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Trump's 'brutal, clumsy' Gaza intervention raises a real question

Trump's 'brutal, clumsy' Gaza intervention raises a real question

New European07-02-2025

Rejection and condemnation of Trump's purported plan were swift and unequivocal, putting the lie to the president's claim that 'everyone loves the idea' of the US taking over the war-ruined territory that millions of people regard as their home.
The White House rolled back on some of the contentious details of his plan for a US occupation of the territory, which itself would be an alarming departure from this campaign promise to stay out of foreign imbroglios.
But then in an early morning post on social media, Trump stated that, once the war was over, Gaza would be 'turned over' to the US by Israel, and the strip, now devoid of all Palestinians, would become 'one of the greatest and most spectacular developments of its kind on Earth'.
Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar have all rejected the Trump plan, citing moral objections and potential security risks.
Saudi Arabia reaffirmed its commitment to the establishment of a Palestinian state, which is a condition for Riyadh's normalisation of relations with Israel.
Establishing diplomatic ties with Israel would signal a strategic shift that the kingdom will only make once Palestinian statehood is established, Saudi political commentator Salman Al-Ansari said. 'Without that, there is no deal.'
The Palestinian president, Mahmood Abbas, called the Trump plan a 'serious violation of international law'. Gaza, he said, is 'an integral part of the state of Palestine'.
Abbas was meeting King Abdullah of Jordan as news of Trump's announcement broke. Abdullah expressed his 'unwavering support' for a two-state solution, 'leading to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the 4 June 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital,' the Jordan Times reported.
Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian diplomat Nassir Alkidwa have formulated a peace plan that they have been promoting since the middle of last year. It includes capitals for each side, in Jerusalem, an international security force, land swaps, and a technocratic Palestinian governing structure linked to the Palestinian Authority, and elections within three years. Their plan is based on the 1967 borders, which Olmert proposed when he was premier.
Trump has not made any public comments on the specifics of a revived two-state process, though it would be difficult to make progress if he pursues his real estate development plans and forces residents to leave.
As the shock that greeted his 'plan' wears off, however, the possibility that he was raising serious issues, albeit in his own style, that need to be addressed if peace is to be achieved, has begun to dawn.
Former French Ambassador to Washington, Gérard Araud, told the New York Times , that beyond the 'disbelief, opposition and sarcasm,' Trump 'in his brutal and clumsy way… raises a real question: What to do when two million civilians find themselves in a field of ruins, full of explosives and corpses?'
The Wall Street Journal said Trump's plan was devised in the days ahead of his announcement, 'with the president running it by aides and allies'. It was 'closely held,' the paper said, implying there was as much consternation at the White House as elsewhere.
'Officials outside of Trump's inner circle weren't aware the idea was on the table during days of planning for the meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu,' it said.
It comes amid a precarious six-week ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas terrorist group, which controls the Gaza Strip and continues to hold Israeli hostages following the shocking October 7 attacks.
US news outlets reported that Trump's plan would have no deleterious impact on the next phase of the ceasefire deal as Israel was committed to sending delegations to Qatar and Egypt for talks.
The White House quickly rolled back on the details of Trump's plan, with 'clarification' from the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt.
'The president has not committed to putting boots on the ground in Gaza,' Leavitt said. 'The president has made it clear that (the Palestinian people) need to be temporarily relocated out of Gaza for the rebuilding of this effort.
'Again, it's a demolition site right now. It's not a liveable place for any human being. And I think it's actually quite evil to suggest that people should live in such dire conditions,' she said.

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9 insane moments as Donald Trump's beef with Elon Musk implodes spectacularly
9 insane moments as Donald Trump's beef with Elon Musk implodes spectacularly

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  • Daily Mirror

9 insane moments as Donald Trump's beef with Elon Musk implodes spectacularly

The history books are filled with breakups and beef. There's Jen and Brad, Drake and Kendrick, Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas. Henry VIII had a few pretty prominent fallings out. And many have compared Donald Trump to Nero, the Ancient Roman emperor whose second marriage to Poppaea Sabina ended with murder. Today, the gradual then sudden implosion of Donald Trump's bromance with Elon Musk surely joins the canon of history's most epic breakups. Beeves so operatic and consequential there can surely be no reconciliation. And a ruckus which will genuinely have an impact on world events for years to come. Here's how it went down - and what happens next. The signs had been there for a while - but the first visible cracks in Trump and Musk's bromance started to appear the morning after the Wisconsin Supreme Court election in April. After winning the state by around 30,000 votes in the Presidential election last year, Trump thought his pick jn the race - Brad Schmiel - had a decent shot. 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Unwelcome at Kennedy Center, LGBTQ+ orchestra defiantly plays in Maryland
Unwelcome at Kennedy Center, LGBTQ+ orchestra defiantly plays in Maryland

