logo
State department papers left behind on Alaska hotel printer reveal sensitive Trump-Putin summit details

State department papers left behind on Alaska hotel printer reveal sensitive Trump-Putin summit details

Yahoo20 hours ago
U.S. State Department documents containing sensitive government information were discovered on a public printer at an Alaska hotel, two hours before a high-stakes summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Eight pages — containing a schedule, several phone numbers of government employees, and a luncheon menu — were found in a public hotel printer at Hotel Captain Cook in Anchorage, a 20-minute drive from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson where the two world leaders met Friday to discuss the future of the war in Ukraine.
Three guests staying at Hotel Captain Cook found the pages around 9 a.m. Friday, two hours before the summit began, according to NPR. It's not clear who left the papers but seven of the pages were 'produced by the Office of the Chief of Protocol', according to images obtained by NPR, which is part of the State Department.
The hotel, which has 550 rooms, declined to comment on where the printers were located.The Independent has also contacted the U.S. State Department and White House about the incident, who was responsible for handling the documents, and whether it is considered a security breach.
A White House spokesperson told NPR that abandoning the documents in a public printer was not considered a security breach.
The first five pages contain the sequence of the day's events, including the participants, locations, and times. Below the names of Putin and his Russian aides sits a pronunciation for each name. Under the Russian president's name, the file suggests: 'POO-tihn."
The pages also contained phone numbers of government employees and a gift that Trump planned to give Putin, described as 'American Bald Eagle Desk Statue.'
The sixth page showed a lunch seating chart. The two world leaders were seated at the center of the table, flanked on both sides by their respective officials, six for Trump and five for Putin.
The seating chart showed Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and White House Chief Staff Susie Wiles, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick and Special Envoy for Peace Missions Steve Witkoff. Putin's group would include his Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov, his Minister of Finance Anton Siluanov, and Minister of Defense Andrey Belousov.
The seventh page revealed the menu for lunch, which ended up being cancelled Friday. The first course would have offered a green salad with champagne vinaigrette dressing and sourdough bread with rosemary lemon butter. For the main course, there would've been a choice of either filet mignon with brandy peppercorn sauce or halibut Olympia. Buttery whipped potatoes and roasted asparagus were intended to be offered as sides while the planned dessert was créme brulé with ice cream, the documents revealed.
The last document showed what appeared to be a stylized copy of the menu. At the top read: "Luncheon in honor of his excellency Vladimir Putin."
Speaking to NPR, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly brushed off the discovery as a "multi-page lunch menu" and suggested leaving the documents on a public printer was not a security breach.
The Trump administration has had several high-profile security breaches in its early months. In March, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth sent sensitive information about a planned U.S. military strike in Yemen to senior officials and a journalist from The Atlantic on the messaging platform, Signal. The incident, dubbed 'Signalgate,' led to the ousting of Mike Waltz, Trump's national security adviser.
Other lawmakers and security experts lambasted the administration over the latest incident in Alaska.
'How many more headlines are we going to read about INCOMPETENT security breaches by the Trump Admin???' Florida Democratic Congressman Darren Soto posted on X Saturday.
Jon Michaels, a UCLA law professor who specializes in national security law, told NPR the incident 'strikes me as further evidence of the sloppiness and the incompetence of the administration."
"You just don't leave things in printers. It's that simple,' he added.
Trump and Putin met at the Alaska military base on Friday afternoon to discuss an end to the war, more than three years after Russia's invasion. The leaders announced 'great progress' had been made, but they still did not reach any kind of plan to end the war.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anxiety Builds at CBS News Over Potential Moves by Skydance
Anxiety Builds at CBS News Over Potential Moves by Skydance

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Anxiety Builds at CBS News Over Potential Moves by Skydance

