logo
Ukraine invited to NATO summit in The Hague: Zelensky

Ukraine invited to NATO summit in The Hague: Zelensky

Arab News2 days ago

VILNIUS: Ukraine has been invited to a NATO summit later in June, President Volodymyr Zelensky has said, after earlier warning it would be a 'victory' for Russia if it was not there.
The heads of NATO states will gather in The Hague, Netherlands, from June 24-26, with Russia's invasion of Ukraine and US President Donald Trump's calls for alliance members to ramp up defense spending set to dominate the agenda.
'We were invited to the NATO summit. I think this is important,' Zelensky said Monday after he held a meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in Vilnius.
Kyiv is seeking to shore up its support from Europe because of uncertainties over vital military aid under Trump.
Last week Zelensky had said that 'if Ukraine is not present at the NATO summit, it will be a victory for Putin, but not over Ukraine, but over NATO.'
Zelensky wants NATO to offer security guarantees to Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire or peace deal with Russia — something Moscow has called 'unacceptable.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pentagon chief confident NATO will commit to Trump's defense spending target
Pentagon chief confident NATO will commit to Trump's defense spending target

Arab News

time44 minutes ago

  • Arab News

Pentagon chief confident NATO will commit to Trump's defense spending target

BRUSSELS: US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Thursday he was confident that members of the NATO alliance will sign up to Donald Trump's demand for a major boost in defense spending, adding that it had to happen by a summit later in June. The US president has said NATO allies should boost investment in defense to 5 percent of gross domestic product, up from the current target of 2 percent. 'To be an alliance, you got to be more than flags. You got to be formations. You got to be more than conferences. You need to be, keep combat ready capabilities,' Hegseth said as he arrived at a gathering of NATO defense ministers in Brussels. 'We're here to continue the work that President Trump started, which is a commitment to 5 percent defense spending across this alliance, which we think will happen,' Hegseth said, adding: 'It has to happen by the summit at The Hague later this month.' Diplomats have said European allies understand that hiking defense expenditure is the price of ensuring a continued US commitment to the continent's security and that keeping the US on board means allowing Trump to be able to declare a win on his 5 percent demand during the summit, scheduled for June 24-25. 'We have to go further and we have to go faster,' NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte told reporters on Wednesday. 'A new defense investment plan will be at the heart of the NATO summit in The Hague,' he added. In a bid to meet Trump's 5 percent goal, Rutte has proposed alliance members boost defense spending to 3.5 percent of GDP and commit a further 1.5 percent to broader security-related spending, Reuters has reported. Details of the new investment plan will likely continue to be negotiated until the eve of the NATO summit. 'We have to find a realistic compromise between what is necessary and what is possible really to spend,' German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said on Wednesday. Countries remain divided over the timeline for a new pledge. Rutte has proposed reaching the 5 percent by 2032 – a date that some eastern European states consider too distant but which some others see as too early and unrealistic given current spending and industrial production levels. A 2032 target is 'definitely too late,' Lithuanian Defense Minister Dovile Sakaliene said on Wednesday, arguing for a target of 2030 at the latest. There is also an ongoing debate over how to define 'defense-related' spending, which might include spending on cybersecurity and certain types of infrastructure. 'The aim is to find a definition that is precise enough to cover only real security-related investments, and at the same time broad enough to allow for national specifics,' said one NATO diplomat.

Trump administration returns migrant hastily deported to Mexico back to the US
Trump administration returns migrant hastily deported to Mexico back to the US

Saudi Gazette

timean hour ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Trump administration returns migrant hastily deported to Mexico back to the US

