Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull is headed to the U.S. Wednesday, and is expected to talk with President Trump about the Trans-Pacific Partnership during a Friday meeting.

Also on the agenda is security risks in the Asia-Pacific region as a result of more aggressive Chinese and North Korean ambitions, especially Kim Jong Un’s nuclear threats, the Associated Press reported.

Former Australian defense minister Kim Beazley said Turnbull will be looking to get a clear picture on how Trump expects the North Korean crisis to unfold.

“Generally speaking, when an Australian prime minister meets an American president, the globe is traversed, all sorts of things, the commitments we have in common, where we’re going to go in Iraq and all the rest of it,” Beazley told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

During his time in the U.S., Turnbull will also be addressing the U.S. National Governors’ Association.

Turnbull will be bringing with him the largest-ever Australian political and business delegation to visit the U.S., something trade minister Steven Ciobo said is a show of the significant strength of the bilateral relationship.