The journalists at CBS News are eager to report out details of what might happen to their own workplace. Staffers at the unit, now part of Paramount Skydance, are worried about the potential for a new round of layoffs, according to three people familiar with the news division, and are also curious about a possible new chapter for 'CBS Evening News,' which has seen its ratings drop noticeably since embracing a new, atypical format. More from Variety 'CBS Evening News' Executive Producer Guy Campanile to Return to '60 Minutes' Paramount Skydance Shares End Roller-Coaster, Memestock-Fueled Week Up 30%, Boosting Market Cap by $2 Billion Investor Mario Gabelli Sues Shari Redstone's National Amusements Inc. Alleging 'Unfair and Inequitable' Terms in Paramount-Skydance Merger CBS News declined to make executives available for comment. Layoffs are indeed possible. Executives from Skydance signaled earlier this month during a meeting with reporters that they intended to follow through on previously announced plans to cut $2 billion in costs from the company, which has suffered from longer-term downturns in traditional advertising and distribution revenue as one-time TV viewers embrace streaming technology. Jeff Shell, the new president of Skydance, indicated those cuts and reductions should be disclosed by the company's next quarterly report to investors in November. As for 'CBS Evening News,' executives are poised to experiment with a tweak to the current format, which relies on two anchors delivering news side by side. A person familiar with the matter suggests viewers will in weeks to come see a more frequent reliance on one of the anchors — John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois lead the program — being out on the road at major, breaking events. Just last week, Dickerson was on the ground in Alaska as U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin met to discuss Russia's ongoing battle with Ukraine. Making use of both anchors in such fashion would put an authoritative person in the field and the studio, this person suggested, while giving the newscast the ability to deliver breaking news at the top of the broadcast. That suggests a new wrinkle in the show's mission. The original concept behind this 'Evening News' iteration was to emphasize more feature and enterprise reporting. In its earliest weeks, even CBS News' Washington bureau veterans tried to examine the effects of Trump-era policies on people in places like Baltimore or Canada. And yet, critics complained that the show was at times giving short shrift to breaking headlines. The format tweak could potentially give 'Evening News' a shot of the latest headlines while still leaving some room for the distinct elements it brings to the mix. Speculation on 'Evening News' has grown since the disclosure that its current executive producer, Guy Campanile, would leave the show and return to his former home, '60 Minutes,' where he has long worked as a producer. One of the concepts behind the new 'Evening News' was to adopt some of the spirit of '60,' which generates its own headlines by pursuing stories both tied to headlines and completely disconnected from them. But evening-news audiences, accustomed to a format that has worn well for many decades, didn't bite. Approximately 3.74 million viewers watched 'CBS Evening News' for the five-day period ended August 4, according to Nielsen. ABC's 'World News Tonight,' which leads the category, captured an average of nearly 6.89 million, while NBC's 'NBC Nightly News' won an average of nearly 5.35 million. CBS News executives had hoped their new 'Evening News' might pick up viewers as Tom Llamas picked up the reins at NBC following a decision by Lester Holt to step away from the 'Nightly' role. Instead, the CBS show has lost hundreds of thousands of viewers since moving away from the format that had been anchored by Norah O'Donnell. One potential candidate to take the 'Evening News' reins behind the camera is said to be Kim Harvey, a veteran producer who has worked for CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC, along with CBS News. Harvey has logged time working on MSNBC town halls during the run up to the 2016 election, and with anchors that range from Rachel Maddow and Chris Hayes to Bill O'Reilly and Greta Van Susteren. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025 What's Coming to Netflix in August 2025

Trump administration halts visas for people from Gaza after Laura Loomer questions arrivals
Trump administration halts visas for people from Gaza after Laura Loomer questions arrivals

Washington Post

time23 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Trump administration halts visas for people from Gaza after Laura Loomer questions arrivals

WASHINGTON — A day after conservative activist Laura Loomer posted videos on social media of children from Gaza arriving in the U.S. for medical treatment and questioning how they got visas, the State Department said it was halting all visitor visas for people from Gaza pending a review. The State Department said Saturday the visas would be stopped while it looks into how 'a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas' were issued in recent days. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday told 'Face the Nation' on CBS that the action came after 'outreach from multiple congressional offices asking questions about it.'

Rubio shoots down report that Trump backs Putin's plan for Russia to control Ukraine's Donbas region
Rubio shoots down report that Trump backs Putin's plan for Russia to control Ukraine's Donbas region

Fox News

time23 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Rubio shoots down report that Trump backs Putin's plan for Russia to control Ukraine's Donbas region

Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back on reports that President Donald Trump supports Vladimir Putin's proposal for Russia to take full control of Ukraine's Donbas region, making clear that decisions on such territory will be left to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy."The president has said that, in terms of territories, these are things that Zelenskyy is going to have to decide on. These are things that the Ukrainian side is going to have to agree to," Rubio said on "Sunday Morning Futures."His appearance came days after Trump's high-stakes meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, which Rubio said allowed for "progress" despite a future peace deal remaining GIVES RUBIO A 'NEW AND DIFFERENT APPROACH' AS TRUMP PUSHES FOR PEACE WITH UKRAINERubio also clarified Trump's role in narrowing down the issues and brokering progress between Russia and Ukraine after years of war, while warning that the talks could collapse if the U.S. moves forward with additional sanctions on Moscow. "The minute you put additional sanctions on him [Putin]… peace talks are no longer possible," he continued, cautioning that economic punishment could derail Trump's effort to bring Putin to the believes that Trump is the only world leader capable of brokering peace between the rivaling nations, which have been sparring on a large scale since February WE'RE GOING STRAIGHT TO RUSSIA-UKRAINE PEACE DEAL, 'NOT A MERE CEASEFIRE'European leaders are also said to play a role in the process, particularly in providing long-term security guarantees that could give Ukraine the confidence to negotiate. Several heads of state are expected to join Zelenskyy at the White House this week, alongside NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, as Trump pushes for a framework that could prevent a renewed Russian offensive in the coming Rubio acknowledged that the negotiations remain difficult, with issues like territorial boundaries and future military alliances far from resolved. "If one side gets everything they want, that's not a peace deal. It's called surrender," he secretary added that while peace may not yet be guaranteed, Trump's willingness to engage both sides offers the only realistic path forward.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store