Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
  • Advertisement

    Ukraine

    Today

    Dutton’s housing election; Nvidia bulls sell; Millennial set to retire

    Read everything that’s happened in the news so far today.

    Beth Sanner: “If you … start influencing policy more than informing it, then it’s a slippery slope.”

    ‘We don’t know the truth’, says senior CIA officer

    Beth Sanner was Donald Trump’s daily intelligence briefer for two years. Few people know the boundaries between secrecy and democracy so well.

    • Kevin Chinnery

    Yesterday

    Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin  review the honour guard during an official welcome ceremony.

    Xi tells Putin their nations’ ties should last ‘generations’

    The Chinese president said his country was “ready to work with Russia as a good neighbour, friend and partner with mutual trust”.

    • jing Li
    Ray Dalio says this year’s US presidential election is the most important of his lifetime.

    Dalio warns of US debt pile, and he wants Taylor Swift for president

    The billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates is worried about investors being able to absorb new supply, and why he would vote for Taylor Swift as president.

    • Kate Duguid

    This Month

    ‘Dear friends’ Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in 2019.

    Putin to meet ‘dear friend’ Xi in China, defying US

    The Russian president is set to arrive in Beijing, underlining the key relationship as China faces growing US pressure to curtail support for the war in Ukraine.

    • Greg Torode and Guy Faulconbridge
    Advertisement
    An oil worker in the Permian Basin. Lawsuits allege some of the largest companies in the sector colluded to curb output and raise prices.

    US shale companies accused of collusion over oil price

    ExxonMobil, Occidental Petroleum and Diamondback Energy are among the companies named in at least 10 class actions alleging they conspired to constrain production.

    • Jamie Smyth and Myles McCormick
    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with Narendra Modi during the Indian PM’s Australian visit last year.

    As India votes, doubt grows about Modi’s intentions

    India’s prime minister is set to extend his power once the election results are known. That is likely to bring further tests for Australia and the world.

    • James Curran
    Andrei Belousov

    Putin replaces defence minister in rare cabinet shake-up

    The Kremlin said Russia’s ballooning defence budget warranted putting economist Andrei Belousov in charge.

    • Paul Sonne and Anton Troianovski
    A village under fire from Russian forces in the Kharkiv region.

    Russia ‘captures key villages’ as Ukraine races reinforcements

    Military bloggers say the assault in the north-east could mark the start of an attempt to carve out the “buffer zone” sought by President Vladimir Putin.

    • Updated
    • Olena Harmash and Tom Balmforth
    Russian soldiers march during the Victory Day military parade dress rehearsal in Red Square.

    Russia not looking for global power clash: Putin

    Vladimir Putin now casts the war as part of a holy struggle with the West, which he says has forgotten the role played by the Soviet Union in defeating Nazi Germany.

    • Updated
    • Guy Faulconbridge
    Benjamin Netanyahu at a ceremony marking Holocaust Remembrance Day at Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Centre, in Jerusalem on Monday.

    Can the ICC actually arrest Benjamin Netanyahu?

    The International Criminal Court is entitled to judge Israeli and Hamas officials, writes one of its former presidents.

    • Chile Eboe-Osuji
    Xi Jinping and Emmanuel Macron at a Franco-Chinese Business Council dinner.

    Xi urges Macron to help avoid a ‘new cold war’

    The Chinese leader told his French counterpart that the two nations should uphold mutual benefits, and jointly oppose decoupling and the disruption of supply chains.

    • William Horobin, Samy Adghirni and Li Liu
    Vladimir Putin.

    Russia plotting sabotage across Europe, intelligence agencies warn

    Russia has begun to more actively prepare covert bombings, arson attacks and damage to infrastructure on European soil, directly and via proxies, officials say.

    • Sam Jones, John Paul Rathbone and Richard Milne

    Macron set to press visiting Xi on trade, Ukraine

    France is backing a European Union probe into Chinese electric vehicle exports and in January Beijing opened an investigation into imports of brandy.

    • John Irish and Ingrid Melander
    Donald Trump has repeatedly declined to rule out violence if he loses in November.

    Europe should brace itself for a Trump victory

    The difference between 2024 and 2016, when Trump last won the presidency, is that this time he has a plan. From Europe’s perspective, it would look like Fortress America.

    • Updated
    • Edward Luce
    Advertisement

    April

    Gold is trading near a record of $US2343 per troy ounce, valuing Beijing’s stockpile at $US170.4 billion.

    China’s gold buying spree raises fears for Taiwan

    China has now been buying gold steadily since October 2022, marking its longest build-up of the precious metal since at least 2000.

    • Melissa Lawford
    xx

    Star ousts chairman; PM’s rally backlash; ‘Safe’ banking danger

    Read everything that’s happened in the news so far today.

    Richard Marles visits Ukrainian troops outside Lviv, near the Polish border, on Saturday.

    Fight to the last Ukrainian

    More aid is clearly a relief for Kyiv, but will it be enough to reverse the tide of the war?

    • James Curran
    Defence Minister Richard Marles visits Ukrainian troops at a training facility near Lviv, near the Polish border on Saturday.

    Failure to reopen Australia embassy in Kyiv ‘an embarrassment’

    Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles visited Ukraine to unveil the package, including drones and air-defence systems, but there was one glaring omission from his trip.

    • Hans van Leeuwen and Ronald Mizen

    ‘No silver bullet’: Ukraine has weapons but still needs the troops

    The $94 billion US aid package should stop Russia in its tracks, but it won’t be nearly enough to send Putin packing.

    • Updated
    • Hans van Leeuwen