguity' about what it would do in the case of China invading Taiwan.
Yet now it is pressuring Australia and Japan to say what they would do.
What's more the story appeared just as the Australian prime minister touched down in Shanghai: timing that few believe was coincidental and possibly designed to disrupt any improvement in relations between the two countries, and to dominate the coverage of the visit.
Prime Minister Albanese and his foreign minister Penny Wong have been significantly changing their language about Australia's strategic approach to both the US and China in the past couple of weeks, and China hawks in Australia have been warning that the change in tone in the way the PM has reflected on, and defined the ANZUS alliance, would not be welcomed in Washington.
In a major speech, Mr Albanese spoke of the decision of his predecessor John Curtin to turn the United States during World War II involved "an Australian foreign policy anchored in strategic reality, not bound by tradition".
It was "dealing with the world as it is, not as we would like it to be", he said, a statement with clear resonances in the present.
While Australia's position between the two superpowers is often seen as a binary choice of one or the other, the times compel a different, more nuanced and independent approach.
After a decade of discussion in Australia about China seen largely through a national security lens, understandably provoked by China's increasing defence position, the PM's message ahead of this trip to China has been a nod to our huge trade relationship and to people-to-people contacts.
Chinese tourism to Australia, for one thing, was worth $9 billion alone last year.
But Mr Albanese's foreign minister, Penny Wong, has been taking the role of 'bad cop', putting on record with her counterpart on the sidelines of an ASEAN meeting in Kuala Lumpur that Australia was not happy about China's live fire exercises off our coast, or a range of other issues.
For the always carefully spoken, the language was stronger than it has been in the past, and came on the back of a speech in which she expressed Australia's concern about China's military build up, including nuclear weaponry.
It seemed to signal a balanced approach to the good and bad of the Australia-China relationship, just as the government was also sending a clear signal that it would take a more independent approach, less frightened of offending the Americans, than has been the case in recent years.
But just as Australia is asserting that its national interests are different from those of both China and the US, it seems the United States may force us into a choice we don't want to make.
Mr Albanese was careful in his response to the Elbridge story, agreeing that there was some irony in the US expecting Australia to outline its position on an issue which the Americans have not done. And also insisting that Australia's preference is for the status quo over Taiwan to continue.
Five years ago it seemed China was the big disruptor in our region. Now the United States appears determined to take that title for itself.
Laura Tingle is the ABC's Global Affairs Editor.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Laura Tingle on tricky diplomacy in China
Laura Tingle on tricky diplomacy in China

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Laura Tingle on tricky diplomacy in China

Sam Hawley: Will Australia join a US war against China if it invades Taiwan? That's the stark question Anthony Albanese faced during his delicate visit to Beijing. He's trying to strengthen trade and business ties. So with the prime minister meeting the Chinese president, can he drum up more business while managing tensions in the relationship? Today, the ABC's newly appointed global affairs editor, Laura Tingle, joins us from Beijing. I'm Sam Hawley on Gadigal land in Sydney. This is ABC News Daily. Sam Hawley: Laura, Anthony Albanese and President Xi, they're two leaders that have a lot to talk about, to say the least, aren't they? Laura Tingle: They do have a lot to talk about, Sam. News report: Prime Minister is sitting down with China's president in Beijing in a high profile meeting being closely watched in Canberra and Washington. Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister: Australia values our relationship with China and will continue to approach it in a calm and consistent manner. It's important we have these direct discussions on issues that matter to us and to the stability and prosperity of our region. Xi Jinping, Chinese President: With joint efforts from both sides, the China-Australia relationship has rose from the setback and turned around. Laura Tingle: There are all the sort of cliches about relationships and all those sorts of things, but it's interesting to me to come back to China on a prime ministerial trip after a bit of a break, because it does feel very much like the trips of the 80s and 90s, where it was all love and kisses and opportunities, which, given that there are points of significant difference between the two sides, is interesting. Sam Hawley: Well, Laura, the prime minister did speak after the meeting. He says he raised the detention of the Australian writer Yang Hengjun with the Chinese president. But overall, he was really positive about the economic relationship that Australia has with China right now. Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister: We had a very constructive meeting with President Xi in which we spoke about the range of issues facing our relationship with China. My government's approach to our relationship with China is patient, is calibrated and is deliberate. Sam Hawley: Not to mention, of course, Donald Trump. He's ever present, isn't he? And his tariffs. Laura Tingle: Absolutely. He's ever present. And just in the last 24 hours, we've had yet another announcement from Donald Trump, of course, about the possibility of really tough tariffs on Russia, over Ukraine, if Vladimir Putin doesn't do as he should, according to Donald Trump. And he's threatening secondary sanctions on China, or he hasn't named China, but on countries that have strong trading relationships with Russia, which would hit China as its biggest trading partner. So it affects everything that's going on here in Beijing at the moment. The world is being rewired before our eyes, I think, Sam. Sam Hawley: Well, we know, of course, that trade and business are crucial items for Anthony Albanese during this trip. Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister: And given that China is overwhelmingly, by far, the largest trading partner that Australia has, it is very much in the interest of Australian jobs and the Australian economy to have a positive and constructive relationship with China. Sam Hawley: But the thing is, Laura, we've seen before that this relationship with China is so delicate that it can fall apart in a nanosecond. We saw that, didn't we, with Scott Morrison when he called for an inquiry into COVID, trade was just cut by Beijing. So why are we trying to build it up when we know that it can fall apart so easily? Laura Tingle: Well, it can fall apart around the edges, but realistically, we still have this massive trade relationship with China. That's the reality of it. They've cut us off on some particular markets in the past few years, but still 25% of our exports go to China. So that relationship is really solid. China, for the time being, certainly, or for the next little while, is reliant on our iron ore. So while you have these disruptions and things, it's still a fundamental relationship. Now, it is extraordinary to just think about how bad things did get a few years ago, where basically no minister could get a phone call from anybody in China. They were throwing Australian journalists out of the country and jailing others. It was, you know, it was pretty ugly. News report: An Australian journalist working in China has been detained by the Chinese government in a highly sensitive case, posing a fresh challenge to those already fraught Australia-China relations. News report: First, it was barley. Now it's beef. Our largest trading partner suspending imports from four abattoirs. News report: Beyond meat, China is now refusing to accept timber from four states. Lobsters are shut out. Wine exporters face up to 200% tariff. Laura Tingle: I think there's been a bit of a change at the Chinese end. I think the whole culture of the so-called wolf warrior diplomacy was something that they ultimately decided wasn't really working in their interests. And I think once again, to mention Donald Trump, you can see, I think, that not just in their relationship with Australia, but in their relationship with countries like Vietnam. China is really pushing this message that, you know, we're the safe and steady, you know, people who make very sensible, rational, calm decisions about our trade relationships. China's playing the sort of adult in the room role, if you like. Sam Hawley: Well, Laura, of course, trade is one thing. But then there is the flip side to this relationship, and that is security, of course, and the elephant, if you like, in the room, which is Taiwan. And that is when things get really complicated, don't they, for Anthony Albanese? Laura Tingle: Well, they do and they don't get complicated in some way, Sam. If you think about sort of the domestic way this issue has to play out at some point and also then how it plays out on the international stage. Now, a story was leaked over the weekend, just as the prime minister was arriving in Shanghai, about how the Under Secretary of Defense, Elbridge Colby, was pushing Australia and Japan to say exactly what their position would be in the case of a war with Taiwan. On one level, that's sort of a bit embarrassing for the prime minister, but he's made it clear that, you know, we make our own decisions about these things. Reporter: Do you think it's important, from the point of view of deterrence, of China, that you say, yes, we're involved or no, we're not involved? Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister: I think it's important that we have a consistent position, which Australia has had for a long period of time. We support the status quo when it comes to Taiwan. We don't support any unilateral action. Laura Tingle: And it was being linked to the AUKUS submarines, the Virginia class submarines that we're supposed to be getting from the Americans. Now, it's quite clear, talking to Australian officials, that they don't regard the AUKUS deal is in any way, gives the Americans any right to tell us what we would do with the US submarines once we got them, because they'd be ours, you know, we would buy them. Now, there seems to be a fair degree of confidence that despite these stories, you know, that will all sort of settle down. And I sort of also think you've got to back engineer this a little bit. I mean, if you took Elbridge Colby's comments seriously and said, he's saying that we can't get the submarines unless we're prepared to go to war with Taiwan. Well, wait a minute. The Americans haven't said that they would go to war with China over Taiwan. It sort of doesn't all quite stack up. Sam Hawley: There was some confusion, wasn't there, when Joe