
Alaska Summit: If Trump surrenders Ukraine, Beijing's next stop is Taipei
Russia made it clear on Wednesday that its position on ending the war in Ukraine hasn't changed since President Vladimir Putin laid out his demands last year: the complete withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from key regions and the abandonment of Kyiv's NATO ambitions.
Yet on Friday in Alaska, U.S. President Donald Trump and Putin will meet for the first U.S.–Russian summit since 2021. Trump has floated the idea of swapping land between Russia and Ukraine as the path to peace. But if Putin is holding firm to his maximalist demands and Ukraine refuses to surrender territory, what is the point of this summit?
If Trump agrees to Putin's terms, it would be nothing short of a capitulation — a sellout of Ukraine's sovereignty and a dangerous precedent for the rest of Europe. Such an agreement would legitimize territorial conquest through war, reward aggression, and undermine the credibility of any security guarantees Washington offers its allies.
And the stakes go beyond Europe.
China is watching closely.
Any gains Putin secures in Alaska will send a powerful signal to Beijing that military aggression pays — emboldening Chinese leaders to move against Taiwan. A Trump–Putin land-for-peace deal would not just weaken Ukraine, it could ignite a new era of territorial conquest from Eastern Europe to the Pacific.
A summit without realistic middle ground is theater, not diplomacy. Unless Trump is prepared to stand firm against Putin's ultimatums and defend Ukraine's internationally recognized borders, this meeting is already a failure in the making — and could set the stage for the next global crisis.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Ya Libnan
3 hours ago
- Ya Libnan
All Eyes on Alaska – Will Trump be Churchill or Chamberlain?
At the Alaska summit, Trump must decide whether to resist Putin's demands or repeat the fatal appeasement mistakes of 1938 — with Ukraine's fate, and Taiwan's future, hanging in the balance. The US leader will have to choose who he wants to be like and how his role will be described in history. By: Vlad Green In 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain returned from Munich proclaiming 'peace for our time' after conceding to Adolf Hitler's demand to annex part of Czechoslovakia. Winston Churchill, however, warned that appeasement would not satisfy Hitler's ambitions — it would only encourage them. Within a year, Europe was engulfed in war. Today, as U.S. President Donald Trump prepares to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, the world faces an unsettling historical echo. Putin's demands — Ukraine's withdrawal from key territories and abandonment of NATO aspirations — follow the same dangerous logic as Munich: trade land for the promise of peace. History has shown us that such deals often pave the way for even greater conflict. Trump has suggested that both sides might 'swap' territory to end the war. To many, this sounds less like a peace plan and more like a potential capitulation. If he agrees to Putin's conditions, it would not just be Ukraine's sovereignty on the bargaining table — it would be the credibility of the United States and the security architecture of Europe. European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky are already voicing concerns. They fear the U.S. could dictate terms that favor Moscow, especially given Trump's track record of praising Putin and downplaying Russian aggression. If this summit ends with territorial concessions, it will be viewed by many as a surrender in all but name. The stakes stretch far beyond Eastern Europe. China is watching. Any territorial gains secured by Putin through pressure and force would send a clear signal to Beijing that similar tactics could work in Taiwan. The Alaska summit, therefore, is not just about Ukraine's future — it is about the stability of the global order. If Trump chooses the path of concessions, it will be his Chamberlain moment — a deal that offers the illusion of peace while inviting greater danger. But if he stands firm and defends the principle that borders cannot be changed by force, he may yet be remembered as a leader who, like Churchill, refused to yield to tyranny. The choice he makes in Alaska will echo far beyond the frozen north — it will reverberate through Kyiv, across Europe, and all the way to Taipei.


L'Orient-Le Jour
3 hours ago
- L'Orient-Le Jour
US says stable West Bank in line with Trump goal for regional peace
The United States on Thursday responded to Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich's announcement that work would start on a long-delayed settlement that would divide the West Bank by saying that a stable West Bank is in line with the Trump administration's goal for peace in the region. Asked about Smotrich's statement that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Donald Trump had agreed to the revival of the so-called E1 development, a spokesperson for the U.S. State Department said the U.S. remained focused on ending the war in Gaza and ensuring Hamas will never govern that territory again. "A stable West Bank keeps Israel secure and is in line with this administration's goal to achieve peace in the region," the spokesperson said, while referring to the Israeli government for further information.


