Tag: Trump

  • Trump’s nasty, ambush politics and diplomacy

    Trump’s nasty, ambush politics and diplomacy

    If this generation had not witnessed the election of Donald Trump a second time as United States president late last year and experienced his ignoble approach to politics and diplomacy, they would have died with a smile on their faces convinced that America was infallible, invincible, thoroughbred, and an exemplar of all that is noble. In his first term, which was truncated by the mitigating election of Joe Biden, President Trump did his best to abridge his worst instincts and habits. He was of course no less nasty and insufferable, but he tried his best not to extend his brutishness beyond American borders. Even when he did, it was half-hearted and unconvincing, with many analysts still giving him the benefit of the doubt. Barely a hundred days into his second term, he has shown without a shred of doubt that no one, no matter how gifted, can plumb the depths of his nastiness.

    In one area, he has demonstrated he cannot be bettered: he is condescending to heads of states, except the autocrats among them. And he has fiendishly displayed the art of diplomatic ambush of the meanest kind. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky was the first to taste of President Trump’s galling style during a visit to the White House two months ago to solicit for help in the war against Russia. Instead, he was ambushed, ridiculed, taunted and even haunted out of the Oval Office. He held his own quite alright, but because he was the one who needed help, he left the US in unquenchable grief. It began inauspiciously as President Trump baited his visitor; then when it seemed Mr Zelensky would ride the storm with surprising eloquence and logic that far outweighed and bettered the performance of the incoherent US president, a planted and groveling newsman asked a dismaying question about the visitor’s ‘inappropriate dressing’. Even this, too, the Ukrainian president tackled with aplomb. Sensing their quarry was getting away with a stellar performance, Vice President J.D. Vance weighed in on cue with a nasty comment to a visiting head of state no vice president was ever thought capable of. The ambush of February 2025 was complete.

    Barely three months later, as if thirsty for more blood, another ambush has been sprung against visiting South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa who asked for and received an invitation to visit the US to try and convince President Trump that no White genocide ever took place in South Africa nor was any contemplated. In visiting the White House after the Zelensky debacle, Mr Ramaphosa obviously reposed too much confidence in his composure, eloquence and the logical unassailability of his position regarding allegations of state-sponsored crime. It was a big mistake. The problem Mr Zelensky encountered with President Trump was not that he did not have a similarly unassailable position nor was he devoid of eloquence and poise, particularly under fire. The Ukrainian president’s problem, Mr Ramaphosa should have known, was that Mr Trump resorts to despicable tactics when he encounters his betters, or when he is losing an argument. More, Mr Trump has a closed mind and tunnel vision of diplomacy: once he makes up his mind, often without any spadework, he is both unmovable and implacable.

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    But Mr Ramaphosa, perhaps grieving over the fallacies Mr Trump had peddled regarding an inexistent White genocide, thought that if he went to the White House armed with facts and truths, his host would relent. Alas, his host does not work with facts and has contempt for truths; he is fascinated by lies and fabrications. The more the South African president displayed profundity, the surlier the US president became, until finally he sprung the said ambush using wholly tendentious videos and photographs depicting a so-called genocidal grave. Mr Ramaphosa was stupefied in a way Mr Zelensky, with his perfect and combative ripostes, was not. The South African was so badgered with falsehoods concocted in the US that he even began to doubt himself, asking tremulously at a brief point whether Mr Trump had verified the so-called genocidal graves. The American president simply waved off Mr Ramaphosa’s queries, for he had made up his mind, and would not and indeed could not be flustered by any doubts or facts to the contrary. It was not until later when he addressed the press unencumbered by the antics of his host that the dazed South African president found his voice. Of course, on the whole, he conducted himself excellently well, and gave a great, not just a good, account of himself. But with Mr Trump, it is futile to argue armed with facts.

    More, with the American president, it is futile to visit him except you are an unremitting autocrat he had taken a fancy to, or a gift-bearing and sinister head of state. After the Zelensky and Ramaphosa debacles, Mr Trump’s appalling tactics have been made very clear and unmistakable to the world. Not too many stouthearted presidents would be willing to visit the White House henceforth. Here, Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu should learn a lesson. He should give the American president a wide berth, not out of fear, but because of common sense. It will be pointless dealing with such a man at close quarters. There will be nothing President Tinubu can say or show to convince Mr Trump that Nigeria is not carrying out genocide against Christians, not even if the Nigerian president were to show proof that his cabinet and military commanders are, to the last man, Christians. Mr Trump will simply goad a nasty reporter to ask the Nigerian president a tricky and provocative question, and then all hell would break loose. Not only should President Tinubu give President Trump a wide berth, he should also proactively put machinery in motion to ensure that for the four years the American president would hold sway in Washington, the Nigerian president should never be invited. Better safe than sorry. As the English say, discretion is the better part of valour.

