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Is Putin a Nebuchadnezzar or Pharaoh?

Is Putin a Nebuchadnezzar or Pharaoh?

When Vladimir Putin's 2022 invasion of Ukraine began, he reminded me of the tyrannical Nebuchadnezzar from scripture, especially the portion of the biblical story about the attempt to force Israelite exiles to assimilate to Babylonian society. But I think Barton Swaim's Exodus comparison in 'Like Pharaoh, Putin's Heart 'Was Hardened'' (Houses of Worship, July 18) is much better.
Susan Harris
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U.S.-India Relations Strain Over Russian Oil
U.S.-India Relations Strain Over Russian Oil

Time​ Magazine

time13 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

U.S.-India Relations Strain Over Russian Oil

President Donald Trump seems unafraid to burn India, a longtime friend of the U.S., over its Russian oil purchases. 'He wants a tremendous relationship and has had always a tremendous relationship with India and the Prime Minister [Narendra Modi],' White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said on Fox News over the weekend. 'But we need to get real about dealing with the financing of this war.' The war Miller was referring to is Russia's with Ukraine, which has been ongoing for three and a half years. The Trump Administration has recently shifted from the President's earlier friendly tone towards Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump, who said repeatedly during his presidential campaign that he would end the war 'in 24 hours,' has apparently grown fed up with Putin, issuing sharp criticisms of the Russian President as well as of former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. Last month, Trump announced that the U.S. would continue to supply Ukraine militarily (after earlier announcing a pause), and he threatened tariffs and other measures on Russia if it does not reach a peace deal with Ukraine by Aug. 8. But Trump is also shifting his approach toward India, which has long served as a regional buffer against China and whose leader has had a close relationship with Trump. 'I don't care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care,' Trump posted on Truth Social on July 31. 'India portrays itself as being one of our closest friends in the world, but they don't accept our products, they impose massive tariffs on us, … and of course we see again the purchasing of [Russian] oil.' Miller said on Fox News, adding that 'all options are on the table' for Trump to end the Russia-Ukraine war. India's ties to Russia India and Russia have a track record of supporting each other that goes back decades. When former U.S. President Richard Nixon sent a warship to intimidate India during the 1971 India-Pakistan War, Russia sent its navy to the Indian Ocean. In December 2021, Modi and Putin signed a number of trade and arms deals, while Russian oil producer Rosneft is expanding its investment in India. India has also repeatedly abstained from voting on United Nations resolutions to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine. 'People will be shocked to learn that India is basically tied with China in purchasing Russian oil. That's an astonishing fact,' Miller said. India imports around two million barrels of crude oil per day from Russia, making it the second largest purchaser of Russian oil after China, according to the New York Times. Russia's share of Indian oil imports has increased from less than 1% before the war to more than a third. Russia has for years also been India's top arms supplier. While the war in Ukraine lowered Russia's arms exports due in part to the need for weapons on its own battlefield, India was still Russia's top arms buyer between 2020 and 2024, purchasing 38% of Russian arms exports, according to a 2024 report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Trump's short-term shifts After months of trade talks between the U.S. and India, which Trump had hinted came very close to a deal, Trump imposed a 25% tariff on the South Asian country. In a July 30 post announcing the new rate, Trump griped about India's 'strenuous and obnoxious' trade barriers and the country's financial ties to Russia: 'Also, they have always bought a vast majority of their military equipment from Russia, and are Russia's largest buyer of ENERGY, along with China, at a time when everyone wants Russia to STOP THE KILLING IN UKRAINE — ALL THINGS NOT GOOD!' In addition to the 25% tariff, Trump said India would pay a 'penalty' for its Russia ties. Trump has separately threatened a 100% tariff on imports from countries that buy Russian oil, unless Russia and Ukraine reach a peace deal. India has also come under Trump's fire as a member of intergovernmental grouping BRICS, which is led by U.S.