Biden was president over some questioning on this, whether the US would support Taiwan militarily. Laura Tingle: Yes. Sam Hawley: That was never really cleared up, but he came pretty close to saying they would. Laura Tingle: He certainly did come close to saying that they would. Donald Trump certainly hasn't. Sam Hawley: What do you think, though, Laura, is the Trump administration justified in asking this question, asking nations if they would support the US if China did invade Taiwan? You know, China has continually been flexing its muscles, hasn't it? Military exercises around the Pacific, including almost all the way around Australia. So there's reason for concern. There's reason for discussions like this. Laura Tingle: Absolutely. There's a really legitimate reason for discussions. And I think it's really important that Australia has that discussion internally, because I don't think we've been having it until now. And it affects those decisions about whether we have a forward strategic stance in the South China Sea or not. But I think the crucial question is it's fine for the Americans to ask that question if their own position is clarified. And I think this is the dodgy bit of it, to use the technical phrase. I mean, I think the Americans don't want to say what their position is. And it's not clear that they would go to war over Taiwan with China. Reporter: Would it be reasonable for the United States to demand any sort of assurances from Australia on a Taiwan contingency, given the United States itself maintains a policy of strategic ambiguity, at least in theory, on Taiwan? Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister: Well, you've just answered the question yourself, I think, through the comments that you've made. Sam Hawley: Well, Laura, just sum this up for me. How successful do you think the prime minister's approach to China will be? Because it is remarkably different, isn't it, to the way that Scott Morrison, for instance, dealt with Beijing or Donald Trump, for that matter? Laura Tingle: Well, you'd have to say at this stage, it's certainly more successful, Sam, just because we have restored those trade links. He's here. This is another visit. You know, as you say, it's always volatile. But for now, it's quite a good relationship. And it serves both countries well in the context of this global trade war that Donald Trump has started. So I think, you know, it's a it's a good basis to be operating in this very uncertain world. Sam Hawley: But Laura, what about tensions in the relationship? What do you think? Will Anthony Albanese actually tackle those head on? Or is he going to bring some sort of softer approach for fear of backlash from China? Laura Tingle: Look, well, I suppose there are two observations on that. One of them is Penny Wong has in the last week gone out very hard on these issues, both in a speech and also in her meetings with her counterpart when she was at the ASEAN meeting. Penny Wong, Foreign Minister: China continues to assert its strategic influence and project its military power further into our region. And we have seen the worrying pace of China's nuclear and conventional military build up without the transparency that the region expects. We are realistic about China's objectives in changing the regional balance of power. Laura Tingle: So she's laid down Australia's protests on all these issues in a very forthright way. And the prime minister has said that, you know, these issues will not be avoided in his conversations with the president and premier while he's here in Beijing. But, you know, it's always the case that those leader to leader meetings, they're a little bit more diplomatic about what they might say publicly. But Anthony Albanese says that, one, he's on the case and two, that it's been successful in the interests of Australia since he's been prime minister. Sam Hawley: All right. Well, Laura, it's a true balancing act. That's for sure. The PM's trying to work with China, but he also wants to keep the US happy too. So this, I think, is one of the most complicated relationships he has to deal with as the leader of Australia, right? Laura Tingle: Absolutely. Absolutely. But I can't help but feeling that the way that the Trump administration has been behaving, if you like, in that broader description of its sort of erraticness and everything, has created both political space at home and abroad for the prime minister to establish a more assertive position with both major powers and sort of establish that more independent voice of our own. I think it's been quite useful because I think people at home are sort of, they look at what Donald Trump's been doing with a bit of confusion and concern, and it's just given him some space. And of course, also, you know, three years ago, there was this sense that the Labor Party couldn't say anything negative about the United States at all or about the alliance because they'd get absolutely pummelled by the coalition. It's harder to do that now because of the way the US has been going. But also, of course, the coalition is weakened politically and its both its capacity and its taste for, you know, fighting every last fight as a sign of, you know, being disloyal to the Americans has really subsided. So I think there's a lot of tectonic plate shifting, which give government of the day room to manoeuvre with both major powers. Sam Hawley: Laura Tingle is the ABC's Global Affairs Editor. This episode was produced by Sydney Pead and Kara Jensen-Mackinnon. Audio production by Sam Dunn. Our supervising producer is David Coady. I'm Sam Hawley. Thanks for listening.

Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia
Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia

US President Donald Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia. "Great deal, for everybody, just made with Indonesia. I dealt directly with their highly respected President. DETAILS TO FOLLOW!!!" Trump said in a post on Truth Social. Trump had threatened the southeast Asian country with a 32 per cent tariff rate effective August 1 in a letter sent to its president last week. Trump sent similar letters to about two dozen trading partners this month, including Canada, Japan and Brazil, setting blanket tariff rates ranging from 20 per cent up to 50 per cent as well as a 50 per cent tariff on copper. The August 1 deadline gives the targeted countries time to negotiate agreements that could lower the threatened tariffs. Some investors and economists have also noted Trump's pattern of backing off his tariff threats. Since launching his tariff policy, Trump has reached trade agreements with three other countries: China, the United Kingdom and Vietnam. US President Donald Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia. "Great deal, for everybody, just made with Indonesia. I dealt directly with their highly respected President. DETAILS TO FOLLOW!!!" Trump said in a post on Truth Social. Trump had threatened the southeast Asian country with a 32 per cent tariff rate effective August 1 in a letter sent to its president last week. Trump sent similar letters to about two dozen trading partners this month, including Canada, Japan and Brazil, setting blanket tariff rates ranging from 20 per cent up to 50 per cent as well as a 50 per cent tariff on copper. The August 1 deadline gives the targeted countries time to negotiate agreements that could lower the threatened tariffs. Some investors and economists have also noted Trump's pattern of backing off his tariff threats. Since launching his tariff policy, Trump has reached trade agreements with three other countries: China, the United Kingdom and Vietnam. US President Donald Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia. "Great deal, for everybody, just made with Indonesia. I dealt directly with their highly respected President. DETAILS TO FOLLOW!!!" Trump said in a post on Truth Social. Trump had threatened the southeast Asian country with a 32 per cent tariff rate effective August 1 in a letter sent to its president last week. Trump sent similar letters to about two dozen trading partners this month, including Canada, Japan and Brazil, setting blanket tariff rates ranging from 20 per cent up to 50 per cent as well as a 50 per cent tariff on copper. The August 1 deadline gives the targeted countries time to negotiate agreements that could lower the threatened tariffs. Some investors and economists have also noted Trump's pattern of backing off his tariff threats. Since launching his tariff policy, Trump has reached trade agreements with three other countries: China, the United Kingdom and Vietnam. US President Donald Trump says he has struck a trade deal with Indonesia. "Great deal, for everybody, just made with Indonesia. I dealt directly with their highly respected President. DETAILS TO FOLLOW!!!" Trump said in a post on Truth Social. Trump had threatened the southeast Asian country with a 32 per cent tariff rate effective August 1 in a letter sent to its president last week. Trump sent similar letters to about two dozen trading partners this month, including Canada, Japan and Brazil, setting blanket tariff rates ranging from 20 per cent up to 50 per cent as well as a 50 per cent tariff on copper. The August 1 deadline gives the targeted countries time to negotiate agreements that could lower the threatened tariffs. Some investors and economists have also noted Trump's pattern of backing off his tariff threats. Since launching his tariff policy, Trump has reached trade agreements with three other countries: China, the United Kingdom and Vietnam.

