‘Treated like dirt’: face-to-face leader talks wobble

Australia may miss sitting again with Anthony Albane, Donald Trump after leaving the US president’s meeting with world leaders.
In a briefing, the White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt did not mention Australia while Mr. Trump had a demolition for bilateral talks that he planned to keep in New York after arriving on Tuesday (Aest).
The government is trying to rely on the first face between the couple after a previous meeting between the G7 meeting in Canada in June due to the increase in violence between Israel and Iran.
Hiccup comes after the Prime Minister announced that he knew the Palestinian province next to Australia’s allies Canada and France late on Sunday.
Asked about the recognition of the Palestinian state by the US allies, Mrs. Leavitt told journalists that Mr. Trump was “very clear that he did not participate in this decision”.
“He thinks that this has not done anything to release hostages, which are currently the primary target in Gaza,” he said.
“He does nothing to end this conflict and end this war, and he believes that there is a reward for Hamas.
“He believes that these decisions are not enough to talk more and some of our friends and allies, and I think you will hear that he is talking about it tomorrow.”
Mr. Trump will appeal to the United Naton General Assembly in New York to the success of the US power and administration around the world.
Opposition leader Sussan Ley, Australia’s tariffs on Australian goods and three nations under the partnership of AUKUS 368 billion dollars of nuclear submarin agreement, including Mr. Trump, including a “long shopping list,” he said.
“We need a meeting, N Nine’s Today said on Tuesday.
“We need to be calm, we need to be considered and our Prime Minister needs to stand for our national interests.”

The Prime Ministry has not yet responded, but Cabinet Minister Amanda Rishworth swept the problem by saying that Australia was a “very close diplomatic relationship with the US”.
“He made a series of telephone conversations with the president and said,… They were hot as they described them, they made good conversations,” he said.
However, the liberal senator Andrew Bragg was more directly directly by saying, “Australia was treated as a dirt by this administration”.
“Perhaps it was not in the interests of Australia (as Kevin Rudd’s Ambassador to the United States), and also the way Mr. Albanese executed the diplomacy of Mr. Albane.”
“Obviously we are punished and now very embarrassing.”
If Mr. Albanese misses a bilateral meeting with Mr. Trump, he may have a short chance to talk to him at the reception of a world leaders on Wednesday (Aest).

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