Nahar Net
6 hours ago
- Nahar Net
Brazil's Lula announces $5.5 billion in credits for exporters hit by US tariffs
by Naharnet Newsdesk 14 August 2025, 15:44 The Brazilian government on Wednesday unveiled a plan to support local companies affected by a 50% tariff imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump on several of the country's exports. Dubbed "Sovereign Brazil," the plan provides for a credit lifeline of 30 billion reais ($5.5 billion), among other measures. Hours later, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced new sanctions against at least two Brazilian officials, in a move the South American nation's health minister rebuked. Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva described the plan, which includes a bill to be sent to Congress, as a first step to help local exporters. The leftist leader, whose poll numbers have gone up since the tariffs against his country were announced, once again said he and Trump have never spoken, and claimed the American president does not want to negotiate. Top congressional leaders attended Wednesday's ceremony at the presidential palace in Brasilia, a first in months, in a sign of growing political support for Lula in response to Trump. Brazil's plan Brazil's measures include postponing tax charges for companies affected by U.S. tariffs, providing 5 billion reais ($930,000) in tax credits to small- and medium-sized companies until the end of 2026, and expanding access to insurance against cancelled orders. The plan also incentivizes public purchases of items that could not be exported to the U.S. Brazil's government is also granting a one-year extension of tax credits for companies that import items so they can produce goods for exportation. That mechanism is called "drawback." "We cannot be scared, nervous and anxious when there is a crisis. A crisis is for us to create new things," Lula said. "In this case, what is unpleasant is that the reasons given to impose sanctions against Brazil do not exist." Trump has tied the 50% tariff on many imported Brazilian goods to the judicial situation of his embattled ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is currently under house arrest. Brazil's president added that "for now" he will not use the country's reciprocity law to impose higher tariffs on American imports coming to Brazil. Ricardo Alban, the chairman of the Brazilian industry confederation, said he hopes "this plan is behind us as quickly as possible." He described it as "palliative, but necessary." "Nothing justifies us being on the lowest of tariffs to going to the highest of tariffs," Alban said. Economy or politics? Trump has repeated a narrative pushed by Bolsonaro's allies, which claims the former Brazilian president's prosecution for attempting to overturn his 2022 election loss is part of a "deliberate breakdown in the rule of law," with the government engaging in "politically motivated intimidation" and committing "human rights abuses." "Our American friends, every time they decide to fight with someone, they try to create an image of a devil against the people they want to fight with," added Lula, who pledged to find markets to buy Brazilian goods that will not go to the U.S. Lula repeated on Wednesday that Brazil's judiciary is independent. The executive branch, which manages foreign relations, has no control over Supreme Court justices, who in turn have stated they won't yield to political pressure. Bolsonaro's trial is expected to come to the sentencing phase sometime between September and October. "If what happened at the Capitol (the U.S. riots on Jan. 6, 2021) had happened in Brazil, he (Trump) would be on trial here too," Lula said. Earlier in August, Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who oversees the case against Bolsonaro, was sanctioned under the U.S. Magnitsky Act, which is supposed to target serious human rights offenders. De Moraes has argued that defendants were granted full due process. Rubio's response Only hours after Lula's plan was announced, Rubio said the U.S. would "restrict visa issuance to Cuban and complicit third-country government officials and individuals responsible for Cuba's exploitative labor export program." Rubio said on X that the Brazilian government program "More Doctors," which was started in 2013 with thousands of Cuban doctors spreading nationwide, was "an unconscionable diplomatic scam of foreign 'medical missions.'" Brazil's Health Minister Alexandre Padilha, who was in the same job when the program was founded, later said the initiative "will survive to unjustifiable attacks from no matter who." "This program saves lives and it is approved by those who matter most: the Brazilian people," Padilha said. "We will not bow to those who are against vaccines, against research, against science and now against two key people in my first tenure as health minister, Mozart Sales and Alberto Kleiman (who had their U.S. visas revoked)." Brazil's government says the initiative currently has almost 25,000 medical professionals operating, but did not provide figures on how many of those are Cuban. Lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro, a son of the former president who is seeking amnesty for his father and others implicated in the alleged coup plot, praised the U.S government. "This measure is a clear message: neither ministers, nor lower-tier bureaucrats nor their family members are immune. Sooner or later, everyone who contributed to support those (autocratic) regimes will answer for what they did — and there will be no place to hide," he said. Earlier, Brazil's Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said that his country "is being sanctioned for being more democratic than its aggressor." "We will face, as we have, many difficult situations and we shall overcome," Haddad said. "This one comes from the outside, but unfortunately it has the support of radicalized sections of Brazil's society."