Australian news and politics live: Anthony Albanese meets Canadian PM Mark Carney ahead of G7

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Key Events
Trump will respect Australia standing up to China says US security expert
Defence expert Herbert McMaster told the Defending Australia conference that Australia holding strong against China during “economic cohesion” would have garnered respect with President Trump.
“They tried that with Australia through economic coercion and failed. I think (the US) respects that, he respects the fact that Australia stood up to China’s communist party coercion,” he said.
Ex-US security adviser expresses confidence Albanese-Trump’s meeting will go well
Former United States national security advisor Herbert Raymond McMaster has expressed confidence Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump’s first in-person meeting will go well.
Speaking one-on-one with former Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer for a Defending Australia conference on Monday, Mr McMaster said he believed Mr Trump would have respect for Australia.
He recalled the trainwreck first phone call between Donald Trump and Malcolm Turnbull which was leaked in 2017.
“I got to witness his relationship with Prime Minister Turnbull. After that, they met. They met in New York on the aircraft carrier and they established a good relationship,” he said.
“He typically is pretty gracious in person. He’s in the hospitality business. Really in person he can be engaging and he does listen. I think you can see evidence of that.”
Arrest made after Australians ambushed by hitmen in Bali
A man has been taken into custody in Bali in connection with the ambush shooting of Australians Zivan Radmanovic and Sanar Ghanim.
The suspected gunman is helping officers with their enquiries at Badung Police Station as they investigate the fatal shooting of Mr Radmanovic, 32, and the wounding of Mr Ghanim, 34.
It is believed that a second man remains on the run.
Malinauskas says Australians take security ‘for granted’
South Australia Premier Peter Malinauskas says Australians take our security “for granted” and need to be on board the conversation as regional tensions mount.
Speaking at a Defending Australia forum in Canberra on Monday he said that Aussies ignoring the issue is a concern.
“I think the biggest challenge is ourselves. I think Australians take for granted our set of circumstances,” he said.
“I see evidence of compliance and apathy in the electorate. In the context of everything going on around us, talking about ourselves seems a bit silly. But I dont think it’s talked about enough.”

Vice Admiral says we must boost drone fleet numbers and strategic partnerships
Navy chief Mark Hammond said in his opinion Australia need to boost our unmanned aerial vehicle systems to ensure our air bases and ports are protected from the new frontier of war - drone attacks.
The Vice Admiral said the world was witnessing a deterioration of the rules based order and security partnerships were important to stop further decline.
“We are a small nation. We’re at our best and at our strongest when we stand alongside our allies and partners,” he said.
Chief of Navy says Australia needs to wise up to its position in the region
Chief of Navy Vice Admiral Mark Hammond has said Australia needs to shift focus to its waters and borders as the Asia-Pacific region faces an increasingly unstable global political environment.
“We need to realise we’re not a land-locked country. We are a nation which can do tough things,” he told a Defending Australia forum in Canberra on Monday, adding more resources needed to be considered.
He said two things make a nation fall over in conflict: “The lack of willpower and the economic backing.
“Ensuring economic wellbeing is the first job in my view”.
Australia submarine boss says former government indecision ‘to our own folly’
Director-General of the Australia Submarine Agency Jonathan Mead has said Australia’s changing of submarine deals from “Plans B, C, D” has “been to our own folly”.
He told a Defending Australia forum in Canberra on Monday when the first US submarines arrive in Henderson in 2027 it would be a “major moment” for Australia.
He said it would send a signal to the region and to “mischievous actors who say AUKUS won’t happen”.
It comes as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is expected to raise the importance of the deal at his first in-person meeting with Donald Trump later this week after the Pentagon launched a review into it.
SA Premier Peter Malinauskas says Australia is right to stick to the AUKUS plan
South Australia Premier Peter Malinauskas has said Australia is right to stick to the AUKUS plan after the former coalition government flip flopped between submarine agreements.
Speaking at a Defending Australia forum in Canberra on Monday he said given the “size, cost and consequence” of the AUKUS pact it made sense that the Pentagon would want to review it under the newish Trump administration.
He said it would speak to an “indifference” not to and would be a greater “concern” for a new government not to review the deal.
“That would speak to a form of indifference that would actually be of concern,” he said.
He said that Australia has to “wise up” to the fact that changing plans constantly would only lead to delays in protecting the nation.
Australia-EU security, free trade talks to continue in Canada
Mr Albanese will enter discussions with EU Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen “constructively” over the coming days, saying he was looking to “cooperate and strengthen Australia’s capacity”.
One of the things that I’ve said consistently is that we invest in our capability and we invest in our relationships. The two things are important. And often, an investment in our relationships can produce very effective outcomes economically as well,” he said.
As for whether he anticipated a breakthrough in discussion over a free trade agreement, Mr Albanese said he didn’t expect a final deal to be struck in Canada.
“But, I would expect us to be able to advance the issues that Australia has put forward,” he said.
“I wouldn’t expect that we’ll finalise it here. But that we will build on the constructive discussions that Senator Farrell, our minister, had in Europe, just a week ago.”
‘Trusted relationships’: Albanese and Carney mention AUKUS Pillar II
Mr Albanese said he and Mr Carney had discussed AUKUS Pillar II, and Canada’s desire to be involved in the technology sharing aspect of the partnership.
“I think when we look at issues such as defence procurement, there’s areas of cooperation, including of course on the Over the Horizon technology that we produce, but there will be other areas as well,” he said.
“We’re also both Five Eyes countries so there’s a lot of cooperation that occur already in intelligence. I think what’s clear is that in the uncertain world, what people are looking for is certainty in relationships - trusted relationships. Australia and Canada are just such partners.”