
Trump to abandon Russia war crimes prosecution
The United States has signalled it could leave an international effort to prosecute Russia for invading Ukraine, The Telegraph can reveal.
US envoys refused to label Russia as an 'aggressor' at a meeting of a 'Core Group' of countries preparing a Nuremberg-style tribunal to try Vladimir Putin for his war crimes, according to Western officials.
Washington is similarly refusing to co-sponsor a United Nations statement that supports Ukraine's territorial integrity and demands Moscow to withdraw its forces from the war-torn nation.
Mr Trump's administration has also refused to sign off on a planned G7 statement calling Russia the 'aggressor' in the war with Ukraine to mark the third anniversary of the conflict on Monday.
The US president has blamed Ukraine for starting the war, branded Volodymyr Zelensky a 'dictator' and pushed for Russia to be invited back to the alliance of industrialised nations.
European officials fear Mr Trump's flattery of Putin could lead to the Russian despot being let off the hook for his invasion as part of any peace settlement.
This stance has put preparations for the final meeting of the 'Core Group' next month in doubt.
The group is leading a 40-nation coalition to form a Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine, modelled on the response to Nazi war crimes after the Second World War.
It would involve the US and other countries joining Ukraine to grant jurisdiction to a dedicated criminal tribunal to investigate both the perpetrators of the crime of aggression and those complicit in that crime.
The crime of aggression cannot be prosecuted by the International Criminal Court in the Hague.
'Unless they acknowledge it's an aggression, they can't participate,' an official said of US opposition to the labelling of Russia as an aggressor.
Losing Washington' s backing for the tribunal will be a major blow to the project's international reputation and standing.
'This is quite a drastic shift,' a European diplomat told The Telegraph.
'Rewriting history and pretending that Russia wasn't the one who started this war is something that we simply cannot and will not agree to.'
The US has not yet officially withdrawn from the scheme and is expected to attend its next meeting next month in Strasbourg, France.
A diplomatic note seen by The Telegraph revealed that European officials were 'shocked' at US claims at a series of international meetings that Russia should be invited back into the 'civilised world'.
European capitals are now holding talks over a possible collapse of the special tribunal if the US does walk away as feared.
The latest US position marks a significant shift in policy between Joe Biden and Mr Trump.
The former president had branded Putin a 'war criminal' and signed off on a series of international statements which described Russia as the aggressor state.
Washington is now pushing for the almost three-year war to be called the 'Ukraine conflict' in discussions with international allies.
A State Department readout of the meeting between Marco Rubio, the US state secretary, and Sergei Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, twice described the war as 'the conflict in Ukraine'.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Hiding in the fields - farm workers fearing deportation stay in California's shadows
The women crouch down motionless, kneeling between endless rows of fruit bushes, almost hidden from view."Are you from ICE?" one of the women, a farm worker in a hat and purple bandana, asks us assuring her that we're not with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which has been raiding nearby farms and arresting workers over the past week, she straightens her back, rising slightly out of the dirt."Have you seen any ICE vans? Are there patrol cars out there?" she asks, still unsure if we can be trusted and she can woman, an undocumented migrant from Mexico, has been picking berries in Oxnard, California since arriving in the US two years ago. It's a town which boasts of being the "strawberry capital of the world".As her work shift ended on Wednesday, she and her co-workers hid in the fields, waiting to be picked up by a friend and unsure whether it was safe to venture out into the parking the previous day, nine farms in the Oxnard area were visited by ICE agents, say local activists, but without search warrants they were denied entry and instead picked up people on the nearby streets, arresting 35. The workplace raids are part of President Donald Trump's goal of arresting 3,000 undocumented immigrants per day. On the campaign trail he had vowed to deport noncitizens accused of violent crimes, a promise that received widespread support, even among some Hispanics. But in Los Angeles