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Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Thousands of Israelis protest war in Gaza, call for return of remaining hostages
Fox News national correspondent Jeff Paul reports from Tel Aviv on protests calling for an end to the Israel-Hamas war on 'Fox News Live.'


Forbes
2 hours ago
- Forbes
Trump-Zelenskyy Meeting: What To Know As Macron, Meloni, Starmer And More Will Attend
Leaders from major European allies, NATO and the European Union are traveling to Washington, D.C., to join Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his Monday meeting with President Donald Trump—setting up what appear to be crucial talks as Trump pushes for a ceasefire in the war in Ukraine that has been raging since the Russian invasion in 2022. Leaders from the EU and NATO will join the Ukrainian president at the White House. Getty Images Zelenskyy will travel to meet with Trump at the White House on Monday. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte will reportedly take part in the talks, as well as leaders of individual allied nations including French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Finnish President Alexander Stubb. Trump administration officials have provided few details about what concessions the Russians may have offered at the negotiations in Alaska on Friday, but speaking to CNN on Sunday morning, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff described the Trump-Putin meeting as 'game-changing.' Witkoff said the Trump administration would likely discuss Ukraine exchanging territory with Russia, what he called a 'fundamental issue' for the Russians, but the administration would not make any decisions for Ukraine when it came to territory. 'We intend to discuss it on Monday,' Witkoff told CNN's Jake Tapper. The special envoy did not offer concrete details on what concessions the Russians may have offered in terms of territory, but added 'that discussion is going to specifically be detailed on Monday, when President Zelenskyy arrives with his delegation and some of the other European leaders,' Witkoff said. 'And, hopefully, we can cut through and make some decisions right then and there on that.' Russia illegally annexed the Ukrainian territory Crimea in 2014, and three years after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russia controls the majority of the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions. The Trump administration said the Russians may support Ukraine signing a future security deal with the U.S. and European allies—but even with the security guarantees, convincing the Ukrainians to cede territory could prove difficult for the Trump administration. Zelenskyy has consistently rejected peace offers that include territorial exchanges in the past, and reiterated this sentiment in a statement posted on social media Sunday, shortly after meeting with European leaders in Brussels. 'There is clear support for Ukraine's independence and sovereignty,' the Ukrainian president said. 'Everyone agrees that borders must not be changed by force.' What Is Article 5? The Trump administration says that Russian negotiators indicated they would agree to allow Ukraine to sign a future security agreement with the U.S. and European allies—one that would offer similar protections like those outlined in Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty, the document that forms the basis of NATO. Article 5 guarantees that if one NATO member is attacked, it is considered an attack on all member states, and all member states are compelled to take necessary action to 'restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.' Witkoff told Tapper the administration got the Russians to agree to allow the U.S. and European nations to 'effectively offer Article 5-like language to cover a security guarantee.' However, he was adamant that this would not amount to Ukraine actually joining NATO—something he said the Russians still viewed as a 'red flag.' The special envoy did not elaborate on the details of the guarantee. European leaders are trying to avoid a repeat of the tense press public meeting Zelenskyy held with Trump and Vice President JD Vance in February, Reuters and other outlets reported Sunday. However, Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected this notion while speaking to CBS News' Margaret Brennan on Sunday morning. 'We've been working with these people for weeks,' Rubio said. 'They're coming here tomorrow because they chose to come here tomorrow. We invited them to come.' Rubio said the Trump administration was focused on hammering out a peace deal. 'Look, our goal here is not to stage some production for the world to say, oh how dramatic he walked out,' he said. 'Our goal here is to have a peace agreement to end this war.'
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Geraldo Sucks Up to Trump With Lame Reason to Give Him Nobel Peace Prize
Geraldo Rivera thinks that President Donald Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize—even if he doesn't actually deliver any peace. The former talk show host and Fox News personality appeared on Newsmax's Finnerty on Wednesday morning to discuss the U.S. effort to end the war in Ukraine. 'If he does end this war, Geraldo, can they deny him the Nobel Peace Prize?' host Rob Finnerty asked. 'Hell no,' Rivera said. 'I think that this and/or Gaza would put him on the fast track, and anyone to deny that, I think, would really be putting their partisan politics in front of their logic.' 'If you have a president of the United States trying so hard... for peace, even if he's not totally successful, just the effort is so, it's so overt, it's so public, it's so aggressive. You know, he deserves recognition at least for that.' Rivera, a longtime Republican who describes himself as socially liberal, has said that Trump was the 'first rich guy [he] ever knew' and that the two were close friends for decades. However, the TV personality told Interview Magazine that their friendship ended after January 6, which Rivera said showed Trump was 'a sore loser who could not be trusted to honor the Constitution.' Rivera endorsed Kamala Harris in 2024, but now he seems to have changed his tune. Both the war in Ukraine and the war in Gaza seem far away from resolution, despite Trump's upcoming summit with Vladimir Putin on Friday to discuss the conflict. On Wednesday, Trump was asked if Putin would face any consequences if he did not agree to stop the war after their meeting—which will take place without the presence of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. 'There will be very severe consequences,' he said, without specifying what those consequences will be. Meanwhile, the Israeli government announced plans to occupy Gaza City last week in order to 'free Gaza from Hamas.' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's announcement sparked an international outcry and an arms embargo from Germany. In July, Netanyahu formally nominated Trump for the Nobel Prize, which has been awarded to three U.S. presidents (most recently to Barack Obama in 2008). Netanyahu's letter to the Norwegian Nobel Committee praised Trump for his role in negotiating the Abraham Accords in 2020 and claimed that Trump was 'forging peace, as we speak, in one country in the region after another.' Trump has made no secret that he wants the award and envies his predecessor for winning it. 'If I were named Obama, I would have had the Nobel Prize given to me in 10 seconds,' he said at the Detroit Economic Club last year. Trump fought ISIS with intense air strikes in Iraq and Syria in his first term and ordered the assassination of a prominent Iranian general. So far in his second term, he has conducted airstrikes on Iran and suggested that the U.S. should occupy the Gaza Strip. 'Let the United States get involved and make it just a freedom zone,' he said in March.