Vladimir Putin once said, rather badly, that it was very difficult for him to dialogue “with people who confuse Austria and Australia.” He was referring to the US president at that time, George W. Bush, who on some occasion mentioned the Central European country wanting to refer to that of Oceania. But the confused Bush is far from the only one, because the misunderstanding between Austria and Australia has already become an almost traditional tradition, to the point that Austrians sell a lot of souvenirs with the yellow sign that warns of the presence of kangaroos. At the 2010 G20 summit, Korean hosts had the idea of reproducing world leaders in dolls in traditional clothing and the Australian president, Julia Gillard, looked like she had just come out of a Tyrolean cabin. The postal services of both countries are very used to receiving packages that should have gone to the other side of the world (On one occasion, a shipment to Australia was sent to Austria … five times in a row!), there are students who claim on exams that Hitler was born in Australia, and television signs insert the wrong name relatively frequently. One of the best was the one on CNN reporting that Australia was erecting a fence on its border with Slovenia.