Kremlin reacts icily to Trump warnings over Ukraine
Kremlin reacts icily to Trump warnings over Ukraine

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Kremlin reacts icily to Trump warnings over Ukraine

Trump, sitting beside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, on Monday, announced new weapons for Ukraine and threatened "biting" secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on the buyers of Russian exports unless there is a peace deal in 50 days. "The US president's statements are very serious. Some of them are addressed personally to President Putin," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday. "We certainly need time to analyse what was said in Washington." Putin, who has spoken to Trump by telephone at least six times in 2025, has yet to comment publicly on Trump's remarks. But two other senior Russian officials did not hold back. Former president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said Moscow did not care about Trump's "theatrical ultimatum", while a senior Russian diplomat, Sergei Ryabkov, suggested that giving ultimatums to Moscow was unacceptable and pointless. Trump, who has said he wants to be seen as a "peacemaker" president, said he wanted to see the end of the war - on which he said the United States had spent $US350 billion ($A534 billion) - but that he had been "disappointed" by Putin. Trump specifically expressed frustration that Putin's "talk" about peace was often followed by Russian strikes on major Ukrainian cities, and indicated Washington wanted to press Moscow into ending the war by sending more arms to Ukraine. "I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy," Trump said of Putin, a reference to former US President Joe Biden calling the Russian leader "a killer" in a 2021 interview. The Financial Times reported that Trump had privately encouraged Ukraine to step up strikes deep in Russian territory, even asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy whether he could hit Moscow if the US provided long-range weapons. Trump told the BBC that he was "not done" with Putin and that he thought a Ukraine peace deal was on the cards. Putin ordered Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces. The United States says 1.2 million people have been injured or killed in the war. In Moscow, state television broadcasts led with advances by Russian troops in Ukraine, of which Russian forces control just under a fifth, and an attack on Russia by Ukrainian drones that injured 18 people. Kommersant, one of Russia's most respected newspapers, invoked William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" in its front page headline to suggest betrayal: "Et tu, Trump - the main peacekeeper of Ukrainian conflict joined the 'party of war". Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to make peace - but on his terms - and there is no point discussing a ceasefire until the details of what a peace would look like are nailed down. In Washington, a White House official said Trump's intention was to impose "100 per cent tariffs on Russia" and secondary sanctions on other countries that buy oil from Russia if a peace deal was not struck in 50 days. China, India and Turkey are the biggest buyers of crude from Russia, the world's second-largest exporter of oil Trump, sitting beside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, on Monday, announced new weapons for Ukraine and threatened "biting" secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on the buyers of Russian exports unless there is a peace deal in 50 days. "The US president's statements are very serious. Some of them are addressed personally to President Putin," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday. "We certainly need time to analyse what was said in Washington." Putin, who has spoken to Trump by telephone at least six times in 2025, has yet to comment publicly on Trump's remarks. But two other senior Russian officials did not hold back. Former president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said Moscow did not care about Trump's "theatrical ultimatum", while a senior Russian diplomat, Sergei Ryabkov, suggested that giving ultimatums to Moscow was unacceptable and pointless. Trump, who has said he wants to be seen as a "peacemaker" president, said he wanted to see the end of the war - on which he said the United States had spent $US350 billion ($A534 billion) - but that he had been "disappointed" by Putin. Trump specifically expressed frustration that Putin's "talk" about peace was often followed by Russian strikes on major Ukrainian cities, and indicated Washington wanted to press Moscow into ending the war by sending more arms to Ukraine. "I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy," Trump said of Putin, a reference to former US President Joe Biden calling the Russian leader "a killer" in a 2021 interview. The Financial Times reported that Trump had privately encouraged Ukraine to step up strikes deep in Russian territory, even asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy whether he could hit Moscow if the US provided long-range weapons. Trump told the BBC that he was "not done" with Putin and that he thought a Ukraine peace deal was on the cards. Putin ordered Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces. The United States says 1.2 million people have been injured or killed in the war. In Moscow, state television broadcasts led with advances by Russian troops in Ukraine, of which Russian forces control just under a fifth, and an attack on Russia by Ukrainian drones that injured 18 people. Kommersant, one of Russia's most respected newspapers, invoked William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" in its front page headline to suggest betrayal: "Et tu, Trump - the main peacekeeper of Ukrainian conflict joined the 'party of war". Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to make peace - but on his terms - and there is no point discussing a ceasefire until the details of what a peace would look like are nailed down. In Washington, a White House official said Trump's intention was to impose "100 per cent tariffs on Russia" and secondary sanctions on other countries that buy oil from Russia if a peace deal was not struck in 50 days. China, India and Turkey are the biggest buyers of crude from Russia, the world's second-largest exporter of oil Trump, sitting beside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, on Monday, announced new weapons for Ukraine and threatened "biting" secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on the buyers of Russian exports unless there is a peace deal in 50 days. "The US president's statements are very serious. Some of them are addressed personally to President Putin," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday. "We certainly need time to analyse what was said in Washington." Putin, who has spoken to Trump by telephone at least six times in 2025, has yet to comment publicly on Trump's remarks. But two other senior Russian officials did not hold back. Former president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said Moscow did not care about Trump's "theatrical ultimatum", while a senior Russian diplomat, Sergei Ryabkov, suggested that giving ultimatums to Moscow was unacceptable and pointless. Trump, who has said he wants to be seen as a "peacemaker" president, said he wanted to see the end of the war - on which he said the United States had spent $US350 billion ($A534 billion) - but that he had been "disappointed" by Putin. Trump specifically expressed frustration that Putin's "talk" about peace was often followed by Russian strikes on major Ukrainian cities, and indicated Washington wanted to press Moscow into ending the war by sending more arms to Ukraine. "I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy," Trump said of Putin, a reference to former US President Joe Biden calling the Russian leader "a killer" in a 2021 interview. The Financial Times reported that Trump had privately encouraged Ukraine to step up strikes deep in Russian territory, even asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy whether he could hit Moscow if the US provided long-range weapons. Trump told the BBC that he was "not done" with Putin and that he thought a Ukraine peace deal was on the cards. Putin ordered Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces. The United States says 1.2 million people have been injured or killed in the war. In Moscow, state television broadcasts led with advances by Russian troops in Ukraine, of which Russian forces control just under a fifth, and an attack on Russia by Ukrainian drones that injured 18 people. Kommersant, one of Russia's most respected newspapers, invoked William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" in its front page headline to suggest betrayal: "Et tu, Trump - the main peacekeeper of Ukrainian conflict joined the 'party of war". Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to make peace - but on his terms - and there is no point discussing a ceasefire until the details of what a peace would look like are nailed down. In Washington, a White House official said Trump's intention was to impose "100 per cent tariffs on Russia" and secondary sanctions on other countries that buy oil from Russia if a peace deal was not struck in 50 days. China, India and Turkey are the biggest buyers of crude from Russia, the world's second-largest exporter of oil Trump, sitting beside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, on Monday, announced new weapons for Ukraine and threatened "biting" secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on the buyers of Russian exports unless there is a peace deal in 50 days. "The US president's statements are very serious. Some of them are addressed personally to President Putin," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday. "We certainly need time to analyse what was said in Washington." Putin, who has spoken to Trump by telephone at least six times in 2025, has yet to comment publicly on Trump's remarks. But two other senior Russian officials did not hold back. Former president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said Moscow did not care about Trump's "theatrical ultimatum", while a senior Russian diplomat, Sergei Ryabkov, suggested that giving ultimatums to Moscow was unacceptable and pointless. Trump, who has said he wants to be seen as a "peacemaker" president, said he wanted to see the end of the war - on which he said the United States had spent $US350 billion ($A534 billion) - but that he had been "disappointed" by Putin. Trump specifically expressed frustration that Putin's "talk" about peace was often followed by Russian strikes on major Ukrainian cities, and indicated Washington wanted to press Moscow into ending the war by sending more arms to Ukraine. "I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy," Trump said of Putin, a reference to former US President Joe Biden calling the Russian leader "a killer" in a 2021 interview. The Financial Times reported that Trump had privately encouraged Ukraine to step up strikes deep in Russian territory, even asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy whether he could hit Moscow if the US provided long-range weapons. Trump told the BBC that he was "not done" with Putin and that he thought a Ukraine peace deal was on the cards. Putin ordered Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces. The United States says 1.2 million people have been injured or killed in the war. In Moscow, state television broadcasts led with advances by Russian troops in Ukraine, of which Russian forces control just under a fifth, and an attack on Russia by Ukrainian drones that injured 18 people. Kommersant, one of Russia's most respected newspapers, invoked William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" in its front page headline to suggest betrayal: "Et tu, Trump - the main peacekeeper of Ukrainian conflict joined the 'party of war". Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to make peace - but on his terms - and there is no point discussing a ceasefire until the details of what a peace would look like are nailed down. In Washington, a White House official said Trump's intention was to impose "100 per cent tariffs on Russia" and secondary sanctions on other countries that buy oil from Russia if a peace deal was not struck in 50 days. China, India and Turkey are the biggest buyers of crude from Russia, the world's second-largest exporter of oil

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store