Putin Calls Zelensky the West's Illegitimate Puppet. Can He Talk Peace With Him?
Negotiating directly with Zelensky would run sharply counter to the narrative Putin has carefully constructed and sold to Russians in an effort to justify his 2022 invasion of Ukraine: that the war is part of a broader conflict with the West in which Zelensky and his country are mere pawns.
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US Defense Department to buy cobalt for up to $500 million
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Trump delivers burgers and pizza to D.C. National Guard. The latest on his federal takeover, 10 days in.
Reports suggest that federal authorities have focused more on detaining immigrants and clearing homeless encampments than on fighting violent crime. Ten days after President Donald Trump ordered 800 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., to crack down on what he described as 'crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor' in the nation's capital, Trump paid them and other federal agents a personal visit Thursday evening to praise their efforts — and deliver burgers and pizza. 'We're going to have the best capital ever,' Trump said. 'It's going to look better than it ever did.' Earlier in the day, the president implied that he would be patrolling the city's streets with law enforcement, but he returned to the White House immediately after the brief event. 'I'm going to be going out tonight with the police and with the military, of course,' the president had told conservative talk show host Todd Starnes. Either way, Thursday's presidential dinner delivery will draw attention to the events of the past week and a half — and raise questions about whether Trump's push to impose federal control over the city is working to reduce crime. To catch up, here are the latest beats in this developing story. Taking over the D.C. police — sort of By invoking Section 740 of the Home Rule Act — and unilaterally declaring an emergency in D.C. — Trump was able to take control of the District's Metropolitan Police Department last week. 'Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people,' he claimed. 'And we're not going to let it happen anymore.' But when Attorney General Pam Bondi tried to replace current D.C. police chief Pamela Smith with an 'emergency police commissioner" in the form of Drug Enforcement Administrator Terry Cole, D.C.'s attorney general sued to block the move. 'If effectuated, the Bondi Order would upend the command structure of MPD, endangering the safety of the public and law enforcement officers alike," Smith wrote in a declaration filed in the suit. "In my nearly three decades in law enforcement, I have never seen a single government action that would cause a greater threat to law and order than this dangerous directive." On Friday, a federal judge effectively sided with D.C., saying that while Bowser must follow White House directives, the Home Rule Act does not grant the administration full control of the police force. As a result, Cole has been reduced to serving as an intermediary between the administration and the MPD — and Smith is still in charge of D.C.'s police. Boots on the ground No one is debating who commands the D.C. National Guard: the president, according to the Code of the District of Columbia. So there's been no legal pushback to Trump mobilizing an estimated 800 D.C. Guard members, some armed, to patrol the city. The same goes for the 500 federal law enforcement agents he's deployed from agencies such as the FBI. Over the last week, 'armoured vehicles have lined up near monuments and other tourist sites, and drivers have been stopped on a popular nightlife corridor,' according to the BBC. 'Helicopters from the police force for the national park system have swept through the sky.' And reinforcements are on the way. Responding to a Trump administration request, six Republican-led states — West Virginia, South Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana, Ohio and Tennessee — have pledged to send more than 1,100 National Guard troops to join their D.C. counterparts. A focus on immigration In addition to trying to install an emergency police commissioner, Bondi has also sought to end D.C. policies that prohibit local police from collaborating with federal immigration authorities and arresting residents solely for being in the country illegally. That issue is still being contested in court — but the same federal judge who blocked the Trump administration's total MPD takeover last week is allowing the White House to use city police for immigration enforcement (for now). The upshot is that so far, reports suggest that federal authorities have focused more on detaining immigrants and clearing homeless encampless than on fighting violent crime. Checkpoints are becoming increasingly common. Since Aug. 7, when Trump began surging federal agents into the city, 630 people have been arrested, according to the White House — 251 of whom were in the country illegally. That's a rate of 40%. Only about 5% of D.C. residents are undocumented immigrants, according to a recent Pew estimate. 'We're finding these criminally illegal aliens, and at the first opportunity we're picking them up, and we're sending them out of the country,' Deputy White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told Fox News on Saturday. 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The Hill
21 minutes ago
- The Hill
Karl Rove warns Ukraine defeat could be Trump's Afghanistan withdrawal
Republican strategist Karl Rove on Thursday underscored the stakes of the Russia-Ukraine peace talks, saying failure to come to a resolution could be the downfall of President Trump's presidency. In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Rove outlined the three possible outcomes from Trump's efforts to end the war in Ukraine: a successful peace deal; a failure to reach a deal, resulting in continued conflict; and a Russian victory over Ukraine. Rove compared the third possibility — which Rove said would result from either no agreement or from an agreement that Russia breaks — to the Afghanistan withdrawal in 2021, when President Biden's poll numbers tanked and never recovered. 'In addition to being the worst possible outcome morally and geopolitically, this third possibility is the worst scenario for the president and the GOP,' Rove wrote in the op-ed. 'The disastrous U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and subsequent Taliban takeover broke President Biden's reputation with voters. He never recovered. Mr. Biden was at 50% approval in Gallup in July 2021; he dropped precipitously after Kabul fell the following month. He bottomed out at 36% in July 2024 before he withdrew from the presidential race,' Rove continued. 'The defeat of Ukraine by Russia would be similarly disastrous for Mr. Trump,' he added. Rove noted that Trump promised to end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours of taking office. Since then, Rove said, Trump has 'put himself at center stage' with his approach to dealmaking and his engagements with foreign leaders. 'The president can't abandon his starring role even if he wants to,' Rove said. 'Public opinion in America and the rest of the civilized world would rightly blame Mr. Putin for the invasion itself—but Mr. Trump for allowing it to succeed.' Rove said that the first outcome—a successful deal—is within reach for the U.S. president, and he touted Trump's steps so far in defense of Ukraine. He also said Trump's pressure on NATO countries to spend more on defense 'is paying off.' Rove urged Trump to become 'as tough on Mr. Putin as he has been on' Zelensky, saying that approach could get the warring countries 'to arrive at a deal that results in a durable peace.' 'Mr. Trump can bring about a reasonably successful conclusion to this catastrophic war by doing what Mr. Putin fears most: rejecting the Russian dictator's flattery and demands and insisting he make a fair, enforceable deal with Mr. Zelensky. Or else,' Rove said. 'Anything less would be a stain on Mr. Trump and on his party, for which they'd rightly pay a high political price,' he continued.