
Protests erupt calling for U.S. to stay out of a war in Middle East
The protests, some organized in part by ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) Coalition, an anti-war group, call for Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the war on Iran.
ANSWER is a left-wing group that has organized protests against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and other U.S. military actions, including some that have drawn hundreds of thousands of participants. Earlier this year, the organization was part of a coalition of groups across the country protesting in the days after Trump's inauguration.
Other protests are planned in the coming week, including a national ''Stop the War on Iran'' march slated for June 28 in Washington, D.C. Others protested across the globe, including in Japan and Iran.
Trump administration officials defended the attacks Sunday morning, and President Trump threatened possible further actions.
"If peace does not come quickly, we will go after those other targets with precision, speech and skill," Trump said Saturday at the White House.
More: Not what 'MAGA wanted to hear': Tensions within GOP remain about Trump's Iran strike
Congress is scheduled to return to Washington this week. Many Republican lawmakers applauded Trump's move.
"President Trump has been consistent and clear that a nuclear-armed Iran will not be tolerated,'' Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, said in a statement. "That posture has now been enforced with strength, precision, and clarity.''
Some Democrats, however, blasted Trump "unilateral decision" to attack Iran without Congressional approval, calling it illegal.
"This move, a rash sequel to his withdrawal from the nuclear deal, puts our nation, our troops, and innocents at grave risk,'' Rep. James Clyburn said in a statement. "Trump promised to be a peacemaker and vowed to avoid plunging the U.S. into more wars in the Middle East. This attack is inconsistent with his promise to the American people."
Contributing: Sarah Wire
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Metro
27 minutes ago
- Metro
Trump may think he's the ultimate salesman
Yesterday, Volodymyr Zelensky turned up to the White House in a black suit and a spine of steel. In a meeting with European leaders and President Trump, he showed more poise and patience than most leaders manage in peacetime, let alone in his position. The valiant leader had already been publicly humiliated in the Oval Office earlier this year, but still kept his cool while Trump did what Trump does in Washington. But let's be clear about what it was. For all of the Ukrainian leader's flattery (with non-stop 'thank yous' and a letter from his wife to the First Lady) and Europe's strongly worded statements, the day amounted to a full-court press to push Ukraine into a meeting with Putin and a deal that, while not explicitly spelled out yesterday, would almost certainly see land handed to Russia. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Craig Munro breaks down Westminster chaos into easy to follow insight, walking you through what the latest policies mean to you. Sent every Wednesday. Sign up here. It is not good enough – and it's time for the UK and our allies to say so. Trump floated another call with Putin and teased a three-way sit-down. European leaders were marched in like human guardrails – having initially been kept outside by the petulant President. The optics were polite; the ask was not. The pressure is still coming from Trump for Ukraine to engage with Putin, who should be required to give up any hopes of 'land swaps' before talks begin. Otherwise, that is not peace. That is defeat with nicer lighting. Hours before the handshakes yesterday, Russian strikes killed families in Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia. You do not reward that with a pen stroke that amputates a sovereign country. Do you think Ukraine should give up land to Russia? You make the next strike less likely by raising the cost of aggression until Moscow cannot pay it. That is the job. Everything else is theatre. There is no world in which Putin settles for parcels of land. Give him paper and he will eat it. Give him land and he will ask for more. We already knew Trump was delusional – he underlined it by claiming Putin wants to make a deal to make the US President happy. That level of misconception inspires no confidence in any future summitry. Trump says he has since begun the arrangements for a meeting between Putin and Zelensky, then a trilateral with himself. Fine – wars end when enemies meet. But the self-styled salesman is still flogging a shortcut to peace that does not exist. Meanwhile, Europe turned up in force – Starmer, Macron, Merz, Meloni, Stubb, von der Leyen, Rutte – and that matters, for now. Keir Starmer, who has led our