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Impossible to Negotiate Away the Ambitions of the CCP: Former Australian PM Tells Congress

Impossible to Negotiate Away the Ambitions of the CCP: Former Australian PM Tells Congress

Epoch Times2 days ago
Former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has warned a U.S. Congress Committee that the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) ambition for global hegemony and a new world order cannot be changed or negotiated away.
During a hearing of the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the CCP on July 23 (Washington time), Morrison, who was invited as a witness, noted that the United States and Australia, as long-standing allies, saw the world through the same lens.
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Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza
Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza

Politico

time3 hours ago

  • Politico

Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza

Presented by THE CATCH-UP TRUMP AND THE WORLD: President Donald Trump is currently in the air en route to Scotland, where he'll head to one of his golf properties and inaugurate a new course honoring his late mother. But as Trump heads abroad — ostensibly for a short break from Washington — a growing list of global crises are vying for his attention. Chief among them: The spiraling humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where an untold number of Palestinians, aid workers and reporters are dying of starvation. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's aid centers are falling short of the levels of food needed and have 'practically become shooting galleries,' as the Atlantic's Hussein Ibish writes. 'I truly don't know what to do anymore,' a MercyCorps worker told ABC News' Mary Kekatos. Hundreds of organizations have called on Israel to stop its blockade of aid. But Trump today signaled that the fighting might only escalate: Israel may have to 'get rid of' Hamas, he said, echoing envoy Steve Witkoff's comments yesterday that Hamas does not want to end the war. 'I think they want to die, and it's very, very bad,' Trump said this morning. 'It got to be to a point where you're gonna have to finish the job.' Speaking to the humanitarian disaster, Trump said the U.S. has sent $60 million in aid to Gaza, and that he hopes further food aid gets there and doesn't get stolen, POLITICO's Irie Sentner writes. The eyes of the world: World leaders are rallying to avoid an even worse catastrophe in Gaza — though Australian PM Anthony Albanese said the crisis has already 'gone beyond the world's worst fears,' per NYT's Qasim Nauman. U.K. PM Keir Starmer said yesterday he'll hold an emergency call with France and Germany on the issue, per Reuters' Andrea Shalal and Andrew Macaskill. And while French President Emmanuel Macron has announced his nation's intent to recognize Palestinian statehood, Trump this morning said it didn't matter: 'It's not going to change anything,' he said, per CNN's Kevin Liptak. The pressure is building inside Congress, too. A group of Democratic senators led by Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) are calling on Trump to directly appeal to Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu on the urgency of allowing humanitarian assistance to flow through the West Bank. Other pressing international issues are stacking up, too. On Iran's nuclear program: Talks between Iran and European officials began today, but are still at an impasse over Tehran's nuclear program, with more conversations to come, AP's Andrew Wilks and colleagues report from Istanbul. 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Sowing division in MAGA: The DNC is planning to launch Epstein-focused ads in a dozen GOP-held House districts at the start of August recess, Axios' Tal Axelrod scooped. 'The ads will run before videos on right-wing YouTube and Meta channels like those of Fox News, Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro — target-rich audiences for the voters fixated on Epstein.' 2. ON THE HILL: There's growing consternation on both sides of the aisle about a possible second rescissions package coming from the White House, WaPo's Theodoric Meyer reports. 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Britain, Australia to sign agreement to build nuclear submarines
Britain, Australia to sign agreement to build nuclear submarines

Miami Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Britain, Australia to sign agreement to build nuclear submarines

July 25 (UPI) -- Britain and Australia confirmed Friday that they would proceed with a $245 billion nuclear-powered submarine deal as part of a defense pact between the two countries and the United States -- despite Washington rethinking its involvement. Following a meeting, Australian Defense Secretary Richard Marles said he and British Defense Secretary John Healey would sign a 50-year cooperation treaty on Saturday to deliver an Australian fleet of submarines, powered by British nuclear reactors. Marles hailed the deal, part of a trilateral security pact signed in 2021, as the most significant U.K.-Australian treaty signed in the 124-year history of modern Australia. The AUKUS alliance, aimed at countering China's military rise in the Asia-Pacific, called for Australia to be armed with eight nuclear submarines, three repurposed from the United States' existing fleet and the remainder a new SSN-AUKUS submarine that Australia and Britain would build together. However, concerns were raised that the first U.S. submarines wouldn't be handed to Australia within the timeline of the early 2030s because U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is reviewing the Biden administration-brokered AUKUS and the U.S. submarine pipeline was behind time. Healey said they welcomed Hegseth's review as a chance for the new administration of U.S. President Donald Trump to "renew their commitment," which he said he fully expected to happen. Marles said last month that he was "very confident" the United States would remain in AUKUS because of its strategic benefit to all three countries. The pact came into force three days before Trump was sworn in as the 47th president of the United States in January, triggering a review to ensure it is a fit with his "America First" policy. In a meeting in Singapore in June, Hegseth told Marles that Australia should increase defense spending to 3.5% of GDP. Elbridge Colby, the U.S. defense official carrying out Hegseth's review, has said AUKUS could compromise national security if the United States were to begin selling its Virginia-class submarines to Australia in the early 2030s, as per the original agreement. Neither Healey nor Marles would say whether the two countries would go it alone with building the submarines if the United States opted to withdraw. The Australia-U.K. treaty encompasses a comprehensive framework to develop the necessary infrastructure and workforce in Australia to build, operate and support the submarine program, with the deal providing a boost to British exports of more than $26 billion by 2050. "Through the treaty, we are supporting high-skilled, well-paid jobs for tens of thousands of people in both the U.K. and Australia," said Healey. Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior analyst Euan Graham said the new treaty was not sending a message to the Trump administration but was "more of a reflection that AUKUS has always been a 3-way arrangement, and that the U.K.-Australia side of the triangle is vital to its success." He said the program would also produce economies of scale, allowing Britain's Royal Navy to increase its nuclear fleet from seven to 12 submarines. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Trump on Hamas: ‘They want to die'
Trump on Hamas: ‘They want to die'

Politico

time6 hours ago

  • Politico

Trump on Hamas: ‘They want to die'

'We're down to the final hostages, and basically because of that they really didn't want to make a deal,' Trump said. Special envoy Steve Witkoff said Thursday that the U.S. had pulled out of talks with Hamas because the U.S.-designated terrorist group — which had just submitted its latest response to a ceasefire proposal — was not negotiating in 'good faith.' As those talks deteriorated, pressure mounted this week against Israel by some of America's closest allies. French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that France would become the first G7 country to recognize a Palestinian state. And Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Thursday, 'The situation in Gaza has gone beyond the world's worst fears.' Earlier this week, a U.N. World Food Programme official said about a quarter of the population in Gaza is facing famine-like conditions, and nearly 100,000 women and children are experiencing severe, acute malnutrition. Last month, a U.N.-partnered report found that 96 percent of the Gazan population is facing crisis levels of acute food insecurity and that there was a 'high risk' of famine across the Gaza strip. Asked Friday about Macron's announcement, Trump called the French president 'a very good guy,' but added that 'what he says doesn't matter' and that his 'statement doesn't carry any weight.' Asked if he had spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about allowing foreign aid drops into Gaza, Trump said he had called Netanyahu but declined to share details, other than calling it 'sort of disappointing.' Israel has reportedly said that it will allow a new round of foreign aid drops in Gaza in the coming days. A U.S. official familiar with conversations among senior officials said there is growing Trump administration concern about the crisis and that officials are trying to figure out the best way to respond. The person was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive internal deliberations. Nahal Toosi contributed to this report.

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