-sanctioned countries Russia, China and Iran, as well as Brazil and South Africa. Trump threatened an additional 10% tariff on BRICS members, which he said were aligning themselves against the U.S. Meanwhile, Trump has moved closer to Pakistan, with which India has hostile relations and the U.S. has historically had a complex and sometimes tense relationship, especially as Pakistan has grown closer to and is primarily armed by China. Earlier this year, India and Pakistan were on the brink of war after a terrorist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir prompted an Indian missile strike on Pakistan-administered Kashmir and Pakistan's eastern Punjab province. India accused the Pakistani government of being involved in the attack, which Pakistan denied. After days of the escalating conflict, Trump announced a cease-fire between the two neighbors—a development that Trump has repeatedly taken credit for since. Pakistan thanked Trump for his part in brokering the peace, going so far as to nominate him for a Nobel Peace Prize. India, on the other hand, has rejected Trump's claim as 'baseless and entirely incorrect' that India called off its military campaign under U.S. pressure. Hours after announcing the 25% tariff on India, Trump said the U.S. 'concluded' a trade deal with Pakistan, which would involve an oil partnership, quipping that, 'Who knows, maybe they'll be selling Oil to India some day!' Experts have said that the Trump Administration's more transactional approach to international diplomacy has meant that longtime friends can abruptly be bucked in favor of short-term U.S. interests. 'The U.S. administration has tended to focus on its immediate concerns, and Pakistan has been quick to respond to these. India seeks to convince the U.S. to take a longer-term view and make decisions accordingly,' retired American diplomat Jon Danilowicz told the South China Morning Post. 'For the present, it seems that New Delhi is holding the short end of the stick.' India doubles down 'I understand that India is no longer going to be buying oil from Russia,' Trump told reporters last week. 'That's what I heard. I don't know if that's right or not. That is a good step. We will see what happens.' It seems, at least for now, that Trump heard wrong. 'Our ties with any country or all the ties that we have with various countries, they have, they stand on their own merit and they should not be seen from the prism of a third country,' India's foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said at a news conference on Aug. 1 without directly addressing Trump's comments. 'As far as India-Russia relations are concerned, we have a steady and time-tested partnership.' Bloomberg reported last week that the Indian government had told state-owned oil refiners to prepare alternatives to Russian crude, although one person familiar with the matter told the outlet that the instruction was meant as scenario planning in the event that Russian crude oil becomes unavailable. Other sources told Bloomberg that the Indian government is still assessing its position. Two senior Indian officials told the Times on Saturday that there has been no change in policy and that India would continue purchasing oil from Russia. Modi also struck a critical tone of Trump's tariffs, after months of Indian officials seeming to cast the policy in a more cautiously optimistic light. 'The world economy is going through many apprehensions, there is an atmosphere of instability,' Modi said at a rally in Uttar Pradesh on Saturday. 'In such a situation, the countries of the world are focusing on their respective interests. They are focusing on the interests of their respective countries,' he added, referencing how the government believes India is on track to become the third largest economy in the world, behind the U.S. and China. 'Therefore, India also has to be vigilant about its economic interests.'