country's support for Ukraine with clarity and confidence, said there was 'real progress' and a 'real sense of unity' yesterday. Great. But that has been the case since Day One. The presence of Starmer, Macron and co is useful only if they say the quiet part out loud, in front of the cameras and behind closed doors: there will be no deal that gives Russia an inch of Ukraine. They need to say cleanly, publicly, repeatedly: If the price of Trump's 'reasonable chance' of peace is Ukrainian territory, the answer is no. Forget flattering Trump. Box him in. Give Ukraine what they need to shut down the sky – layered air defence, ammunition without drama, long-range strikes to put Russian logistics at risk every night. Seize frozen Russian sovereign assets and wire them to Ukrainian air defence and reconstruction. That is what 'security guarantees' actually mean. Anything less is a press release. And finally, cut the coyness about how this ends. It ends when Russia leaves. All of it. That is the baseline, not the maximalist position. The only negotiation is about sequencing and verification, not whether Ukraine keeps its territory like a contestant keeps a prize. If Moscow wants a photo-op to claim victory at home, fine – give them a nothingburger with an embossed seal. But give Ukraine the protection. That is the bargain – optics for them, outcomes for us. As practically every leader has said, yesterday was a 'good step forward.' But now go and read the casualty sheets. Watch the footage from Kharkiv. Count the children abducted, the cities utterly cratered and the power grids attacked as winter approaches. Ukraine is holding. Their resistance has been heroic and their people have more courage than the rest of us combined. Our job now is to make sure they can hold until Russia understands there is no profit in continuing. Then, we – as in Ukraine, Europe and the US – must take back Ukrainian land and rebuild it. Yesterday's test was not whether Zelensky smiled in a suit. It is whether Europe and the United States can say, in public, that territorial concessions are off the table. There is only one way wars like this ever end: when the aggressor is forced to accept what he cannot change. If yesterday's Washington show delivers that, good. But the signs are bleak. More Trending Trump values theatre above all else, and Ukrainians have buried too many of their people to be cast in another play. This has gone on long enough – and the message from yesterday should have been that this is Putin's last chance to back down. If not, it's up to all us together – Britain, Europe and America – to secure Ukraine's victory. And it'll take more than suits and smiles to make that happen. Do you have a story you'd like to share? Get in touch by emailing Share your views in the comments below. MORE: Lisa Nandy's 'protect the dolls' T-shirt left a sour taste in my mouth MORE: Fact check: Donald Trump boasts he's ended 'six wars in six months' but has he? MORE: Russian troops troll Zelensky by flying US flag on mission into Ukraine


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Air Force's top uniformed officer is retiring early in latest Trump military shake-up
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Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Is this the hot mic moment that gives away what REALLY happened at White House summit? Fears Putin will pull out of Ukraine talks as Trump commits to US security guarantees
Vladimir Putin last night told Donald Trump that he would attend peace talks with Volodymyr Zelensky within two weeks - but failed to name a specific date fuelling fears he will pull out of efforts to end the war at the last minute. The Kremlin branded a 40-minute phone call between Trump and Putin on Monday as 'frank' and only 'fairly constructive' - moments after the US President said on social media that he discussed plans for a summit in the next two weeks between the leaders of Russia and Ukraine. Volodymyr Zelensky has also said that he's 'ready' to sit down for face-to-face talks with Vladimir Putin to end the Ukraine war. It follows yesterday's extraordinary Oval Office love-in with Donald Trump that saw the two presidents swap praise and promises, a stark contrast to their explosive meeting in the same setting earlier this year. The meeting was also attended by European leaders, including Keir Starmer, Italy 's Georgia Meloni and French President Emmanuel Macron. But the tensions behind the scenes were seemingly revealed when Trump appeared to be reassuring French President Emmanuel Macron that Russian President Vladimir Putin was serious about making peace in Ukraine. In a hot mic moment on Monday, President Donald Trump appeared to be reassuring French President Emmanuel Macron that Russian President Vladimir Putin was serious about making peace in Ukraine. 