
'Expectations were low and nothing came out' of Trump-Putin talks
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Qatar Tribune
an hour ago
- Qatar Tribune
Russia-Ukraine ceasefire close, says US president
WASHINGTON: The US President Donald Trump has said that he believes a deal to end the Russia-Ukraine war is very close, stressing that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky now bears the responsibility to advance this process. In remarks to Fox News following his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, Trump explained that the burden now rests on Zelensky to build on yesterday's summit and ensure that an agreement is reached to end Russia's military campaign, which has been ongoing in Ukraine for three years. He emphasized that Zelensky must take the lead, while also noting that European countries should contribute in some capacity. Trump added that if there is another meeting, he would attend. He also said that Ukraine needs to be ready to agree, though there is a chance it might not. He urged Zelensky to strike a deal and revealed that Zelensky and Putin are expected to hold their own meeting soon in an attempt to reach a ceasefire. Trump noted that his negotiations with Putin covered issues such as NATO, security arrangements, and territorial matters, which he described as very straightforward. The US and Russian presidents met on Friday, at Elmendorf-Richardson Air Base in Alaska to discuss ways to stop the war between Moscow and Kiev. Both leaders described their talks as highly productive.


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
US suspends visas for Gaza residents after right-wing social media storm
The United States has announced that it is halting all visitor visas for people from Gaza pending a 'a full and thorough' review, a day after social media posts about Palestinian refugees sparked furious reactions from right-wingers. The Department of State's move on Saturday came a day after far-right activist and Trump ally Laura Loomer posted on X that Palestinians 'who claim to be refugees from Gaza' entered the US via San Francisco and Houston this month. 'How is allowing for Islamic immigrants to come into the US America First policy?' she said on X in a later post, going on to report further Palestinian arrivals in Missouri and claiming that 'several US Senators and members of Congress' had texted her to express their fury. Republican lawmakers speaking publicly about the matter included Chip Roy of Texas, who said he would inquire about the matter, and Randy Fine of Florida, who described the alleged arrivals as a 'national security risk'. By Saturday, the State Department announced it was stopping visas for 'individuals from Gaza' while it conducted 'a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days'. It did not provide a figure. All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days. — Department of State (@StateDept) August 16, 2025 The US issued 640 visas to holders of the Palestinian Authority travel document in May, according to the Reuters news agency. B1/B2 visitor visas permit Palestinians to seek medical treatment in the US. Loomer greeted Saturday's State Department announcement with glee. 'It's amazing how fast we can get results from the Trump administration,' she said on Saturday, though she later posted that more needed to be done to 'highlight the crisis of the invasion happening in our country'. While I appreciate the State Department and @marcorubio issuing this statement, I want to press even harder to highlight the crisis of the invasion happening in our country. The visas and arrivals of GAZANS to US airports isn't new. This has been drastically increasing in speed… — Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) August 16, 2025 The decision to cut visas comes as Israel intensifies its attacks on Gaza, where at least 61,827 people have been killed in the past 22 months, with the United Nations warning that 'widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease' are driving a rise in famine-related deaths. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been pushing to seize Gaza City as part of a takeover of the Strip, forcibly displacing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to concentration zones.


