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Alaska Airlines is flying to Europe for the first time — and the planes are getting a fresh look

Alaska Airlines is flying to Europe for the first time — and the planes are getting a fresh look

Alaska Airlines is flying transatlantic for the first time — and has unveiled a fresh livery for its new Boeing 787s to mark the new chapter.
In an announcement on Tuesday, the airline called the new design its "first-ever global livery," as it sets up more ambitious international routes following its $1.9 billion acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines last September.
Alaska flies to destinations in North America, Central America, and the Caribbean. Until 1998, it also operated flights to eastern Russia.
The acquisition added four Boeing 787 Dreamliners to the airline's fleet, which have twin aisles and wide bodies. Another 13 are on order. Previously, it operated single-aisle jets designed for shorter distances.
Alaska's Dreamliners will first fly from Seattle to Seoul on September 12. Flights to Tokyo begin on January 7, followed by flights to Rome in the spring.
The airline also announced it will start serving Reykjavík, Iceland's capital, from Seattle next May. It will use the narrow-body Boeing 737 Max — making it the longest route with such an aircraft operated by a US airline.
Seattle and Reykjavík are about 3,600 miles apart, and flights take around 7½ hours. Daily flights on the route will be available during the summer season, but won't operate during the winter, when Iceland is less popular with tourists due to its shorter days.
By next spring, the airline will also operate a daily, non-stop service to London Heathrow, using a Boeing 787.
It takes about 9½ hours to fly from Seattle to the British capital, which Alaska calls "one of the most sought-after international destinations and business markets."
Unlike on a 737 Max, the 787's business class will have fully lie-flat seats with privacy doors.
That could be key for attracting new customers to Alaska for these routes, as premium options have become more important since the pandemic. While travel demand has been slow since the start of the year, many airlines have found that premium demand is still growing.
Northern lights livery
The new chapter for Alaska Airlines is also being reflected with a redesigned livery, its first update since 2016.
For the Boeing 787s, blue and cyan colors extend from the tail and across the white fuselage in a design the airline said is inspired by the northern lights. The horizontal stripe is also supposed to evoke the airline's classic liveries in the 1970s and 1980s.
"Our new 787 exterior embodies Alaska's transition to a global airline with beauty, grace, and a nod to our heritage," said Andrew Harrison, the airline's chief commercial officer.
"As we significantly expand to new destinations around the globe, we're eager for more and more travelers to recognize our new livery as being Alaska Airlines and appreciate the outstanding service we've long been known for," he added.
Some people were surprised that the smiling Inuit, known as Chester, was removed from the airline's livery. He has featured on the airline's tails since 1992 and has become synonymous with the brand.
However, only the 17 Dreamliners will be repainted, so he will still appear on most Alaska Airlines jets.
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Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says
Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says

President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are planning on meeting in Alaska, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. Mr. Trump confirmed on Truth Social the meeting will take place in Alaska on Friday, August 15. One senior White House official told CBS News the planning for next Friday's summit is still fluid, and that it is still possible that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy could end up being involved in some way. The White House said earlier this week that Mr. Trump is open to meeting with both Putin and Zelenskyy, but Mr. Trump suggested Friday he may start by just meeting with Putin, telling reporters he plans to "start off with Russia." Mr. Trump also said he believes "we have a shot at" organizing a trilateral meeting with the Ukrainian and Russian leaders. The expected meeting comes as Mr. Trump presses Putin to strike a ceasefire deal with Ukraine. It would be the first face-to-face meeting between Putin and an American leader since former President Joe Biden met with his Russian counterpart in Switzerland in June 2021, eight months before Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Friday, August 8, is the Trump-imposed deadline for Putin to either cut a ceasefire deal with Ukraine or face hefty sanctions targeting the Russian economy, including possible secondary sanctions on countries that do business with Russia. Mr. Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods earlier this week, in part because India buys oil from Russia. The status of those additional sanctions is unclear. Mr. Trump has grown frustrated with Putin in recent weeks, as Russia has continued to pummel Ukrainian cities with drone and missile attacks. Mr. Trump has described some of his recent phone calls with the Russian president as disappointing. The Trump administration's tone has appeared to shift in recent days. Mr. Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, met with Putin in Moscow for hours on Wednesday, which the U.S. president described as "very productive." The White House and the Kremlin later indicated they were open to a Putin-Trump summit. The president told reporters Friday: "President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace, and Zelenskyy wants to see peace." But the actual terms of any possible peace deal remain unclear. Russia's military occupies large swaths of eastern Ukraine, including both territories that it has captured since 2022 and ones that it annexed in a lower-intensity conflict that began in 2014. Russian leadership has indicated in the past that it wants Ukraine to withdraw its own forces from much of the country's east — possibly including areas that Russia hasn't even captured — and to end its longstanding push to join NATO. Zelenskyy has pushed back on those demands. Mr. Trump said Friday he expects "some swapping of territories" between Russia and Ukraine. The U.S. president has blamed both Zelenskyy and Putin at various points for slow progress on a ceasefire deal. Mr. Trump publicly argued with Zelenskyy in the Oval Office earlier this year, and he claimed Zelenskyy was prolonging the conflict by refusing to cede the Crimean peninsula to Russia. The Trump administration has also paused military assistance to Ukraine at least twice, before restoring the aid shipments. Global stock markets react to Trump's sweeping tariffs in effect now Sean "Diddy" Combs wants to go back to Madison Square Garden in the future, attorney says Israel's Security Cabinet approves plan to take over Gaza City

