
European Leaders, Zelenskiy to Hold Call With Trump on Wednesday
Trump's vice president, JD Vance, will also join the call, scheduled for 3 p.m. in Berlin, Chancellor Friedrich Merz's chief spokesman, Stefan Kornelius, said by email.
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Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Chuck Todd argues Putin made a 'huge miscalculation' by not giving Trump a 'win' at Alaska summit
Former NBC News "Meet the Press" host Chuck Todd argued Wednesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin made a "huge miscalculation" during last week's summit in Alaska by not giving President Donald Trump a "win." On his show, "The Chuck Toddcast," the former NBC host said Putin has a "very low regard" for Trump and views the president as "really easy to manipulate" after he refused to make any concessions, such as a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine, for the duration of the Alaska summit. "Why do I say this? Because he's given Trump nothing," he said. "And, you know, he pays him lip service, right? He tells Trump what he wants to hear about mail-in voting. … What Trump wants to hear about is whether the war would have started if Trump had been president or not. But he never actually gives Trump a win that Trump is asking for, right?" Putin Appears To Be Visibly Annoyed As Reporters Barrage Him And Trump With Questions Trump and Putin met in Alaska on Friday to discuss peace in Ukraine as the war has gone for over three years. Todd noted that Putin "couldn't even give him a ceasefire during the time that they were meeting in Alaska" or during the 72 hours that Trump was "playing shuttle diplomacy between Putin and Zelenskyy." Read On The Fox News App "That is total disrespect by Putin, right?" he questioned. "It totally should undermine the idea that Putin wouldn't have launched this invasion of Ukraine had Trump been president." Todd contended that if Putin respected Trump so much, "why couldn't he just give him a temporary ceasefire?" "I think Putin thinks he can just pay lip service and not actually have to match the lip service with an action," he said. "I think he's miscalculating." Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture Todd said Trump will eventually realize that Putin is "tapping" him along and that he doesn't plan on making good on his "lip service." He argued that this is a mistake on Putin's part, because Trump may be the "most friendly" U.S. president that he'll ever face. "To not enhance his reputation at a time when he's desperate to enhance it, not to help him get his ceasefire, get his peace prize, give him more credibility with the West with a guy that you have influence, really seems to be a mistake on Putin's part," Todd article source: Chuck Todd argues Putin made a 'huge miscalculation' by not giving Trump a 'win' at Alaska summit


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
Rwanda-backed rebels killed over 140 civilians in eastern Congo, rights group says
DAKAR, Senegal — Rwanda-backed rebels killed at least 140 people in farming communities in eastern Congo in July, Human Rights Watch said in a report Wednesday, describing the killings as 'summary executions.' The group said 141 people, predominantly ethnic Hutus, were feared dead or missing after the attacks near Virunga National Park in North Kivu province, citing local experts and witness accounts. It said the killings appeared to be part of a military campaign by the M23 group, the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups in mineral-rich eastern Congo, against the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a mostly Hutu armed group. Nearly 2 million Hutus from Rwanda fled to Congo after the 1994 Rwandan genocide that killed 800,000 Tutsi, moderate Hutus and others. Rwandan authorities have accused Hutus who fled of participating in the genocide, alleging that the Congolese army protected them. The United States and others have been trying to achieve a permanent ceasefire since fighting between the M23 and Congolese forces escalated in January with the M23's seizure of two key cities. U.S. President Donald Trump this week asserted he had 'ended six wars' including this one, but experts say his impact isn't as clear cut as he claims. The U.N. has called the decades-old conflict in eastern Congo 'one of the most protracted, complex, serious humanitarian crises on Earth.' The Human Rights Watch report says the Rwanda Defense Force was involved in the M23 operations it describes, citing U.N. and military sources and witness accounts. There was no immediate comment from the Rwandan government. 'The M23 armed group, which has Rwandan government backing, attacked over a dozen villages and farming areas in July and committed dozens of summary executions of primarily Hutu civilians,' said Clementine de Montjoye, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. Witnesses said M23 soldiers, accompanied by Rwandan soldiers who were identified by their accents, told them to 'immediately bury the bodies in the fields or leave them unburied, preventing families from organizing funerals,' the report said. One woman described being marched in a group to a riverbank near the town of Kafuru. The group of around 70 people was lined up before the soldiers began shooting at them. Forty-seven of the dead, including children, were identified, the report added. Willy Ngoma, military spokesperson for M23, called the report 'military propaganda.' M23 was previously accused of extrajudicial killings during its seizure of major cities earlier this year. A separate report by Amnesty International on Wednesday said the rights group found that both M23 and Congolese government-sponsored militias regularly committed mass atrocities and sexual violence against civilians, including gang rape. 'Rwanda and (Congo) cannot continue shunning responsibility; they must hold all perpetrators accountable,' said Tigere Chagutah, Amnesty International's regional director for East and Southern Africa.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Korean Companies Plan More US Investment Pledges, Hankyoreh Says
South Korea is set to unveil about $150 billion in US investment plans by private companies during a summit between President Lee Jae Myung and US President Donald Trump, the Hankyoreh newspaper reported Thursday. The pledge is likely to include both ongoing and future projects and will be separate from the $350 billion South Korea agreed to invest in the US as part of a trade agreement struck last month.