logo
Single picture exposes sad reality about Australia: Defence Minister Richard Marles on the outer in NATO 'family photograph

Single picture exposes sad reality about Australia: Defence Minister Richard Marles on the outer in NATO 'family photograph

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

A picture of Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles on the outer fringes of a 'family' photograph of world leaders taken at this week's NATO summit has sparked questions about Australia's increasing irrelevance on the world stage.
The Defence Minister attended the NATO summit in The Hague in the Netherlands this week, where member nations agreed to lift their defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP over 10 years.
Of course, Australia is not part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation but Marles was there to announce more funding for Ukraine and to meet world leaders, including UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Crucially, however, Donald Trump was not among them.
Many political observers had expected Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to go in Marles' place after his scheduled meeting with Trump at the G7 summit in Canada the week prior was cancelled at the last minute due to the Iran-Israel crisis.
It would not have been unprecedented, given Albanese attended NATO summits in 2022 and 2023.
The Prime Minister is yet to meet Trump, despite Australia facing punishing tariffs imposed by the US on imports, including a 50 per cent levy on steel and aluminium, and an existential threat to the AUKUS submarine deal.
Today host Karl Stefanovic quizzed Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Wednesday about why the Prime Minister's chose not to attend the NATO summit .
'I cant quite comprehend how Albo isn't in The Hague rattling Donald Trump's cage for a meeting,' Stefanovic said to the Treasurer.
Chalmers insisted Australia was 'well represented' by Marles and there would be 'other opportunities' to meet the US President.
But a 'family' photo of world leaders, showing Marles on the far right of the back row, appeared to symbolise Australia's drifting relevance on the world stage.
Trump, who had his ego massaged by NATO chief Mark Rutte who called him 'daddy', was pictured front and centre next to the Dutch King and Queen.
'There's Richard Marles, the Australian Deputy Prime Minister, right on the outer,' Sky News host James Macpherson observed on Thursday.
'Of course, I understand photographers probably order where everybody stands so maybe there's nothing in it.
'But the problem is when Australia's relationship with he US is so fractured at the moment, people read things into everything.
'And the fact we're reading into that is entirely the Albanese governments fault.'
Marles also risked Trump's ire by insisting Australia would not follow NATO members by lifting its defence spending to five per cent of GDP.
'Look, obviously, a very significant decision has been made here in relation to European defence spending, and that is fundamentally a matter for NATO,' Marles told reporters.
'We've gone through our own process of assessing our strategic landscape, assessing the threats that exist there, and the kind of defence force we need to build in order to meet those threats, to meet the strategic moment, and then to resource that.
'And what that has seen is the biggest peacetime increase in Australian Defence spending.
'Now that is a story which is, which is understood here and we'll continue to assess what our needs are going forward. And as our prime minister has said, we will resource that.'
Marles did not speak directly with Mr Trump, nor US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, despite intensive efforts by government officials to tee up a first face-to-face meeting of an Australian minister with the US President.
Marles announced Australia would deploy an RAAF Wedgetail surveillance aircraft to Poland, along with 100 defence force personnel, to help provide visibility for key humanitarian and military supply routes into Ukraine.
The aircraft will be deployed for three months, concluding in November, and follows an earlier six-month deployment which was highly valued by the Ukrainians.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zelenskyy approves plans on special tribunal to prosecute Russian leaders over Ukraine
Zelenskyy approves plans on special tribunal to prosecute Russian leaders over Ukraine

The Independent

time14 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Zelenskyy approves plans on special tribunal to prosecute Russian leaders over Ukraine