  • Trump revokes Harvard University’s authority to enroll foreign students

    Trump revokes Harvard University’s authority to enroll foreign students

    The Trump administration on Thursday revoked Harvard University’s ability to admit international students, who comprise more than a quarter of its total enrollment. The decision marks a significant escalation in President Donald Trump’s ongoing conflict with the elite academic institution.

    The action follows Harvard’s refusal to comply with the administration’s demand for federal oversight of its admissions and hiring processes. President Trump has accused the university of being a breeding ground for anti-Semitism and what he calls a “woke” liberal ideology.

    Harvard, which has produced 162 Nobel Prize laureates, has pushed back against the accusations and defended its independence. The revocation is expected to spark legal and political fallout, with critics warning of potential long-term consequences for academic freedom and international education.

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    “Effective immediately, Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor (SEVIS) Program certification is revoked,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem wrote in a letter to the Ivy League institution, referring to the main system by which foreign students are permitted to study in the United States.

    Last month, Trump threatened to stop Harvard from enrolling foreign students if it did not agree to government demands that would put the private institution under outside political supervision.

    “As I explained to you in my April letter, it is a privilege to enroll foreign students,” Noem wrote.

    “All universities must comply with Department of Homeland Security requirements, including reporting requirements under the Student and Exchange Visitor Program regulations, to maintain this privilege,” she said.

    “As a result of your refusal to comply with multiple requests to provide the Department of Homeland Security pertinent information while perpetuating an unsafe campus environment that is hostile to Jewish students, promotes pro-Hamas sympathies, and employs racist “diversity, equity, and inclusion” policies, you have lost this privilege.”

    University data shows that foreign students represented over 27 percent of Harvard’s enrollment during the 2024-25 academic year.

    Harvard has not responded immediately to requests for comment.

  • Trump condemns horrible killings near Jewish museum in Washington

    Trump condemns horrible killings near Jewish museum in Washington

    U.S. President Donald Trump has condemned the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staff outside a Jewish museum in Washington on Wednesday evening, calling it a “horrible” act of anti-Semitism.

    “These horrible D.C. killings, based obviously on antisemitism, must end, NOW!, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Thursday.

    “Hatred and Radicalism have no place in the United State.

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    “Condolences to the families of the victims. So sad that such things as this can happen!” the president said.

    Metropolitan Police chief Pamela Smith said a man and a woman were killed.

    She said a suspect was arrested and a weapon was recovered.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump administration violates court order, U.S. judge says

    Trump administration violates court order, U.S. judge says

    A U.S. federal judge on Thursday ruled that the administration of President Donald Trump has violated an earlier court order by attempting to deport migrants to South Sudan.

    U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy said at a hearing that the administration had violated a preliminary injunction he issued in April.

    The preliminary injunction had barred officials from deporting people to countries other than their own without first giving them sufficient time to object.

    Murphy said the U.S. Department of Homeland Security notified seven migrants earlier on Monday night that they could be deported to South Sudan, less than 24 hours before they were loaded onto a plane, which was plainly insufficient notice.

    The department’s actions in this case are unquestionably violative of this court’s order,” said the judge, who is yet to announce what he plans to do about the apparent violation.

    Murphy said officials who were involved in the illegal deportation should be on notice that they risk criminal contempt.

    Read Also: Russia, Ukraine to begin cease fire negotiations after Trump-Putin call

    In a statement issued after Murphy’s finding on Wednesday, the White House accused Murphy of being “activist judges” who are advocating the release of dangerous criminals.

    Murphy’s finding delivered one of the most forceful rebukes yet to the Trump administration since he returned to office in January.

    Trump vowed to crack down on illegal immigration and announced sweeping deportation plans since taking office.

    However, many of his efforts have been blocked by the courts.

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Trump to discuss end of ‘bloodbath’ with Putin, Zelensky

    Trump to discuss end of ‘bloodbath’ with Putin, Zelensky

    President Donald Trump intends to call Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky today to discuss ending the war in Ukraine.

    “The subjects of the call will be stopping the ‘bloodbath’ that is killing, on average, more than 5,000 Russian and Ukrainian soldiers a week,” Trump said in a Truth Social post made on Saturday.

    Trade will be part of Trump’s discussion with the Russian president.

    “I will then be speaking to President Zelensky of Ukraine and then … with various members of NATO,” Trump said.

    Zelensky will participate in the calls with the respective leaders of NATO member nations.

    “Hopefully, it will be a productive day,” Trump said. “A cease-fire will take place, and this very violent war, a war that never should have happened, will end.”

    Trump has tried to end the war in Ukraine since he took office in January and has come close to getting the two sides to agree to a cease-fire, but nothing lasting has emerged.

    Russian and Ukrainian representatives met on Friday in Istanbul and agreed to a prisoner exchange but are not close to agreeing to a cease-fire, NBC News reported.

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    Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Saturday and welcomed the prisoner exchange agreement made on Friday, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said Saturday in a statement.