'I think he wants to make a deal. I think he wants to make a deal for me,' Trump whispered to Macron in the White House East Room before their meeting started. 'Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds.' After the meeting, Trump also said that Putin 'had accepted security guarantees for Ukraine'. Vladimir Putin has failed to commit to peace talks with fears growing he will drop out at the last minute President Donald J. Trump on the phone with President Putin in the Oval Office. — The White House (@WhiteHouse) August 19, 2025 Macron appeared skeptical that Putin was serious about ending the three and a half year conflict that Russia had started. But he later suggested that Geneva could host a peace meeting between Putin and Zelensky. Meanwhile, the Finnish president also urged caution about the prospects for peace in Ukraine - as he labelled his Russian counterpart as 'untrustworthy'. Despite the meeting, Putin launched 270 drones and 10 missiles in an overnight attack. Speaking after he left Trump's historic talks in the White House with Zelensky and other European leaders, Alexander Stubb said: 'Putin is rarely to be trusted. 'So now it remains to be seen whether he has the courage to come to this type of meeting. 'Does he have the courage to come to a trilateral meeting, or is he once again playing for time?' Stubb's rhetoric was in stark contrast to that of President Trump who hailed the success of Monday's talks in the White House. Mr Trump told reporters: 'If everything works out well, we will have a tri-lat [between himself, Zelensky and Putin] and have a good chance of ending the war.' President Zelensky also said he is ready to sit down for face-to-face talks with Vladimir Putin at the extraordinary Oval Office love-in. It comes as William Browder, an expert on Russian foreign policy, warned that Putin's life depends on the continuation of the Ukraine war. Writing in Monday's Daily Mail, he said: 'For Vladimir Putin, an outbreak of peace means certain death–by assassination, overthrow and execution, or in an international prison cell as a war criminal. 'The Russian president's only credible hope of survival in the gangster state he has himself created is to prolong the "special military operation" in Ukraine or to win in such outrageously successful terms that he can turn his attention to other former client states, other victims. 'Survival, after all, was Putin's objective in launching the invasion in 2022.' French president Emmanuel Macron, however, called for stepping up sanctions against Russia if Putin backtracks on peace in Ukraine. He told reporters: 'President Trump believes we can get an agreement and believes that President Putin also wants a peace accord. 'But if at the end this process is met by refusal, we are also ready to say that we need to increase sanctions.' Monday's meeting, which was praised by Zelensky as the best he had with Trump, saw the two presidents swap praises as they sought to make progress towards peace. However, lots of questions remained unanswered early on Tuesday morning as to what that would look like or how it would come about. Fresh from his Alaskan summit with Vladimir Putin, Mr Trump said he was prepared to provide military support to Kyiv in the event of a peace deal. 'We will give them very good protection, very good security,' the President said. 'There'll be a lot of help when it comes to security. It's going to be good.' Mr Trump refused three times to rule out putting American boots on the ground though any assistance is more likely to come in the form of air support. The hastily arranged scenes at the White House saw a contingent of European leaders, including Sir Keir Starmer, put summer holiday plans on hold to stand with Mr Zelensky. They were locked in talks on Monday night as Mr Trump pledged they would 'come to a resolution today on almost everything, including probably security'. He had earlier spent an hour with just his Ukrainian counterpart, presenting him with a giant battlefield map showing the 20 per cent of the country under Russian control. The 'possible exchanges of territory, taking into consideration the current line of contact' was up for discussion, the President said. Responding calmly to a provocative first question from an American journalist over whether he is prepared 'to keep sending Ukrainian troops to their deaths', Mr Zelensky said he was ready to sit down with Putin. 'We support the idea of the United States, of personally President Trump, to stop this war, to make a diplomatic way of finishing this war', he said. 