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CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Here's what to expect ahead of the Trump, Putin summit in Alaska
John Herbst, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, predicts that U.S. President Donald Trump understands it will 'take time to make peace happen.' This comes after Trump announced he would be meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
‘Ridiculous': How Washington residents view the new troops in town
Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents join Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conduct traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) WASHINGTON — Outside the busiest train station in Washington, newly deployed National Guard troops wearing camouflage lean on a huge military Humvee. Wary residents and curious tourists stop to take photos, while inside the elegant Union Station a string trio plays 'What a Wonderful World.' Christian Calhoun, a 26-year-old consultant who was born and raised in the US capital, told AFP that seeing the troops made him 'more than disappointed -- I'm furious.' 'It's a lot of standing around,' he added. Declaring that Washington is overrun by crime and plagued by homeless people, President Donald Trump has deployed 800 National Guard troops, as well as ordering a federal takeover of the city's police department. Over more than an hour on Thursday afternoon, the most that the handful of troops at Union Station interacted with the public was to let a French tourist take a selfie with them. Larry Janezich, an 81-year-old resident, said he had not seen the troops taking part in 'any kind of meaningful action that is dedicated to the prevention of crime.' Patricia Darby, a 65-year-old retiree, said that the troops 'don't want to be here,' pointing to how some had their faces covered. Calhoun said he does 'feel bad' for them as they wore heavy combat gear as temperatures soared above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (33 Celsius). 'Fake news' On his Truth Social platform, Trump this week described Washington as 'under siege from thugs and killers,' with higher crime rates than 'many of the most violent Third World Countries.' Residents outside Union Station rejected the apocalyptic image. 'It's ridiculous, and it really just shows how (Trump) sees the people that live here,' Calhoun said. 'It's totally false, and obviously promulgated on his media to justify an unwarranted exercise of federal power,' Janezich said. Gerry Cosgrove, a 62-year-old tourist from the Scottish city of Edinburgh only in Washington for two days, had a simple response when asked about Trump's portrayal of the city: 'To quote a phrase: fake news.' Trump has also ordered homeless people to 'move out' of Washington. 'Where are they going to go?' Darby asked, after fetching a bottle of water for a homeless person in the heat. Randy Kindle, who volunteers with a protest group in a tent outside Union Station, told AFP he was afraid that homeless people could now end up in confinement or jail 'when all they need is help.' Guadalupe, a homeless man in his late 70s originally from Mexico, told AFP that the troops had asked him to move on Wednesday night. 'They have no manners,' he said in Spanish. 'I almost felt sick' during the interaction, he added. Calhoun said he had mostly seen the troops outside train stations, adding that he noticed they had 'a lot of focus on cannabis use.' Washington legalized cannabis use on private property in 2015, however it is still prohibited under federal law. Several residents also raised the cost of deploying the troops in their city. 'It's a waste of money -- I think D.C. was safe,' Darby said.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Man dies fleeing ICE raid in California: officials
Korean veteran Jack Harrison, 89, in wheelchair holds a sign NO ICE outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) L.A. — A man who was believed to have been running from a raid by US immigration agents died Thursday after being hit by a car on a freeway, police said. City managers in Monrovia, near Los Angeles, said police had been called after there were reports of activity by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents at a Home Depot. During the raid, one man ran from the parking lot of the hardware store -- a place where day laborers commonly gather looking for casual work -- and onto a busy freeway during rush hour, Monrovia City Manager Dylan Feik told media. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol (CHP) said the 40-year-old man was taken to a hospital where he died from his injuries a few hours later. Neither CHP nor the city were immediately able to provide any details on the man's identity. Feik said: 'The city has not received any communication or information from ICE.' ICE did not immediately respond to an AFP request for information. Masked and armed agents from ICE and US Border Patrol began carrying out raids in and around Los Angeles earlier this year, as President Donald Trump looked to fulfill his election promise to carry out the most deportations in US history. The raids, which target hardware stores, carwashes and other businesses where undocumented people seek work, sparked fury in the mutlicultural city. Protests in Los Angeles, some of which saw isloated instances of violence, were met with the mass deployment of soliders by the federal government, even as local law enforcement said they could handle the unrest. A federal court in July ordered a halt to ICE's roving patrols in several California counties, after rights groups argued that the raids appeared to be arresting people largely based on their race, the language they were speaking or the place they had gathered.