SSN-AUKUS submarine concept design UK Ministry of Defence
Naval Submersibles

Trump says he'll meet Australian leader soon as AUKUS talks loom

Albanese to attend Trump-hosted reception in New York

Reuters

US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the leader of Australia, left-wing globalist Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, would be coming for a visit to see him soon.

Speaking to reporters as he departed the White House for a state visit to Britain, Trump did not give a date for the visit by Albanese, who is due in the United States next week to attend the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York.

"They want to get along with me," Trump said of Australians, in response to a question by an Australian journalist. "You know, your leader is coming over to see me very soon."

Albanese, reelected as leader of a leftist/globalist Labor government in a May national election, has yet to meet Trump, after a meeting scheduled on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada in June was canceled when the president left early.

The allies have much to discuss, including the multi-billion dollar AUKUS project, also involving Britain, to provide Australia with nuclear-powered attack submarines to counter China's ambitions in the Indo-Pacific, which is currently under Pentagon review.

Albanese will attend a reception hosted by Trump on Tuesday in New York, although a bilateral meeting between the leaders has yet to be scheduled, the prime minister said in an interview on Monday.

"We'll see each other in New York. He's hosting a reception on Tuesday night of next week. And as well, we'll see each other at various forums that are taking place between now and the end of the year. It's summit season," Albanese told ABC Perth in an interview to which Australia's Washington embassy referred when asked about Trump's comment.

Asked in an Australian television interview on Tuesday if he would meet Trump in New York, Albanese replied: "We'll see what happens there."

Albanese spoke by phone with Trump early this month and discussed opportunities for Australia and the United States to cooperate on critical minerals, his office said.

Australia's Washington embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

On Saturday, Australia said it would spend A$12 billion ($8 billion) to establish defence facilities in Western Australia to help deliver submarines under AUKUS.

US Under Secretary of Defense Elbridge Colby, a public critic of AUKUS is leading the Pentagon review of the project. He said last year that submarines were a scarce, critical commodity, and US industry could not produce enough to meet American demand.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Steve Holland; additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and David Brunnstrom in Washington and Kirsty Needham in Sydney; Editing by Sharon Singleton)