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Australian Prime Minister heads to New York and may meet Trump first

The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is leaving for the U.S. in this week. This raises expectations of the first meeting between President Donald Trump and the allies, where AUKUS partnership on defence and China will likely dominate the talks.

Albanese, according to his office departs Saturday for the United Nations General Assembly, in New York. The prime minister has said that he will attend the reception hosted by Trump, on Tuesday.

Australian media reported that a bilateral meeting "may" take place, even though Trump had said on Tuesday that Albanese was coming to visit him "very shortly".

Michael Fullilove of the Lowy Institute, a think-tank that focuses on Australian security, stated that Australia's relationship with the United States was "currently quite thin" because Albanese hadn't met Trump in the ten months since he was elected and the U.S. Ambassador to Australia was not present.

He said that Mr Albanese's main goal when he meets President Trump is to strengthen the relationship.

Arthur Sinodinos said that King Charles gave AUKUS "a very strong plug" when Trump visited the UK. It will be crucial for Albanese, in order to encourage investment, to receive in principle support directly from Trump on the nuclear submarine deal.

In a speech at a dinner, King Charles described AUKUS as a "vital partnership" between Britain and the U.S.

AUKUS, a system designed to counter China’s rapid build-up of naval forces in the Indo-Pacific region, is currently being reviewed by the Pentagon.

Sinodinos is the chairman of United States Studies Centre. He asked, "What new strings will be attached to AUKUS?"

GAZA, SOCIAL MEDIA BAN

Albanese, who will be speaking at the U.N. General Assembly on behalf of Palestinian statehood and Australia's ban on social media for under-16-year-olds, also spoke about Australia's new law banning social media. Trump, who has a broad criticism of foreign laws that he claims are unfair to U.S. technology companies, is at odds with both positions. Sinodinos stated that there is a common ground in the belief that Western countries must break China's dominance of the supply chain for critical minerals.

This week, more than 20 Australian companies that produce critical minerals met with officials from the Trump Administration to explore possible areas of collaboration.

Officials said that Australia would urge Trump, on trade, to sign a free-trade agreement with a surplus in Washington's favor. The 10% base tariff on Australia is the best deal that any country has ever struck. In response to Washington's call for increased defence spending, Australia announced on Saturday an additional A$12 billion (8 billion dollars) to upgrade a Western Australia shipyard to maintain AUKUS subs.

Officials from Australia and the United States have stated that the U.S. is very interested in Australia's military strategic ties to the Pacific Islands.

Australia, the region's largest aid donor, suffered a blow when it failed to sign security treaties with Vanuatu or Papua New Guinea which would have restricted China's influence during Albanese’s visits in each country earlier this month.

In a Friday Facebook post, the Chinese embassy in Papua New Guinea stated that it was against exclusive treaties which "restricted or prevented a sovereign nation from cooperating" with a third-party.

Sinodinos said that other players were trying to exploit any perceived lack of interest by the U.S. and Australia, as well as New Zealand, in our backyard. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast in Sydney, Kirsty needham from Sydney.

(source: Reuters)