there was a public backlash and street protests that sometimes turned violent, prompting him to controversially send in the military to the second largest city in the US."They treat us like criminals, but we only came here to work and have a better life," says the woman, who left her children behind in Mexico two years ago and hopes to return to them next year."We don't want to leave the house anymore. We don't want to go to the store. We're afraid they'll catch us." Large-scale raids on workplaces in California's agricultural heartland haven't been seen for the last 15 years, says Lucas Zucker, a community organiser in California's Central Coast that seems to have changed this past week."They are just sweeping through immigrant communities like Oxnard indiscriminately, looking for anyone they can find to meet their politically-driven quotas," he than 40% of US farmworkers are undocumented immigrants, according to a 2022 report by the US Department of Agriculture. In California, more than 75% are undocumented, according to the University of California, at farms and businesses that rely on the agricultural industry throughout California, and across the entire country, have ramped up this arrests have raised fears of shortages to America's food supply, if the migrants are arrested or forced into hiding, afraid to come to work. This impact has not been lost on the White House. Despite winning the election decisively after promising mass deportations, Trump on Thursday acknowledged the tough time his crackdown is inflicting on the farming sector."Our farmers are being hurt badly. You know, they have very good workers. They've worked for them for 20 years. They're not citizens, but they've turned out to be, you know, great."Who has been arrested by ICE under Trump?In April, he said that some migrants may be authorised to continue working in the US, on the condition that they have a formal recommendation from their employer and that they first leave the US. The result of one raid on Tuesday in Oxnard, a municipality 60 miles (100km) from downtown Los Angeles, can be seen in a video posted to Instagram by a local flower short clip shows a man running in a vast field of crops, through a haze of thick morning fog, as agents give chase on foot and in trucks. He is then seen falling to the ground, among the rows of plants, as agents move to arrest the BBC visited Oxnard on Wednesday, a US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) truck was seen parked outside an organic produce trucking company. A security guard insisted their visit was not related to immigration, saying: "This is not ICE. We would never let ICE in here."Many tractors and trucks sat idle surrounded by acres of farmland, as an unknown number of workers chose to stay and peril in Newsom's fight with TrumpJesus polished luxury cars in LA - then ICE showed upThe impact is having ripple effects on other businesses. Watching from her family's Mexican restaurant, Raquel Pérez saw masked CBP agents attempt to enter Boskovich Farms, a vegetable and herb packing facility across the her business, Casa Grande Cafe, has only one customer during the normally busy lunch hour, because farm workers have stayed home. She estimates that at least half of her normal clientele are undocumented."No one came in today," says her mother, Paula Pérez. "We're all on edge."Raquel says she's more concerned now for the future of the restaurant - serving chilaquiles, flan, and other Mexican delicacies - than she was during Covid, when her customers continued their work as usual, keeping the nation supplied with fresh foods."They don't realise the domino effect this is going to have," she says about the raids. Other companies around her that rely on agriculture have already been affected. The adjacent business buying and selling wooden pallets is closed, and a local car mechanic too."If the strawberries or vegetables aren't picked, that means there's gonna be nothing coming into the packing houses. Which means there's not gonna be no trucks to take the stuff." A migrant selling strawberries from his truck on the side of the road says the raids have already had a devastating effect - on both his business and his hopes of becoming a legal resident of the US."Fewer people are going out for trips, and they buy less from me," says Óscar, who comes from the Mexican state of Tlaxcala and, while undocumented himself, has children who were born in the US."I'm scared, but I can't stop going out to work. I have to provide for my family," he says.Óscar says he has been working to finalise his immigration status, but with ICE agents now waiting outside courthouses for migrants seeking to process paperwork, he's unsure of what to do next."There aren't many ways left to be here legally."