The Memo: Putin and Netanyahu vex Trump on the world stage
The Memo: Putin and Netanyahu vex Trump on the world stage

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Memo: Putin and Netanyahu vex Trump on the world stage

Two foreign leaders have become more vexing to President Trump than he expected: Russian President Vladimir Putin and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Each of them has complicated the political calculus for Trump on the world stage, owing not only to the suffering each of them has imposed on Ukrainians and Palestinians, respectively, but also to their reluctance to change course. The president's shift in attitude has been starkest in relation to Putin, who has resisted Trump's urging to bring down the curtain on the war in Ukraine. Russia started the war by invading its neighbor in February 2022. On Friday, Trump announced he had ordered two nuclear submarines to unspecified 'appropriate regions' in response to 'highly provocative statements' from Moscow. The backstory to that move lies in Trump's declaration earlier in the week, during a trip to Scotland, that he was tightening his deadline for Russia to work toward a ceasefire. The president said he was bringing the time frame down to '10 or 12 days.' Moscow responded with a shoulder shrug, however. A Kremlin spokesperson said the nation had developed 'a certain immunity' to such threats. The sequence of events — and the general tone toward Putin — is a massive difference from late February, when Trump and Vice President Vance berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office for his supposed ingratitude over American assistance. Several times earlier in the year, Trump appeared to blame Ukraine for starting the war. In April, he said of Zelensky: 'When you start a war, you've got to know that you can win the war, right? You don't start a war against somebody that's 20 times your size and then hope that people give you some missiles.' The reason for the recent change in tone is straightforward. Trump wants to bring the war in Ukraine to an end and Putin is not playing ball. Trump has seemed especially irritated about Putin's propensity to have constructive or even friendly phone conversations with the president — only for Russia to launch ferocious bombardments against Ukrainian cities hours later. 'We get a lot of bulls‑‑‑ thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth,' Trump said in early July. 'He's very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless.' One reason for Trump's ire, presumably, is that Putin's recalcitrance places the president in a tough political spot. During last year's presidential campaign, he promised he would be able to bring the war in Ukraine to an end 'within 24 hours.' That promise has proved hollow, and no breakthrough seems close at hand. On the other hand, it seems highly unlikely that Trump will shrug off his long skepticism about U.S. aid to Ukraine entirely. That leaves the president in a kind of uncomfortable limbo, neither ending the war nor shifting the tide in Ukraine's favor. The specifics are very different with Netanyahu. But in that case, too, there are reasons for political discomfort on Trump's part. Trump's relationship with Netanyahu is in some ways even more turbulent than with Putin. The president is extremely pro-Israeli in his overall outlook. In his first term, he moved the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and came up with a 'peace plan' so aligned with Israeli priorities that it was dismissed out of hand even by the comparatively moderate Palestinian Authority. But Trump also fell out with Netanyahu after the Israeli prime minister recognized former President Biden's victory in the 2020 election. His annoyance then led him to air a complaint that the Israeli prime minister had allegedly backed out of what had been originally conceived as a joint operation to kill the head of Iran's Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani. The U.S. went ahead alone, killing Soleimani in January 2020. 'Bibi Netanyahu let us down,' Trump said in late 2023. Trump's actual policies have remained staunchly pro-Israeli in the first six months of his second term, but his tone has pitched in wildly different directions. He nudged the Israelis toward a ceasefire even before he took office — but seemed fairly unbothered when they broke it off in March, blocking all aid from getting into Gaza for more than two months. Trump has talked up the idea of moving the Palestinians out of Gaza, even suggesting transforming one of the most benighted places on earth into some kind of coastal resort. But he also broke early this week with Netanyahu's insistence that there is no starvation in Gaza. Trump averred that he had seen footage of children who 'look very hungry,' adding 'you can't fake that.' On Friday, Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and the U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee visited an aid distribution site in Gaza run by the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Witkoff said part of the purpose was to 'help craft a plan to deliver food and medical aid to the people of Gaza.' Back at home, there have been signs that the traditionally staunch support Israel has received from the right is beginning to fray, further complicating the picture for Trump. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) recently became the first prominent Republican to call what Israel is doing in Gaza a 'genocide.' Influential commentators within Trump's base, from Tucker Carlson to podcasters like Theo Von and Joe Rogan, have become more inclined to criticize Israeli policies and their effects. But none of that guarantees that the Israeli prime minister will shift. Among the counterweights are Netanyahu's repeated assertions that the war aim is not only the release of all hostages held by Hamas but 'total victory'; his desire to keep together his governing coalition, which includes extremely hard-line figures from minor parties; and his presumed interest in continuing to delay his long-running corruption trial. Trump could play hardball with Netanyahu more easily than with Putin, given the massive aid the U.S. gives to Israel. But whether he has the urge to do so is widely open to question. For the moment, it seems likely that the Russian and Israeli leaders will cloud Trump's political outlook for some time to come. The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Tankers Deliver Russian Crude to India Despite US, EU Pressure
Tankers Deliver Russian Crude to India Despite US, EU Pressure

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Tankers Deliver Russian Crude to India Despite US, EU Pressure

At least four tankers discharged millions of barrels of Russian crude at Indian refineries at the weekend, a sign the closely scrutinized deliveries are continuing as normal, even as the US ramps up pressure on the South Asian country to stop purchases. Oil traders and shipping companies have been waiting for direction from New Delhi on whether supplies from Moscow will be allowed to continue after US President Donald Trump last week threatened punitive action to curb trade with Russia. Over the weekend, a senior aide accused India of effectively funding President Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine.

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