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A heartening display of European resolve in support of Ukraine

A heartening display of European resolve in support of Ukraine

Telegraph5 hours ago
SIR – What impressed me most about Monday's events at the White House was the sight of European leaders stepping up to the plate for once (report, August 19).
Instead of the usual vacuous babble, here were our elected representatives behaving like statesmen, determined to influence the course of history.
And it was heartwarming to see our own Prime Minister playing a pivotal role. Whether this will result in a peace deal that doesn't sell out Volodymyr Zelensky remains unclear. But it's good to see that serious, civilised politics is back.
Stan Labovitch
Windsor, Berkshire
SIR – The presence of the European leaders at the talks was largely an irrelevance – an expensive, taxpayer-funded photo opportunity. Sir Keir Starmer should be in Britain. There is plenty for him to deal with here.
David Saunders
Sidmouth, Devon
SIR – Donald Trump's friendly, even affectionate, attitude towards Volodymyr Zelensky has been taken by some as a sign that he will treat the Ukrainian leader more fairly.
Would it were so, but I have my doubts. One cannot forget the American president's fury at the idea of Mr Zelensky conspiring against him with the Biden family, as Charles Moore says (Comment, August 19).
Mr Trump has been steadily manoeuvring Mr Zelensky into a corner. Mr Zelensky is forbidden by the Ukrainian constitution from ceding territory. Yet if he refuses to cooperate, he will, as Lord Moore puts it, '[bring] down upon his head a tide of American denunciation and, more importantly, a withdrawal of US aid of all description'. This, then, is the context in which a smiling Mr Trump has declared himself ready to deliver Mr Zelensky to Vladimir Putin to conclude the negotiation.
Gordon Bonnyman
Frant, East Sussex
SIR – Donald Trump was overheard appearing to suggest that he thought Vladimir Putin wanted to make a peace deal for him.
Sadly, I fear Mr Trump is seriously mistaken. There is no evidence that Putin genuinely wishes to make peace, but he has fooled Mr Trump into believing that he does, playing on the American president's conceit and plying him with empty praise.
Putin will play this game for as long as possible, taking as much Ukrainian territory as he can, until America wakes up and smells the coffee. At the heart of all this is a simple but self-evident truth: Putin only really respects superior strength and overwhelming force, whether military, economic or political. The European leaders know this, but have to tread on eggshells in dealing with the mercurial Mr Trump. Sooner or later, though, they must all confront him and clearly state what he needs to hear.
David Platts
Newark, Nottinghamshire
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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump ramps up pressure on Putin with ‘10 European nations' offering ground troops
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump ramps up pressure on Putin with ‘10 European nations' offering ground troops

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump ramps up pressure on Putin with ‘10 European nations' offering ground troops

Donald Trump has signalled his support for a package of security guarantees for Ukraine, including foreign boots on Ukrainian soil from around 10 European countries, in a new push to pressure Russian president Vladimir Putin into ending the conflict. Trump ruled out sending US boots on the ground, but said America could offer air support to maintain peace. A day after their high-stakes talks in the White House on Monday, European leaders yesterday discussed the details of how a peacekeeping force would be deployed from roughly 10 countries, according to Bloomberg. 'When it comes to security, (Europeans) are willing to put people on the ground. We're willing to help them with things, especially, probably ... by air," Trump said in an interview on Fox News. Trump continues to push Putin to meet Zelensky while admitting the conflict was a 'tough one' to solve and that it is possible the Russian leader "doesn't want to make a deal". "I think Putin is tired of it," Trump said. 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Sir Keir Starmer has led a follow-up meeting to the White House gathering with 30 international leaders to discuss the next steps for ensuring Ukraine's security Oliver O'Connell20 August 2025 03:00 Witkoff calls Trump 'legend' at dealmaking — Americans aren't so sure, poll shows On Tuesday evening, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff told Sean Hannity on Fox News that President Donald Trump is a 'legend' when it comes to dealmaking. Witkoff made the remark during a discussion about the talks he has held over the past week with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, and the leaders of European allied nations. However, Americans might need more convincing, given the results of the latest Economist/YouGov poll. Per The Economist: Donald Trump claims to have ended six wars in six months and has been angling for a Nobel Peace Prize. Americans are less convinced of his diplomatic prowess. In February, his net approval rating—the share who approve, less the share who disapprove—for foreign policy was 2. It has since fallen steadily. In this week's survey—which began on the day that Mr Trump met Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, in Alaska and ended on the day Volodymyr Zelensky, his Ukrainian counterpart, visited the White House—it was -14. More Americans think Mr Trump is an ineffective negotiator with foreign leaders than believe he is an effective one. Just 32% said that the American and Russian presidents made at least some progress towards ending the war. Mr Trump's net approval rating for his handling of the Ukraine-Russia conflict is -10. 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Pics of Trump holding court in Oval Office branded 'embarrassing' for world leaders Some on social media noted that the set up, with Trump behind the Resolute Desk and his European counterparts on chairs opposite him, presented the president as hosting a bunch of 'unruly schoolchildren' Oliver O'Connell20 August 2025 02:40 ICYMI: Zelensky says he's ready to talk to Trump and Putin to end war in Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky said he was prepared to meet Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin at a joint summit to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. The Ukrainian president made the pledge during talks with his US counterpart at the White House, hastily convened after President Trump's encounter with Putin last Friday. When Mr Trump suggested that all three leaders could gather if Monday night's talks went well, Mr Zelensky added: 'We are ready for trilateral.' Sam Kiley and Andrew Feinberg filed this report on Monday's meeting. Zelensky says he's ready to talk to Trump and Putin to end war in Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and Donald Trump met for a second time in the White House before meeting senior European leaders including Keir Starmer Oliver O'Connell20 August 2025 02:20 Reporter who attacked Zelensky over suit in February responds to Ukrainian president's zinger Marjorie Taylor Greene 's boyfriend, Real America's Voice correspondent Brian Glenn, laughed off Volodymyr Zelensky's zinger about him wearing the same suit during Monday's press conference in the Oval Office as he did during February's now-infamous showdown between the Ukrainian leader and President Donald Trump. Gustaf Kilander has the story. MTG's boyfriend speaks out after Zelensky's Oval Office suit zinger 'I apologized to him, and then he threw a little zinger back at me…I actually loved it,' Brian Glenn says Oliver O'Connell20 August 2025 02:00 Ukrainian sniper claims to have killed two Russian soldiers with 'longest ever shot' of 2.5 miles The record shot was fired on 14 August with the assistance of artificial intelligence using a 14.5mm Alligator rifle, a Ukrainian military blogger said on Telegram. Alex Croft has the story. Ukrainian sniper kills two Russians with 'longest ever shot' of 2.5 miles The sniper was part of the 'Pryvid' sniper unit defending the key Ukrainian town of Pokrovsk from advances by Putin's forces Oliver O'Connell20 August 2025 01:45 Russia pounded Ukraine with largest aerial bombardment in a month hours after Trump-Zelensky meeting Russia 's army launched its largest aerial attack in a month on Ukraine hours after Donald Trump held fresh peace talks with Volodymyr Zelensky. 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Single photo says it all about the real reason Australians feel so poor right now
Single photo says it all about the real reason Australians feel so poor right now

