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'A Critical Historical Moment': European Allies & Zelenskyy Talk Peace With President Trump

'A Critical Historical Moment': European Allies & Zelenskyy Talk Peace With President Trump

Fox News10 hours ago
European leaders visited the White House on Monday, where President Trump had an Oval Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Coming just days after Trump's Alaskan summit with Vladimir Putin, many questions still remain: what will it take to negotiate an end to the war? And what do 'security guarantees' look like for Ukraine, for Europe, and even for Russia? Former NSC advisor to President George W. Bush and Beacon Global Strategies managing director Michael Allen about the territory demands from Russia, European leaders pushing for Ukraine's security guarantees, and the historic peace talks being shepherded by the Trump administration.
One week into President Trump's crime crackdown in Washington, D.C., and Democrats continue to push back, arguing that crime data suggests the President's actions in the nation's capital are unnecessary and that violence is not 'out of control.' Mayor Muriel Bowser has called the administration's actions 'unsettling and unprecedented.' Rafael Mangual, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and member of the Council on Criminal Justice, joins to discuss President Trump's actions, what is next for the city, and why he says crime statistics don't always reflect reality.
Plus, commentary from the host of 'Tomi Lahren is Fearless' on Outkick, Tomi Lahren.
Photo Credit: AP
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Advertisement The Nobel Peace Prize is in a different category than its counterparts in the sciences, economics, and literature. Those awards are nearly always bestowed in recognition of undeniable achievement — a chemical discovery that expanded the boundaries of human knowledge, a significant body of writing compiled over many years, a medical breakthrough that has saved countless lives, economic insights that transformed financial markets or government policies. Before a scientist, an author, or an economist is awarded a Nobel Prize, his or her work has invariably been sifted and weighed and studied and put to the test of time. Its importance has been established, often through years of peer review. As a result, the science, literature, and economics Nobels rarely end up looking foolish or naive. The same can hardly be said of the peace prize, which has been awarded to any number of undeserving villains, phonies, or poseurs. 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In his will, the Swedish industrialist stipulated that the Peace Prize should honor the individual or group that had 'done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.' Lofty words, but maddeningly vague. What, after all, constitutes 'fraternity between nations'? Does campaigning against climate change qualify? Does brokering a cease-fire that soon collapses? The committee has answered those questions with a flexibility bordering on caprice. The roster of peace laureates includes figures whose contributions to world peace have ranged from ambiguous to nonexistent to counterproductive. In 1973, the committee gave the prize to Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho for negotiating an end to the Vietnam War — a sham accord that paved the way to a brutal conquest and communist tyranny. 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It's not a verdict of history but a snapshot of fashion, shaped by the preferences of five Norwegian politicians eager to make a statement. Once in a while their choice exalts a moral exemplar like Mother Teresa; more often it flatters a cause or rewards a politician whose 'achievement' looks far shakier in hindsight. The result is a roll of honor that veers from the saintly to the dubious, from genuinely inspiring to patently absurd. Advertisement Which is why it's futile to get worked up over the Trump boomlet. If Oslo decides to indulge his lobbying and flatter his vanity, it will not mean he deserves the accolade any more than Obama deserved his prize in 2009 or Arafat his in 1994. It will mean only that the Nobel committee has once again done what it so often does: confused politics with principle. Trump's critics will rage, his admirers will gloat, and history will judge the man by what he actually does, not by what the Norwegians proclaim. In the end, cynicism is the only sensible response to the Nobel Peace Prize. This article is adapted from the current , Jeff Jacoby's weekly newsletter. To subscribe to Arguable, visit . Jeff Jacoby can be reached at

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