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy formally approved plans Wednesday to set up a new international court to prosecute senior Russian officials for the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The special tribunal will be created through an agreement between Ukraine and the Council of Europe, the continent's top human rights body. Zelenskyy visited the Strasbourg-based organization for the first time as part of the announcement. The special tribunal aims to target senior Russian leaders for the 'crime of aggression,' which underpins the countless war crimes Ukraine accuses Russian forces of committing since the start of the war on Feb. 24, 2022. Existing international courts, including the International Criminal Court in The Hague lack jurisdiction to prosecute Russian nationals for that specific offense. Since early in the conflict, Kyiv has been pushing for the creation of a special tribunal that goes beyond prosecuting war crimes that Ukraine alleged Russian forces committed — including bombing civilian infrastructure, killing civilians, rape, taking hostages and torture. Russia denies those accusations. There are logistical details still to be resolved, including where the court will be based. The Hague has been suggested because of its existing legal infrastructure, but no final decision has been made. Russia doesn't extradite its own citizens, and whether or not Russian President Vladimir Putin will ever end up in the dock remains to be seen. Under international law, sitting heads of state and certain other top officials — often referred to as the 'troika,' including a country's head of state, head of government and foreign minister — enjoy immunity from prosecution. That means any potential indictment of Putin could only move forward if he leaves office. There is no statute of limitation on the crime of aggression. The institution will be funded by supporting countries known as the Core Group, including the Netherlands, Japan and Canada. The United States backed the project under former President Joe Biden, but President Donald Trump's administration didn't support the initiative.

Where is the Ayatollah? Iran's fanatical leader, 86, not seen in a WEEK – as CIA confirms Trump obliterated nuke sites
Where is the Ayatollah? Iran's fanatical leader, 86, not seen in a WEEK – as CIA confirms Trump obliterated nuke sites

The Sun

time14 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Where is the Ayatollah? Iran's fanatical leader, 86, not seen in a WEEK – as CIA confirms Trump obliterated nuke sites

President Donald Trump on Wednesday praised the B-2 stealth bomber pilots who carried out strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, saying they flew with a 'great risk' and a 'big chance that they would never come back home and see their husbands or their wives.' Speaking at the NATO summit, Trump said he received a call from Missouri after the mission, where the pilots are based, describing how upset they were by media reports that downplayed the success of the operation. 'I got a call that the pilots and people on the plane were devastated because they were trying to minimise the attack,' Trump said, referring to a leaked preliminary US intelligence assessment that questioned the level of destruction at the sites. 'They all said it was hit, but oh, but we don't think it was really maybe hit that badly. And they were devastated. They put their lives on the line,' he said. Trump added he spoke personally to one of the pilots, who told him: 'Sir, we hit the site. It was perfect. It was dead-on.' A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit stealth bomber lands after returning from Operation Midnight Hammer, the U.S. attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri

White House posts ‘Daddy's Home' vid to round off Trump's Nato tour – but alliance's boss tries to DENY calling Don name
White House posts ‘Daddy's Home' vid to round off Trump's Nato tour – but alliance's boss tries to DENY calling Don name

Scottish Sun

time28 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

White House posts ‘Daddy's Home' vid to round off Trump's Nato tour – but alliance's boss tries to DENY calling Don name

