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Former CIA chief reveals which questions Trump will ask about Putin

Former CIA chief reveals which questions Trump will ask about Putin

Fox News2 days ago
Former CIA station chief Dan Hoffman discusses the 'questions yet to be answered' ahead of President Donald Trump's reported meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 'The Story.'
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Trump and Putin to meet in Alaska for Ukraine talks next week
Trump and Putin to meet in Alaska for Ukraine talks next week

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Trump and Putin to meet in Alaska for Ukraine talks next week

US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet in Alaska on 15 August to discuss the future of the war in Ukraine. Trump announced the meeting on social media and it was later confirmed by a Kremlin spokesperson, who said the location was "quite logical" given Alaska's relative proximity to Russia. The spokesperson added that Trump had been invited to Russia for a potential second summit. The announcement of next week's meeting came just hours after Trump signalled Ukraine may have to cede territory in order to end the war, which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of its neighbour in February 2022. "You're looking at territory that's been fought over for three and a half years, a lot of Russians have died. A lot of Ukrainian have died," Trump said at the White House on Friday. "It's very complicated. We're going to get some back, we're going to get some switched. There will be some swapping of territories, to the betterment of both." The US president did not provide further details of what that proposal would look like. However, the BBC's US partner CBS News, citing sources familiar with the discussions, reports that the White House is trying to sway European leaders to accept an agreement that would include Russia taking the entire Donbas region in eastern Ukraine and keeping Crimea. It would give up Kherson and Zaporizhzhia as part of the proposed agreement, CBS reports. Earlier on Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that Putin had proposed a similar arrangement to Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff during a recent meeting in Moscow. Ukraine has not responded to those reports or the announcement of a meeting between the US and Russian leaders. It remains unclear whether Ukraine and European allies would agree to such a deal, given Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Putin remain far apart on the conditions for peace. Zelensky has roundly rejected any preconditions for territorial concessions. One senior White House official told CBS the planning for next Friday's meeting is still fluid, and it is still possible that Zelensky could still be involved in some capacity. Moscow has failed to achieve a decisive breakthrough in its full-scale invasion, but occupies around 20% of Ukraine's territory. Ukrainian offensives, meanwhile, have not pushed the Russian forces back. Three rounds of direct talks between Ukraine and Russia in Istanbul have failed to bring the war closer to an end. And Moscow's military and political preconditions for peace are seen by Kyiv and its allies as the de facto capitulation of Ukraine. Russian demands include Ukraine becoming a neutral state, dramatically reducing its military and abandoning its Nato aspirations, as well as lifting of international sanctions imposed on Russia. Moscow also wants Ukrainian military withdrawal from its four partly occupied regions in the south-east, and the demobilisation of its soldiers. Trump, however, insisted on Friday that the US had "a shot at" a trilateral peace agreement between the countries. "European leaders want to see peace, President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace, and Zelensky wants to see peace," he told reporters. "President Zelensky has to get all of his, everything he needs, because he's going to have to get ready to sign something and I think he's working hard to get that done," Trump said. Last month, Trump admitted to the BBC that after all four of Witkoff's previous visits, Putin had disappointed him after talks had initially led to optimism. He has hardened his stance against the Kremlin in recent weeks, imposing a deadline of Friday for Russia to agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine or face more sweeping sanctions. But as the deadline approached, the economic threat was quickly overshadowed by plans for Trump and Putin to meet in person to discuss a potential peace deal. There was no announcement of further sanctions on Russia from the White House on Friday. Trump and Putin spoke by phone in February in the first direct exchange between the leaders of the two countries since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The last time a US president met Putin was in 2021, when Joe Biden met the Russian president at a summit in Geneva, Switzerland. Putin and Trump's relationship has soured - but behind the posturing, a Ukraine deal is still possible Trump and Putin to meet in coming days, Kremlin says

Trump Administration Seeks $1 Billion From UCLA to Restore Research Funding
Trump Administration Seeks $1 Billion From UCLA to Restore Research Funding

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Trump Administration Seeks $1 Billion From UCLA to Restore Research Funding

Trump Administration Seeks $1 Billion From UCLA to Restore Research Funding originally appeared on L.A. Mag. The Trump administration is asking for $1 billion from UCLA as part of a proposed settlement to restore hundreds of millions of dollars in suspended federal research funding, according to a draft proposal lays out a $1 billion payment to the U.S. government, along with a $172 million contribution to a fund for individuals affected by civil rights violations. The negotiations follow the administration's suspension of roughly $584 million in research support for the accepted, the proposal would be the largest financial settlement yet between the federal government and a university. In separate agreements with the Trump administration, Columbia University agreed to pay $221 million and Brown University committed $50 of California President James Milliken confirmed Friday that the school received the document from the Department of Justice and is currently reviewing it."As a public university, we are stewards of taxpayer resources, and a payment of this scale would completely devastate our country's greatest public university system as well as inflict great harm on our students and all Californians,' Milliken said in a statement. The Trump administration's actions come weeks after UCLA settled a lawsuit related to campus protests over the war in Gaza in spring 2024. The Justice Department has since alleged the university violated civil rights law by failing to prevent demonstrators from blocking Jewish students during pro-Palestinian Chancellor Julio Frenk confirmed that the university had already seen hundreds of millions in research dollars suspended. The university relies heavily on these grants and contracts — they make up more than 10% of UCLA's total revenue."We share the goal of eradicating antisemitism across society," Frenk wrote in a statement to the campus community, expressing his "deep disappointment" with the news. "This far-reaching penalty of defunding life-saving research does nothing to address any alleged discrimination." The federal proposal also includes non-financial conditions, such as appointing a monitor to ensure compliance, eliminating race-based scholarships and ending the use of diversity statements in hiring. Similar to the settlements reached with Columbia and Brown, the draft contains a provision intended to keep U.S. officials from interfering directly with academic freedom, admissions and hiring through the use of draft proposal is the latest move in a series of actions taken by the Trump administration to reshape higher education policy, particularly in regards to campus speech and diversity initiatives. While much of this attention has focused on elite private schools, UCLA is the first major public university to face these demands at this scale. California Governor Gavin Newsom, an ex officio member of the university's board of regents and notable critic of the Trump administration, vowed that UCLA would not bow to these demands.'There's principles. There's right and wrong, and we'll do the right thing, and what President Trump is doing is wrong, and everybody knows it,' Newsom said. "[I will] do everything in my power to encourage [UC] to do the right thing and not to become another law firm that bends on their knees, another company that sells their soul or another institution that takes a short cut and takes the easy wrong versus the hard right.'Still, university leaders have shown a willingness to talk."[We've agreed] to engage in dialogue with the federal administration,' Milliken said, though he emphasized that UCLA has already taken "extensive" steps to address UCLA will accept the terms or follow Harvard University in pursuing a legal challenge remains to be seen. As negotiations continue, the outcome could set a precedent for other public institutions navigating an evolving federal funding landscape under the current administration. This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Aug 8, 2025, where it first appeared.

Trump weighs reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous drug, WSJ reports
Trump weighs reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous drug, WSJ reports

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Trump weighs reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous drug, WSJ reports

(Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump is considering reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous drug, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter. At a $1 million-a-plate fundraiser at his New Jersey golf club earlier this month, Trump told attendees he was interested in making such a change, the people, who declined to be named, told the newspaper. The guests at Trump's fundraiser included Kim Rivers, chief executive of Trulieve, one of the largest marijuana companies, who encouraged Trump to pursue the change and expand medical marijuana research, the report said.

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