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Bitcoin Soars To New All-time High As Us Lawmakers Focus On Pro-crypto Legislation

Bitcoin Soars To New All-time High As Us Lawmakers Focus On Pro-crypto Legislation

Al Arabiyaa day ago
Bitcoin continued its rapid climb and hit another all-time high Monday as US lawmakers begin a week focused on passing pro-crypto legislation. Data from CoinMarketCap showed bitcoin climbed above 123000 early Monday, up from about 108000 only a week ago. The world's oldest and most popular cryptocurrency is currently the fifth most valuable asset class in the world at 2.4 trillion, giving it a higher market cap than Amazon.
The enthusiasm for bitcoin comes as the US House is set to take up several pieces of cryptocurrency-related legislation in what's been dubbed crypto week in Congress. Lawmakers have been under pressure from President Donald Trump and the big-spending crypto lobby to pass legislation quickly. That includes a bill passed last month by the Senate that would regulate a type of cryptocurrency known as stablecoins. The House is also set to take up cryptocurrency market structure legislation that is far more sweeping.
Trump, once a skeptic of the industry, has vowed in his second term to make the US the global capital of crypto. Meanwhile, he and his family have moved aggressively into nearly every corner of the industry: mining operations, billion-dollar bitcoin purchases, a newly minted stablecoin, and a Trump-branded meme coin.
The crypto industry has rapidly become a major player in Washington after feeling unfairly targeted by the Biden administration. The industry spent huge amounts on last year's elections and has been spending heavily on lobbying and other influence efforts this year. Bitcoin has seen a significant rebound since April, when it briefly dipped below 75000. Spot bitcoin ETFs are becoming increasingly popular since launching last year, and several publicly traded companies have made using debt and stock sales to buy bitcoin their primary business strategy.
Created in response to the 2008 financial crisis, bitcoin has taken a highly volatile path to mainstream acceptance. Its backers say the asset is like a digital gold that can act as a hedge against central bank and government malfeasance. Only 21 million bitcoins will ever be created.
Bitcoin's price is finally catching up to what's been building under the surface, said Adam Back, CEO of the crypto company Blockstream. 'This is institutional demand aligning with bitcoin's fundamentals and a fixed supply doing what it was designed to do,' he said.
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Europeans open to buying US arms for Ukraine under Trump plan but need details
Europeans open to buying US arms for Ukraine under Trump plan but need details

Arab News

timean hour ago

  • Arab News

Europeans open to buying US arms for Ukraine under Trump plan but need details

'Of course we can't do it on our own, we need others to partner up,' Rasmussen told reportersEuropean ministers said they would now need to examine how new purchases of US weapons could be paid forBRUSSELS: Several European countries said on Tuesday they were willing to buy US arms for Ukraine under a scheme announced by US President Donald Trump, although arrangements still needed to be worked said on Monday that Washington will supply Patriot air defense systems, missiles and other weaponry to Ukraine for its war against Russia's invasion and that the arms would be paid for by other NATO much remains undisclosed, including the amounts and precise types of weapons to be provided, how quickly they would be supplied and how they would be paid officials have suggested that European countries will be willing to give up some of their own stocks of weapons for Ukraine and then buy replacements from the United States. But some of the countries involved say they still don't even know what is being asked of a move would get weapons to Ukraine more quickly but would leave donor countries' defenses more exposed until new systems are ready.'We are ready to participate. Of course we can't do it on our own, we need others to partner up – but we have a readiness,' Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told reporters in Brussels on Tuesday ahead of a meeting of European Union alongside Trump at the White House on Monday, NATO chief Mark Rutte said that Germany, Finland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Canada want to be part of the new of those countries have been among the biggest military aid donors to Ukraine, either overall or per whether Denmark could give US arms from its own stocks as part of the scheme, Rasmussen said: 'We don't have these kind of systems – the Patriot systems – so if we should lean in, and we are absolutely ready to do so, it will be (with) money and we have to work out the details.'European ministers said they would now need to examine how new purchases of US weapons could be paid for. In many cases, that seems likely to involve countries teaming up to buy US weapons systems.'Now we need to see how together we can go in and finance, among other things, Patriots, which they plan to send to Ukraine,' Sweden's Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard told Swedish Brussels, Dutch Foreign Minister Caspar Veldkamp said his country is looking into the plan 'with a positive inclination'.Asked about the scheme, Norwegian Defense Minister Tore Sandvik told Reuters that Oslo was 'in close dialogue with Ukraine' on military aid and 'air defense remains a high priority for Ukraine and for the Norwegian military support'.'Norway has contributed to significant amounts of air defense for Ukraine, including co-financing the donation of a Patriot system and missiles,' he Finnish Defense Ministry said Helsinki 'will continue to provide material support to Ukraine'.'The details of the US initiative ... are not yet known and we are interested to hear more about them before we can take more concrete lines on this issue,' it said.