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE White House has celebrated Donald Trump's return from the Nato summit with a "Daddy's Home" video. It came just hours after Nato chief Mark Rutte was forced to retract his bizarre remark in which he referred to the US President as "daddy". Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 The White House has celebrated Trump's return from his Nato tour with a 'Daddy's Home' Credit: Twitter/@WhiteHouse 7 Trump speaks at a press conference, as Secretary of State Marco Rubio reacts to a reporter asking about the 'Daddy' comment Credit: Reuters 7 Trump (R) and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speak to media at the start of the second day of the 2025 NATO Summit Credit: Getty During the Nato summit on Wednesday, Rutte and Trump met after the US President exploded over Iran and Israel's ceasefire violation a day earlier. He said in an expletive tirade to reporters: "They don't know what the f*** they're doing." Rutte bizarrely said on Wednesday that "Daddy has to use strong language" in order to get the two countries to listen and stop the conflict, which Trump agreed. After the Nato chief's remark flabbergasted the world, the White House posted a playful video to X to Usher's hit "Hey Daddy (Daddy's Home)". read more news DRESSING FOR DON Zelensky tries new look for meeting with Trump as Don praises war leader The video shows Trump stepping off his plane to adoring crowds lining the streets while the lyrics "Daddy's home, home for me" plays. It also shows snippets of Trump's Nato meeting, with Rutte making an appearance as well as Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. In another part of the minute-long video, Trump can be seen shaking hands and introducing himself to officials as the Usher track says "Hey, hey, hey Daddy". It came hours after Rutte had to retract his "daddy" comment after it accidentally became the focal point of the summit. He argued: "The daddy thing, I didn't call [Trump] daddy, what I said, is that sometimes… In Europe, I hear sometimes countries saying, 'hey, Mark, will the US stay with us?' "And I said, 'that sounds a little bit like a small child asking his daddy, 'hey, are you still staying with the family?' So in that sense, I use daddy, not that I was calling President Trump daddy." Zelensky tries new formal look for crunch meeting with Trump at Nato as Don says war leader 'couldn't have been nicer' But Trump wasn't embarrassed by the comment and appeared to be rather flattered as he spoke in a press conference. After being asked how he felt to be referred to as "daddy," Trump responded: "No, he likes me, I think he likes me! If he doesn't I'll let you know and I'll come back and I'll hit him hard OK?' He added through a grin: "He did it very affectionately though, 'daddy, you're my daddy.'" Trump had said earlier during his talk with Rutte that he was confident the Iran-Israel ceasefire will hold. He argued: "They're not going to be fighting each other, they've had it. "Like two kids in the schoolyard, they fight like hell, you can't stop them. Let them fight for two or three minutes then it's easy to stop them." The "schoolyard" comment is what is thought to have spurred Rutte on to call the US President "daddy". On Wednesday, the bloc agreed to a gargantuan increase in defence spending in the latest win for Trump. 7 The video shows Trump shaking hands as he gets off his plane Credit: Twitter/@WhiteHouse 7 He's also shown stood on a red carpet Credit: Twitter/@WhiteHouse 7 Craters on a ridge at the Fordow plant after US strikes Credit: EPA Nearly all of the 32 Nato countries agreed to committing to "invest five per cent of GDP annually on core defense requirements as well as defense-and security-related spending by 2035". But Spain rebuked the agreement and said it would only be willing to increase its spending by a mere two per cent. After saying he doesn't know what "the problem" is, he vowed to respond by forcing high tariffs on the country. He slammed: "They want a little bit of a free ride, but they'll have to pay it back to us on trade." But as Spain belongs to the European Union, which negotiates trade deals on behalf of all its member countries, they're not supposed to negotiate trade deals individually. Trump added: "I'm going to negotiate directly with Spain. I'm going to do it myself." It comes as the CIA says Trump's weekend blitz on Iran has left key nuclear sites 'destroyed' – in a devastating blow that will take 'years' to recover from. In a bombshell statement, the Agency's director John Ratcliffe confirmed 'several key Iranian nuclear facilities' were wiped out and must be completely rebuilt. 'The CIA can confirm that a body of credible intelligence indicates Iran's Nuclear Program has been severely damaged by the recent, targeted strikes,' Ratcliffe said. 'This includes new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years.' The chief added the CIA would 'provide updates to the American public' given the 'national importance' of the operation. The White House had earlier called for the arrest of whoever leaked a classified intelligence report on Iran's nuclear sites White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the person responsible for leaking the classified Iran intelligence report should face jail time. 'They should go to jail,' she told Fox News' Ryan Schmelz when asked about potential punishment for the leaker. Leavitt said the DIA memo had been 'discredited' by U.S. and Israeli officials — and even by Iran itself. 'CNN ran with a story they knew wasn't fully vetted,' Leavitt told Fox News, calling it a leak from 'someone with an agenda' and noting it came from 'the same reporter who once pushed the false Hunter Biden laptop narrative.' She confirmed the FBI is investigating the leak and stressed that those responsible 'should be held accountable.' Secret Iranian fortress Trump's bombs CAN'T reach By Patrick Harrington, Foreign News Reporter Trump may have "obliterated" Iran's notorious Fordow facility, but there are fears the nuke programme lives on in another top-secret mountain fortress. Iranian officials have claimed the key enriched uranium was carted out of Fordow before the bombs fell - and Pickaxe Mountain could be its new home. Pickaxe is a peak in the mountains surrounding Natanz, another of Iran's nuclear plants hammered by the US and Israel, and around 90 miles south of Fordow. The site is still under construction, but has been secretly expanded and reinforced over the past four years. The peak is over 5,000ft high - taller than any mountain in the UK - and the site is thought to be buried 328ft down. Click here to read the full story

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