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Ron DeSantis has blunt advice for Florida drivers who could potentially face mob of angry protesters
Ron DeSantis told drivers in Florida who are confronted by angry mobs of liberal protesters that 'you have a right to defend yourself in Florida.' Ahead of widespread anti-Trump protests planned this weekend and following the anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles, the governor was blunt about how Sunshine State motorists should deal with the demonstrations. 'If you're driving on one of those streets and a mob comes and surrounds your vehicle and threatens you, you have a right to flee for your safety, and so if you drive off and you hit one of these people, that's their fault for impinging on you,' he told Dave Rubin. 'You don't have to sit there and just be a sitting duck and let the mob grab you out of your car and drag you through the streets,' DeSantis added. The former candidate for president explained how he differs on protests from liberals like Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass. 'You have no right to commandeer streets,' DeSantis said. 'First of all, it's just wrong; second of all, that has huge impacts on people's quality of life.' 'We have an absolutely zero tolerance policy for that,' he added. The comments come as 'No Kings' protests are set to take place all across the country on Saturday, to coincide with the military parade marking the Army's 250th anniversary - also happening on Trump's 79th birthday. Ahead of widespread anti-Trump protests planned this weekend and following the anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles , the governor was blunt about how Sunshine State motorists should deal with the demonstrations 'No Kings' organizers have told potential demonstrators to actually stay away from Washington, D.C., which already has a heavy security presence thanks to the parade. Fencing was erected around the White House, the Capitol Building and parts of the National Mall ahead of Saturday's event. Instead a major 'No Kings' demonstration is set to take place in Philadelphia - and D.C. locals are being steered to suburban Virginia and Maryland. The 'No Kings' protests come on the heels of anti-ICE demonstrations taking place all over the country pushing back on the president's 'mass deportation' plans. The epicenter of the demonstrations was in Los Angeles this week - setting up a major confrontation between Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat. Trump federalized California National Guard members against Newsom's wishes and deployed active duty Marines to the LA area. Military parades have also historically been avoided, as they give off an authoritarian air akin to places like Russia and North Korea. But after seeing a Bastille Day - and World War I commemoration parade - in Paris in July of 2017, the president became fixated on having his own in the United States. People are arrested by policemen as they do not leave the Los Angeles downtown area in time when the curfew is effective Plans got nixed during his first term due to cost concerns - as the massive tanks were expected to damage Washington, D.C.'s roads. Saturday's parade for the Army kicks off more than a year's worth of celebrations marking the country's semicentennial - as July 4, 2026 marks the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. For years, Trump has talked about what all he would do to mark the occasion. While Trump distanced himself from being called a 'king' on Thursday, he's used royal imagery to troll critics in the recent past. In February, he posted an AI image of himself dressed as a monarch after officials from his administration moved to halt New York City's traffic congestion pricing system. 'Congestion pricing is dead. Manhattan, and all of New York, is saved. Long Live The King!' the post said. An official White House social media account also posted a fake Time magazine cover that replaced 'Time' for 'Trump' and showed the president grinning and wearing a crown.


NBC News
3 hours ago
- NBC News
Afghan man accused of planning an Election Day attack in the U.S. pleads guilty
An Afghan man in Oklahoma accused of planning an Election Day attack in the U.S. on behalf of the Islamic State group pleaded guilty Friday to terrorism-related charges in federal court. Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi, 27, pleaded guilty to two offenses: conspiring and providing support to the Islamic State group, and attempting to receive firearms to commit a federal crime of terrorism. The Islamic State is designated by the U.S. as a foreign terrorist organization. Tawhedi faces up to 35 years in prison. 'The defendant admits he planned and obtained firearms to carry out a violent terror attack on Election Day in 2024, a plot that was detected and disrupted through the good work of the FBI and our partners,' FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement. A phone message was left seeking comment from Craig Hoehns, an attorney for Tawhedi. Tawhedi was living in Oklahoma City last year when he acquired two AK-47-style rifles and 500 rounds of ammunition to target large crowds, according to court documents. Authorities said he had conspired with multiple people, including his brother-in-law, Abdullah Haji Zada, for several months to plot out the attack. Zada, who was 17 at the time, was charged as an adult and pleaded guilty in April. He faces up to 15 years in prison. Tawhedi arrived in the U.S. in September 2021 on a special immigration visa shortly after the capital city of Afghanistan, Kabul, was captured by the Taliban. At the time of his arrest on Oct. 7, Tawhedi was on parole while his immigration status was pending, according to the Justice Department. His parole status has since been revoked. FBI agents had testified earlier that Tawhedi, who worked as a rideshare driver and at auto shops, was under surveillance for more than a month before his arrest.