'And we are ready for a trilateral, as the president said. This is a good signal about trilateral. I think this is very good.' The meeting was a complete contrast to the pair's bust-up in February, which saw Mr Zelensky effectively kicked out of the White House, with the US President this time complimenting his opposite number for his 'fabulous' military-style suit. Mr Trump opened graciously, saying it was 'an honour' to receive the Ukrainian President and that the two men have had 'a lot of good talks', making 'substantial progress'. Mr Zelensky responded in turn, saying thank you seven times in his opening speech after he was dressed down by Vice President JD Vance for his supposed ingratitude over American support. In another dramatic day of diplomacy over the future of Europe: Sir Keir joined the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Finland, the EU and NATO in supporting Mr Zelensky in an unprecedented day at the White House The US President was due to phone Putin directly on Monday to update him on the talks Any trilateral summit could be held between Putin, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky as early as this week in Europe Furious Russian officials on Monday accused Britain of undermining American efforts to end the conflict in Ukraine Mr Zelensky arrived dressed in a black jacket, shirt, and trousers as he tried to show Mr Trump respect whilst not breaking his pledge to forego a suit until the end of the war. The European leaders were each met by a guard of honour outside the White House as protesters outside waved placards reading: 'Do not abandon Ukraine.' Mr Trump smiled as he personally greeted Mr Zelensky, shaking his hand before putting his arm around the Ukrainian President and ushering him inside. Inside the Oval Office, Mr Zelensky deftly handed Mr Trump a letter from his wife, Olena Zelenska, for the First Lady Melania Trump to thank her for raising the plight of 20,000 Ukrainian children his forces have kidnapped with Putin. But on hammering out a peace deal, Mr Trump admitted it's 'a tough one' saying while he has ended six wars he 'thought this maybe would be the easiest one... and it's not the easiest one.' Of the wars he has ended, he said, none had come after a ceasefire, with a complete and lasting end to hostilities being his goal. That was challenged by both Emmanuel Macron and Friedrich Merz, who pushed for a pause in the fighting before any future meetings. Mr Trump responded by saying he liked the idea of an immediate ceasefire to 'stop the killing immediately,' but that would be left to Mr Zelensky and Putin. At the end of the press conference, Mr Trump revealed he was going to call the Russian dictator straight after the meeting of leaders. 'I just spoke to President Putin indirectly, and we're going to have a phone call right after these meetings today, and we may or may not have a trilat,' he said. 'If we don't have a trilat, then the fighting continues, and if we do, we have a good chance. 'I think if we have a trilat, there's a good chance of maybe ending it. But he's expecting my call when we're finished with this meeting.' There were hopes on Monday night that a summit between the three leaders could take place as early as this week in Europe. While Mr Trump favours Rome, Moscow reportedly prefers Geneva. It marks a remarkable turnaround, as there were growing fears of a cataclysmic breakdown of the trans-Atlantic alliance after Putin apparently succeeded in winning over Washington to his worldview in Alaska last Friday. He appeared to get everything he wanted at the summit in Anchorage, with the Trump administration dropping its desire for an immediate ceasefire to halt the Russian advance and reportedly agreeing that Ukraine should cede all of the Donbas - a huge territory Moscow has failed to take for 12 years. In a separate hot mic moment, a brief conversation between Italy's leader Giorgia Meloni, Finnish president Alexander Stubb and Trump. Meloni starts off by thanking Trump 'for being fair'. Stubb then asks if he does 'this everyday'. They then break into a side conversation where Trump says someone is a 'good golf player'. JD Vance looks on during a meeting with US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky Trump, centre, speaks with Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, right, and France's President Emmanuel Macron, left Meanwhile, Mr Trump blasted back at his 'stupid critics' before on Monday night's gathering, writing on his Truth Social platform: 'I know exactly what I'm doing.' Speaking on board his flight to Washington earlier in the day, Sir Keir insisted that 'we've got to get this right'. He said: 'This war in Ukraine has been going on for a really long time now, three-plus years. 'It's hugely impacted the Ukrainians who've suffered hugely but it's also affected Europe - it's impacted every single family and community in the United Kingdom. 'And so everybody wants it to end, not least the Ukrainians, but we've got to get it right. We've got to make sure there is peace, that it is lasting peace, that it is fair and that it is just.'