WASHINGTON — A Guatemalan national who says he was wrongfully deported to Mexico is back in the United States, his legal team told CNN, in what appears to mark the first time the Trump administration has brought back a migrant after a judge ordered the administration to facilitate their return. O.C.G., a pseudonym the migrant is using in the case, landed in the United States on Wednesday and made contact with a member of the litigation team challenging the Trump administration's moves to send migrants to countries where they have no ties, according to Trina Realmuto, executive director of the National Immigration Litigation Alliance. He is now in Immigration and Customs Enforcement's custody, Realmuto told CNN. The Trump administration said in court filings last week that it was 'working' on flying back O.C.G. after resisting similar orders to facilitate deported migrants' returns in other cases. 'The person in question was an illegally present alien who was granted withholding of removal to Guatemala. He was instead removed to Mexico, a safe third option for him,' DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to CNN on Wednesday. 'Yet, this federal activist judge ordered us to bring him back, so he can have an opportunity to prove why he should be granted asylum to a country that he has had no past connection to.' 'The Trump administration is committed to returning our asylum system to its original intent,' she District Judge Brian Murphy – who is overseeing a case concerning migrants being deported to countries that are not their home country – ordered O.C.G's return last month, ruling that his removal to Mexico, and subsequently Guatemala, likely 'lacked due process.'After entering the US and being deported a first time, O.C.G. reentered the US again in 2024, at which point he sought asylum, having suffered 'multiple violent attacks' in Guatemala, according to court his way to the US during the second trip, O.C.G. said, he was raped and held for ransom in Mexico –– a detail he made known to an immigration judge during 2025, a judge ruled he should not be sent back to his native country, the documents say. And just two days after, the government deported him to Mexico, according to Murphy's order.O.C.G. was later removed to Guatemala, where he filed a declaration last month that he was 'living in hiding, in constant panic and constant fear.'He has claimed that he had not been given the opportunity before his deportation to communicate his fear of being sent to Mexico and that his pleas before his removal to speak to an attorney were government had initially argued that O.C.G. had communicated to officials before his removal that he had no fear about being deported to Mexico, but it recently backed down from that claim after it could not identify an immigration official who could substantiate to Murphy's ruling, O.C.G. said during his immigration proceedings that he feared being sent to Mexico, but the judge told him that since Mexico isn't his native country, he can't be sent there without additional steps in the ruling came days after an appeals court denied the Trump administration's request to put on hold an order requiring it to facilitate the return of a 20-year-old Venezuelan migrant wrongly deported to El Salvador earlier this a hearing last month, US District Judge Stephanie Gallagher said officials had done virtually nothing to comply with her directive that they 'facilitate' that migrant's return to the US from the mega-prison in El Salvador where he was sent so he can have his asylum application a similar case, the Trump administration has been in a standoff with another federal judge in Maryland over her order that it facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man who was mistakenly deported in District Judge Paula Xinis, who is overseeing the case, has faced repeated stonewalling from the Justice Department and members of the Trump administration, who have continued to thwart an 'expedited fact-finding' search for answers on what officials are doing to facilitate Abrego Garcia's return from El Salvador. — CNN

Judge halts deportation of Colorado suspect's family
Judge halts deportation of Colorado suspect's family

Saudi Gazette

timean hour ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Judge halts deportation of Colorado suspect's family

WASHINGTON — A US judge has temporarily halted deportation proceedings against the family of a man accused of Sunday's petrol-bomb attack on Jewish demonstrators in Boulder, Colorado. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, is accused of a federal hate crime and other charges. Officials say his family, who are not charged in the attack, are Egyptian citizens. US District Judge Gordon Gallagher, a Biden appointee, ordered deportation proceedings to be halted, a day after the White House said it had six one-way tickets to deport the wife and five children from the US. The decision was one of three immigration rulings on Wednesday against Trump by federal judges as he seeks to deliver on his pledge for mass deportations. "The court finds that deportation without process could work irreparable harm and an order must issue without notice due to the urgency this situation presents," Judge Gallagher wrote in his order on Wednesday. Lawyers for the defense had accused the government of unfairly targeting the family, who say they were unaware of Soliman's violent plans and have co-operated with investigators."It is patently unlawful to punish individuals for the crimes of their relatives," the family's lawyers said in a lawsuit challenging their immigration detention."Such methods of collective or family punishment violates the very foundations of a democratic justice system."The family members include Soliman's wife, Hayam El Gamal, 41, as well as the couple's 17-year-old daughter, two other daughters and two are being held at an immigration detention centre in Texas, over 900 miles (1,450km) from their home in of Homeland Security officials have said that Mr Soliman arrived in the US on a tourist visa in August 2022. That visa expired the following year. He made an asylum claim in September to police documents, the suspect told officials that he "never talked to his wife or his family" about his plans, and that he had left a phone in a desk drawer with messages to his wife and children. His wife turned the phone in to of Soliman's daughters was recently awarded a scholarship by a local newspaper in Colorado Springs. A profile in the Gazette newspaper noted she "was born in Egypt but lived in Kuwait for 14 years" and relocated to the US two years his arrest, Soliman told police he planned the attack to take place after his daughter's high school graduation, according to the Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the agency was "investigating to what extent his family knew about this heinous attack, if they had knowledge of it, or if they provided support to it".The judge's order is the latest setback for the Trump administration on Wednesday, another federal judge ruled that over 100 Venezuelan migrants deported to a jail in El Salvador must be given a chance to challenge their James Boasberg said the US had "plainly deprived" the migrants of their constitutional right to oppose their the ruling does not apply Venezuelan migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran native deported from the US at the same also emerged on Wednesday that the US had flown a Guatemalan man back to the US, after deporting him to Mexico.A federal judge in Boston last month found that prosecutors had incorrectly declared the man was not afraid for his safety in individual, identified in court papers only as OCG, was returned on a commercial flight on Wednesday, according to his lawyers. — BBC

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store