Reuters

time26 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Unwelcome at Kennedy Center, LGBTQ+ orchestra defiantly plays in Maryland

NORTH BETHESDA, Maryland, June 6 (Reuters) - The program contained American favorites: pieces by Aaron Copland and George Gershwin and a choral performance of "America the Beautiful" to celebrate WorldPride, a biennial international festival in support of LGBTQ+ rights that this year is taking place in Washington. The International Pride Orchestra had hoped to play at the Kennedy Center, the most prestigious venue in the United States, but that was before U.S. President Donald Trump pledged on social media that there would be "NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA" at the public-private performing arts center. Instead, the orchestra took to the stage at the Strathmore Music Center in Maryland, just north of the capital, with sequin-clad drag queen Peaches Christ as host, and another drag queen, Thorgy Thor, playing a violin solo to Beyonce's "Crazy in Love" to an audience of 1,166 people. WorldPride events are taking place during a Trump administration that has issued executive orders limiting transgender rights, banned transgender people from serving in the armed forces, and rescinded anti-discrimination policies for LGBTQ+ people as part of a campaign, opens new tab to repeal diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Michael Roest, conductor and founder of the International Pride Orchestra, a nonprofit, reminded the audience that "people don't feel safe to live and love openly." "That is the reason why we have this orchestra," Roest said. The evening offered messages about equality and patriotic ideals as expressed in "America the Beautiful," sung by the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington, which accompanied the orchestra in the second half of the show. A transgender pianist, Sara Davis Buechner, dazzled with her grand piano lead on "Rhapsody in Blue." U.S. and rainbow flags were hoisted at the close. Within weeks of taking office, Trump in February fired the leadership of the Kennedy Center and named himself chairman, complaining about what he said was the poor quality of performances. On February 10, he announced on social media that loyalist Richard Grenell would become interim director of the center and made the "NO MORE DRAG SHOWS" post. Two days later, the Kennedy Center sent Roest a message that said, "We are not in a position at this time to advance a contract," according to an email chain seen by Reuters. That message came after months of negotiations over securing the Kennedy Center, orchestra spokesperson David Perry said. Considering themselves "disinvited," event organizers began looking for alternative venues and the Strathmore offered its space, Perry said. Ryan Bos, executive director of the Capital Pride Alliance, which is leading the coordination of WorldPride, explained the move by saying, "We would not be allowed to have any official drag programming." "That defeats the purpose of Pride - in terms of creating a welcoming and safe environment for anybody to feel comfortable being their true, authentic self, which is what Pride's about," Bos said in comments to The Advocate, a magazine reporting LGBT+ news, that were confirmed by the alliance. Asked for a response, a Kennedy Center spokesperson referred Reuters to Bos' remarks and an X post by Grenell saying, "We didn't cancel a single show at the Kennedy Center. We simply ask that shows don't lose money and leave us with the bill." The three-year-old orchestra was created to give LGBTQ+ musicians an avenue to perform free of concerns about their sexual orientation or gender identity. "This performance is in and of itself a form of resistance," said Luke Spence, the orchestra's general manager and also a trumpet player. Jennifer Curtis, a violinist and concert master, welcomed the spotlight that came with the dispute. "That's what you want in the time of struggle, or if you're needing to make a statement," Curtis said. "We got extra publicity out of being at the butt end of Trump."

Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell
Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell

Daily Mirror

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell

With a single post, Elon Musk reignited scrutiny over Donald Trump's intimate association with Jeffrey Epstein who trafficked and raped underage girls - all while socialising with the world's elite Donald Trump's decades-long friendship with Jeffrey Epstein is today under a blazing spotlight after Elon Musk publicly claimed the president's name appears in the paedophile's government files. Musk's statement on X, where he commands an audience of over 185 million, was as brief as it was damning. "Time to drop the really big bomb,' the billionaire wrote, 'Trump's in the Epstein files', and 'that is the real reason they have not been made public.' He signed off: 'Have a nice day, DJT!' ‌ With his single post, the Tesla billionaire reignited scrutiny over Trump's intimate association with a man who allegedly trafficked and raped underage girls - and did so with impunity for years, while socialising with the world's elite. How Trump is allegedly mentioned in the files he vowed to release, only few know. ‌ But what is documented and undeniable is the US leader's closeness to Prince Andrew's paedophile pal for years. The Epstein flight logs, released by Trump's own attorney general in February, include his name seven times. The documents, reviewed by The Mirror, show him flying alongside Epstein as early as October 1993, with Ghislaine Maxwell - now a convicted sex trafficker herself - also listed aboard. Despite years of denials and deliberate distancing, the paper trail is growing, and with it, the pressure to answer one increasingly urgent question: What exactly did Donald Trump, if anything, know about Jeffrey Epstein? It is compounded by how the property mogul said six years before the sex offender was convicted in 200 for soliciting a minor for prostitution, how his pal liked women, ' many of them are on the younger side. To understand how deeply intertwined Trump and Epstein were, one only needs to look at the 1992 video footage from Mar-A-Lago. There, the two men, surrounded by young women, some reportedly NFL cheerleaders, can be seen laughing, pointing, whispering, and dancing. And not just any dance. The stiff, robotic shimmy Trump wheels out at campaign rallies - dubbed by his MAGA supporters the 'Trump Dance' - was on full display three decades ago while he partied with Epstein. 'It was only during last year's election campaign that the world saw Donald dance, but those at the club have seen it for years,' a Mar-A-Lago source said. ‌ 'He and Jeff would party up a storm in West Palm Beach. At times, they seemed joined at the hip… It is the exact same moves he honed back in the early nineties while partying with Jeff." It's not just their socialising that raises red flags. At the time the footage was taken, Epstein would describe Trump as his 'best friend.' Trump, in turn, famously told New York Magazine in 2002: 'I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do - and many of them are on the younger side.' That comment, casually tossed off during Trump's playboy era, has not aged well. It begs questions of why the businessman would make such a statement. Court testimony from a woman known only as 'Jane Doe' adds further fuel to the Trump-Epstein fire. She told jurors she first met Trump when Epstein brought her to Mar-A-Lago at age 14. She did not accuse the president of any wrongdoing, but placed him squarely in Epstein's orbit at a time when the financier was grooming minors. Another woman, former model Stacey Williams, claimed that Trump groped her during a visit to Trump Tower in 1993. She said she was dating Epstein at the time, who introduced her to the future president. ‌ 'The second he [Trump] was in front of me, he pulled me into him, and his hands were just on me and didn't come off,' she alleged. 'It became very clear then that he and Donald were really, really good friends and spent a lot of time together.' Author Michael Wolff has claimed he has seen explosive material from Trump's years-long friendship with Epstein - including a set of lewd photographs that he says, if made public, could severely damage the former president. ‌ The writer, who spent hours interviewing the financier before his arrest in 2019, said: 'I have seen these pictures. I know that these pictures exist and I can describe them,' Wolff said, referring to a trove of alleged images featuring Trump and Epstein, who died by suicide in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. 'There are about a dozen of them,' Wolff alleged. 'The ones I specifically remember is the two of them with topless girls of an uncertain age sitting on Trump's lap. And then Trump standing there with a stain on the front of his pants and three or four girls kind of bent over in laughter - they're topless, too - pointing at Trump's pants (trousers).' The president has denied all wrongdoing. The US leader used the Epstein files as a vote winner while campaigning last year for the White House. He had hyped the Epstein files as a bombshell - a revelatory moment that would bring justice to victims and expose the powerful figures complicit in the cover-up. Instead, it has been a damp squib. ‌ The documents contained flight logs, a redacted contact book, and a masseuse list — almost all of which had already been disclosed in court or through investigative reporting. No new names. No meaningful accountability. No answers. 'He made a big deal about releasing these files, but in the end, we got nothing,' one victim told the Mirror. Critics say the release had all the hallmarks of a smokescreen: a heavily redacted, incomplete document dump designed more to protect than expose. Attorney General Pam Bondi, a Trump loyalist, admitted she had received only 200 pages, despite reports that thousands more exist. ‌ So, where are the missing files? What names are still being protected? And why, after promising transparency, has Trump delivered silence? While figures like Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton have spent years attempting to distance themselves from Epstein, Trump's tactic has always been deflection. He has downplayed and dismissed Epstein as a 'guy I didn't like' while ignoring the decade-plus of mutual admiration and frequent encounters. But as each new detail emerges - whether in a flight log, a court testimony, or a viral clip - the picture becomes harder to deny. Trump didn't just know Epstein. He welcomed him into his private club. He praised him. He partied with him. He danced beside him while Epstein preyed on girls. Trump once claimed that if the truth about Epstein ever came out, 'a lot of very important people' would be taken down. What he never clarified was who those people are.

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