Trump Will Meet With Putin in Alaska on August 15
Trump Will Meet With Putin in Alaska on August 15

Bloomberg

time39 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Trump Will Meet With Putin in Alaska on August 15

CC-Transcript 00:00Special reports now on the fact that we have a meeting between the Russian president and US President Donald Trump taking place. It's official. It is the truth put out by the president is going to take place next Friday in the state of Alaska, in the United States. Let me just read what the president tweeted out just a few moments ago. The highly anticipated meeting between myself as president of the United States of America and President Vladimir Putin of Russia will take place next Friday, August 15th, in the great state of Alaska. Further details to follow. Thank you for your attention to this matter. As I said, we were anticipating some kind of further details about this particular meeting. Markets have been anticipating this meeting, in fact, all day, as the president had been hinting at it and essentially saying that would happen next week. We're also perhaps anticipating something about the secondary tariffs. There's been a hint that that might also be on the cards for Russia, although that said, with this meeting now firmly in place, that may be on the back foot for the US president. The hope is that the two will be able to come to some kind of a deal regarding Ukraine and the war that continues in Ukraine on the part of Russia. It seems to want to keep on to the eastern territories, the territories of Donbas. We'll see what the US president can agree to with the Russian president, but that meeting is now set for next Friday. Again, as I said, markets today traded higher. The S & P 500, in fact, for the week was up 2.4%, and that was partially on the hopes of some geopolitical rest, if you like, at least when it comes to this particular matter between the US and Russia and Ukraine. Now, we know that Ukraine is also meeting this weekend with European partners. So there will be some additional steps to follow and additional negotiations going on, no doubt, and posturing as well on the part of Ukraine. Ukraine hasn't wanted to give up its eastern territories. And if that's a line in the sand when it comes to what Ukraine will have to offer Russia, then obviously there won't be any truce agreement. But the president has been saying this for many months, in fact, since before he got elected, in fact, that he wants to put an end to this and he wants to do it fast. And now we actually have a date and a place in the state of Alaska, in fact, is where this meeting is going to take place. So Vladimir Putin is going to travel across the border to Alaska and will meet with the US president. Let's just have a listen to this soundbite. I'll be meeting very shortly with President Putin. It would have been sooner, but I guess the security arrangements that unfortunately people have to make was I'd do it much quicker. He would do he'd like to meet as soon as possible. I agree with it, but we'll be announcing that very shortly. So that was the president essentially saying what we now know to be official, and that is that in one week from today, just a few days away, the Russian president is going to travel to the state of Alaska in the United States and meet with US President Donald Trump to try to come to some kind of a brokered truce in terms of the war in Ukraine. Now, we know that earlier on, Trump had been announcing his plans with meeting with the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders. That was a summit going on today. And that's where you heard the president say that as much. Look, the war has been going on for years. All sides want a truce. The president has been talking about the amount of bodies that have died and they're on the field and they continue to die every single day. And he was making it a pillar, in fact, of his candidacy, that he was going to be the president that was bringing peace to the world and stopping war, as he's already taken credit for stopping some wars. But at least in the case of Russia's war in Ukraine, it does continue. Will it continue after next Friday? Will there be a truce or some kind of a negotiated, at least cease fire that will be lasting? We shall see. We do know that Russia's plan is to hold on to the eastern territories, the territories of Donbass. Will the US agree to that? Will the US put that to Ukraine? Over the weekend, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is going to meet with his European counterparts. So no doubt Europe will have a say on this matter as well. So again, we'll see how markets trade next week in the run up to this particular meeting. But just the thought that this meeting would be taking place finally did have markets trading with better sentiment today, let's put it that way. We had the S & P 500 higher and higher for the week, indeed up 2.4% in spite of some weaker economic data that had put a little bit of a downturn on things on Tuesday. We also had the Nasdaq 100 trading higher by 3.7% on the week. So a fantastic week for equities. So no doubt this will hold the market's attention all week. Next week, we have seven days to wait until that meeting between the US president and President Vladimir Putin of Russia is going to take place in the state of Alaska. And we'll continue to monitor and see if the President. Truthout Anything else related to Russia sanctions, secondary sanctions or anything that we've been keeping our eye on. But for now we have a firm date, a firm commitment on the part of both leaders, the leader of Russia and the leader of the United States. They're meeting next week in Alaska. Bloomberg Markets Balance of Power See all shows

Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says
Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska next week, Trump says

President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are planning on meeting in Alaska, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. Mr. Trump confirmed on Truth Social the meeting will take place in Alaska on Friday, August 15. One senior White House official told CBS News the planning for next Friday's summit is still fluid, and that it is still possible that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy could end up being involved in some way. The White House said earlier this week that Mr. Trump is open to meeting with both Putin and Zelenskyy, but Mr. Trump suggested Friday he may start by just meeting with Putin, telling reporters he plans to "start off with Russia." Mr. Trump also said he believes "we have a shot at" organizing a trilateral meeting with the Ukrainian and Russian leaders. The expected meeting comes as Mr. Trump presses Putin to strike a ceasefire deal with Ukraine. It would be the first face-to-face meeting between Putin and an American leader since former President Joe Biden met with his Russian counterpart in Switzerland in June 2021, eight months before Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Friday, August 8, is the Trump-imposed deadline for Putin to either cut a ceasefire deal with Ukraine or face hefty sanctions targeting the Russian economy, including possible secondary sanctions on countries that do business with Russia. Mr. Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods earlier this week, in part because India buys oil from Russia. The status of those additional sanctions is unclear. Mr. Trump has grown frustrated with Putin in recent weeks, as Russia has continued to pummel Ukrainian cities with drone and missile attacks. Mr. Trump has described some of his recent phone calls with the Russian president as disappointing. The Trump administration's tone has appeared to shift in recent days. Mr. Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, met with Putin in Moscow for hours on Wednesday, which the U.S. president described as "very productive." The White House and the Kremlin later indicated they were open to a Putin-Trump summit. The president told reporters Friday: "President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace, and Zelenskyy wants to see peace." But the actual terms of any possible peace deal remain unclear. Russia's military occupies large swaths of eastern Ukraine, including both territories that it has captured since 2022 and ones that it annexed in a lower-intensity conflict that began in 2014. Russian leadership has indicated in the past that it wants Ukraine to withdraw its own forces from much of the country's east — possibly including areas that Russia hasn't even captured — and to end its longstanding push to join NATO. Zelenskyy has pushed back on those demands. Mr. Trump said Friday he expects "some swapping of territories" between Russia and Ukraine. The U.S. president has blamed both Zelenskyy and Putin at various points for slow progress on a ceasefire deal. Mr. Trump publicly argued with Zelenskyy in the Oval Office earlier this year, and he claimed Zelenskyy was prolonging the conflict by refusing to cede the Crimean peninsula to Russia. The Trump administration has also paused military assistance to Ukraine at least twice, before restoring the aid shipments.

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