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
The Alaska summit was not a ‘new Munich', but it could be a ‘new Yalta'
These days, the Russian army has a hard time scoring any major successes. Its soldiers face a grinding slog in Ukraine, dying by the hundreds, sometimes to advance just a few hundred metres or not at all. On the diplomatic front, however, the situation is different. Russian President Vladimir Putin secured a major diplomatic victory by holding a summit with United States President Donald Trump. At Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska, it was all bonhomie. Trump clapped as Putin made his way onto the red carpet for a handshake before Trump escorted him into his presidential limo as the Russian leader smiled like a Cheshire cat. The two came away from their nearly three-hour meeting without much to say. Both spoke of agreement on a host of matters. Putin invited Trump to Moscow, who demurred – for now. Little has leaked thus far on exactly what Putin and Trump discussed. The Russian leader sought to suggest in his remarks to the media that the talks were on his terms, bringing up Russia's security concerns and praising his US counterpart for trying to 'understand the history' of the conflict. According to Russia's ambassador to the US, Alexander Darchiev, apart from Ukraine, there were some concrete bilateral issues discussed. He claimed two major diplomatic questions were raised: 'the return of six Russian diplomatic properties that were de facto confiscated' during former US President Joe Biden's administration and 'the restoration of direct air traffic' between Russia and the US. Trump for his part appeared to drop the demand for a ceasefire in Ukraine – something he had publicly called for before the summit. Instead, he agreed to take the Kremlin's demand for a full settlement of the conflict rather than a ceasefire to Ukraine and its European allies. Later, he posted on his social media platform, Truth Social, that the European Union and Ukraine agreed with him that 'the best way to end the horrific war between Russia and Ukraine is to go directly to a Peace Agreement'. Although Trump seemed to take the Russian position on a ceasefire, the worst possible outcome of the summit was still avoided. The meeting did not turn into a 'new Munich', where Trump would appease Putin just like the French and British leaders appeased Adolf Hitler in a meeting in the German city in 1938 by agreeing to a German takeover of part of Czechoslovakia. The US president did not accede to Russian territorial claims. That said, for Putin, the summit was a tactical win because it broadcast to the world that the US president himself was casting off the pariah status the Kremlin had earned for its unilateral invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and the subsequent war crimes it has overseen. The Russian president was treated like the leader of a 'great power' – a status he has long been obsessed with returning Russia to – who had to be negotiated with, on his terms. So where does all this leave Ukraine and its European allies? Trump is clearly unwilling to change his position on Ukraine. He admires Putin – his personality and his governing style – immensely. But Brussels, London, and Kyiv cannot give up on him. The truth is that continued US support is indispensable to Ukraine maintaining its defence. Europe has moved to pick up more of the burden of funding since Trump was inaugurated for his second term, but its military capabilities and defence industry supply chains cannot replace those of the US anytime soon, even if they increase investments exponentially. Trump wants peace in name and cares nought about the details. For Kyiv, the detail is its very survival, and for the rest of Europe, Ukraine's fate shapes the potential that it could be the next target of Putin's aggression in his would-be geopolitically rebalanced world. That does not mean that there is no way to turn Trump. There is – Ukraine and Europe can use a page or two out of Putin's playbook in dealing with the US president. Trump clearly likes his ego to be stroked, which is what Putin repeatedly did in his remarks to the media, echoing, for example, Trump's claim that if he had been president in 2022, the war in Ukraine would not have happened. Continuing diplomatic engagement is the way forward, as is seeking to change the frame in which Trump sees the Ukrainian conflict. The US president cares more about the future of US energy exports, US competition with China, its challenge to US economic dominance and the exploitation of the Arctic than he does about Ukraine. It was Trump's choice to host the meeting in Alaska, after all, and his obsession with Greenland – so seemingly strange to European allies of the US – makes far more sense in this context. The key is to persuade the US president that Russia is a threat to Washington's interests in all of these matters. An easing of sanctions could see Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects flood into the market and depress the price for US LNG exports. Putin has reshaped Russia's economy to be dependent on minerals exports to China, fuelling its ability to compete economically thanks to cheap inputs. Putin has also repeatedly sought to push Beijing to be more assertive in economic competition by calling on it to dump the dollar and push new trade and finance frameworks that exclude the US. And Russia is hoping to dominate the Arctic by expanding its Arctic fleet with new nuclear-powered icebreakers and submarines. For Putin, his war in Ukraine has never been just about the dividing lines in the Donbas or his claimed injustices from the Soviet Union's collapse. It is a war to reshape the world. On the other hand, Trump sees the war as a distraction and a drag on his own efforts to reshape the world. Only if Kyiv and the wider West understand Trump's approach could they persuade him what is at stake. They must focus on how Putin hurts American interests and Trump's perception thereof. If they fail to do so, while Alaska may have proven to be no 'new Munich', its legacy could be that of one of a 'new Yalta' in which Europe's future is to be shaped by new exclusive spheres of influence drawn by Moscow and Washington. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.