Daily Mail​

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  • Daily Mail​

Single photo says it all about the real reason Australians feel so poor right now

Australia's prohibitively expensive electricity prices and high government spending have been blamed for the nation's productivity crisis. Nationals senator Matt Canavan has convened an alternative roundtable at Parliament House in Canberra to Treasurer Jim Chalmers ' three-day Economic Reform Roundtable. Chalmers is trying to find policy solutions to Australia's slipping living standards. Senator Canavan said: 'There was no mention of a tripling of electricity prices that have occurred in the past 20 years.' 'There's no mention of the government spending that we've seen that is crowding out private investment.' Canavan, a former economist with the Productivity Commission, noted that from 1990 to 2004, electricity prices had fallen by 19 per cent. 'We actually got in there and made some hard decisions and we lowered the cost of living for Australian people and of course helped Australian businesses compete with the rest of the world,' he said. 'Of course, since then we've lost complete control of electricity prices.' During the 1990s to the mid-2000s, Australia's productivity - or hourly output per worker - increased by an average annual pace of 2.1 per cent during the first decade of the internet. That was a far cry from the one per cent plunge in the year to March on Anthony Albanese's watch as Prime Minister. The Reserve Bank has slashed its growth forecast to just 0.7 per cent a year for the next two years. Economists have linked Australia's weak productivity growth during the past decade to a reluctance by companies to invest in new technology and machinery that would make businesses more productive. 'We are not, in my view, going to fix our productivity crisis if we cannot lower energy prices in the country, it's as simple as that,' Canavan said. Gary Banks, a former chairman of the Productivity Commission, said Australia's productivity crisis risked making Australians poorer. 'Productivity ... has become a matter of general concern if not consternation,' he said. 'Even more concerning is the expectation, which is embedded in the Treasury's latest Intergenerational Report, of a much diminished future rate of productivity growth compared to what it was in the past. 'That will bring with it a comparable diminution in income growth and thus living standards in the longer term.' Chalmers on Wednesday said the second day of his three-day roundtable would focus on addressing Australia's productivity crisis. 'The first day was about resilience, today is about productivity and tomorrow more fundamentally about the Budget,' he said. 'But we all know those three things are very tightly linked. 'Productivity really sits at the core of so much of what we're trying to achieve. 'In the conversations yesterday about attracting more investment, about capital deepening, capital flows in the world and in our own economy. 'Productivity is the central focus of the government, of today's part of the roundtable, but also the work that we will all do in the months and years ahead. 'It was a really deliberate decision by our government to put productivity at the centre of our economic agenda and that's primarily or exclusively because that's how we get those higher living standards that we need to see in our economy.' Treasury is forecasting a string of deficits for at least the coming decade with government spending as a proportion of the economy at the highest level since 1986, outside of the Covid pandemic. Shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien told Canavan's summit that workers would end up paying higher income taxes unless government spending was restrained. 'Absolutely key to where the real problem lies, that is, the government has to stop the spending spree because if it doesn't, then it's only going to go after more taxes, and the only tax they are really relying on is income tax increases,' he said. 'That's entirely what they think is going to close the gap of the deficits.' Income taxes are expected to make up almost 52 per cent of commonwealth revenue during this financial year with neither side of politics committed to raising the GST from 10 per cent or broadening it to cover fresh food, health and education. Labor is also committed to a net zero by 2050 target and a 43 per cent reduction by 2030.

Asia shares slip, dollar steadies ahead of Jackson Hole
Asia shares slip, dollar steadies ahead of Jackson Hole

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Asia shares slip, dollar steadies ahead of Jackson Hole

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