'Not our war' — Trump's Nato weapons deal for Ukraine sparks MAGA anger
'Not our war' — Trump's Nato weapons deal for Ukraine sparks MAGA anger

Saudi Gazette

time2 hours ago

  • Saudi Gazette

'Not our war' — Trump's Nato weapons deal for Ukraine sparks MAGA anger

WASHINGTON — Some conservative members of Donald Trump's "Make America Great Again" movement have reacted angrily to the president's plans to sell weapons to Nato, arguing it is a betrayal of his promise to end US involvement in foreign wars. On Monday, Trump said he would send weapons to Ukraine via Nato, while also threatening Russia with more tariffs if a deal to end the war is not reached in 50 days. Republican Congresswomen Marjorie Taylor Greene, a key Trump ally, and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon are among those who have criticised the decision, with Bannon telling his podcast listeners that Ukraine is a "European war". The White House has emphasised that Europe will pay for the US-made weapons. In an interview with the New York Times, Greene - an isolationist member of Congress from Georgia who has been one of the most loyal Trump supporters on Capitol Hill - said the move was at odds with what she had promised voters on the campaign trail. "It's not just Ukraine; it's all foreign wars in general and a lot of foreign aid," she said. "This is what we campaigned on. This is what I promised also to my district. This is what everybody voted for. And I believe we have to maintain the course."Trump sought to emphasise that the weapons would be paid for rather than given as direct aid, saying on Monday: "We're not buying it, but we will manufacture it, and they're going to be paying for it."But in a rare public disagreement with the president, Greene expressed scepticism that US taxpayers would ultimately avoid bearing any cost and, in a post on social media, criticised "backdoor deals through Nato"."Without a shadow of a doubt, our tax dollars are being used," she told the New York Times, arguing that indirect costs such as US training missions and contributions to Nato qualify as US involvement."I said it on every rally stage: no more money to Ukraine. We want peace. We just want peace for those people," she said. "And guess what? People haven't changed."One former Trump campaign official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to Politico, said Europe's purchase of the weapons "mitigates" the anger from Trump's isolationist supporters."But we still hate it," the official said. "This is not our war, and escalation isn't in America's interest."Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Trump, said on his War Room podcast that "Ukraine is getting so dangerous"."It's a European war. Let Europe deal with it," he said. "They have the resources. They have the manpower.""We're about to arm people we have literally no control over," Bannon said of Ukraine. "This is old-fashioned, grinding war in the bloodlands of Europe - and we're being dragged into it."In a statement quoted by Politico, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said that Trump's MAGA base "aren't panicans like the media"."They trust in Trump, and they know that this president is restoring peace through strength."The BBC has contacted the White House for comment.A White House official who spoke to Politico on the condition of anonymity disagreed that the president's base opposed his moves. They pointed to one recent poll that suggested nearly two-thirds of Trump voters support continuing to send arms to in the Trump administration have also defended the president's decision, with Under Secretary of Defense Elbridge Colby writing on X that Trump's "America First message is that our alliances have to be fair and equitable"."This is eminently reasonable but was treated for many years as heresy," he added. "Yet now with the historic Nato commitment we see that it can work."That recent commitment from Nato leaders to ramp up defence spending to 5% of their economic output was praised by Trump supporters on Monday, who argued that even with the new weapons deal Europe was taking on more responsibility for its in an exclusive interview with the BBC on Monday, just hours after he met Nato chief Mark Rutte at the White House, Trump said the alliance was now "paying its own bills".He affirmed his support for the organization's common defence principle, and said he was "disappointed but not done" with Russia's Vladimir president said that he had thought a deal to end the war in Ukraine was on the cards with Russia four different times. — BBC

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