    Rubio also “delivered President Trump’s strong message: The United States is committed to achieving a lasting end to the Russia-Ukraine war,” Bruce said.

    “The comprehensive peace plan by the United States outlines the best way forward,” Bruce added. “The secretary emphasized President Trump’s call for an immediate cease-fire and an end to the violence.”

    Zelensky was in Rome on Saturday, where he met with Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter and thanked him for Switzerland’s support of Ukraine and its ongoing peace efforts.

    “We are also grateful for the humanitarian support provided by your government, especially for what matters most to us: shelters for our schools, for our children,” Zelensky told Keller-Sutter.

    Zelensky updated the Swiss president on peace negotiations in Istanbul and emphasized the importance of coordinating efforts with the United States, maintaining unity and pressuring Russia to agree to a “full and unconditional cease-fire.”

  • House Dems open probe into Trump’s acceptance of $400m jet from Qatar

    House Dems open probe into Trump’s acceptance of $400m jet from Qatar

    House Democrats are opening an investigation into President Donald Trump and his administration’s acceptance of a $400 million private jet from the Qatari government.

    Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, led his fellow Democrats on the panel in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House counsel David Warrington yesterday.

    They’re specifically asking Bondi to hand over a reported legal memo she wrote that is meant to assert the legality of Trump accepting the plane on behalf of the U.S.

    “Any legal memo purporting to make such a claim would obviously fly in the face of the text of the Constitution’s Foreign Emoluments Clause, which explicitly prohibits the President from accepting any ‘present [or] Emolument… of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State’ unless he has ‘the Consent of Congress,’” the letter reads.

    “Accordingly, we are writing to request that you provide the Committee on the Judiciary with these memos immediately as their analysis and conclusions are apparently the basis for the President’s decision to disregard the plain text of the Constitution.”

    Raskin and the other Judiciary Committee Democrats went so far as to accuse Trump or people in his orbit of soliciting a bribe from Qatar.

    “President Trump’s statements expressing displeasure with delays in the delivery of his new Boeing aircraft to serve as Air Force One and the timing of this ‘gift’ suggest that President Trump or a member of his Administration may have improperly solicited this ‘nice gesture’ from the Qatari government,” the Democrats said, citing Trump’s own comments.

    “The fact that, according to President Trump, the plane would not remain in service to the United States but would rather be donated to his presidential library after his term concludes further raises the possibility that this ‘nice gesture’ is intended as a bribe to Donald Trump.”

    Multiple outlets reported that Bondi and Warrington drafted a legal memo that said it was “legally permissible” for Trump to accept the plane and then have it transferred to his presidential library when he leaves office.

    A source familiar with the discussions told Fox News Digital the memo was drafted by the Office of Legal But Democrats suggested the memo was likely not sufficient grounds for Trump to bypass Congress on the issue, and pointed out Bondi herself had previously lobbied on Qatar’s behalf.

    Read Also: Trump lands in Saudi Arabia for first multi-day trip of second term

    “The Constitution is clear: Congress – not the Attorney General or the White House Counsel – has the exclusive authority to approve or reject a gift ‘of any kind whatever’ given to the President by a foreign government,” the letter said.

    “We would also note that, even if the Attorney General had a constitutional role to play here, Attorney General Bondi has a significant and obvious conflict of interest given her prior registration as an official agent of the Qatari government and earned no less than $115,000 per month lobbying on its behalf.”

    When reached for comment on the matter, a source close to Bondi said only that the letter was received by the Department of Justice (DOJ).

    In addition to looking for the memo itself, the Democratic letter also asked for any communications and other records regarding the Boeing plane’s transfer, and discussions of the gift’s legal justifications.

    Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee have little power to compel Trump administration officials to comply, given their status as the minority party in the chamber.

    But Raskin has been scrutinising Trump and his inner circle over family foreign ties since the former president’s first term.

    The latest letter comes during Trump’s diplomatic visit to the Middle East, where Qatar was one of his stops.

    Trump has defended his acceptance of the plane on multiple occasions, arguing he would be a “stupid person” to not take it, while bashing Democrats for their criticism.

  • Trump meets with de-facto Syrian president al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia

    Trump meets with de-facto Syrian president al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday met with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh, a U.S. government representative confirmed.

    The meeting took place in the Saudi capital before a scheduled meeting between Trump and leaders of several Gulf countries.

    It is the first between a U.S. and Syrian Presidents in around 25 years.

    The meeting also came a day after Trump said that he would be lifting sanctions imposed on Damascus.

    Trump, who was in Saudi Arabia for the first leg of his three-nation Gulf tour, said lifting the sanctions were a chance for the war-torn country to shine.

    The White House said on Tuesday that Trump had agreed to say hello to the Syrian President.

    Sanctions were imposed by the U.S. and other countries in response to former president Bashar al-Assad’s brutal crackdown on protesters in 2011.

    The violence in his regime carried out against civilians during the ensuing civil war.

    Al-Assad was overthrown in early December by an Islamist rebel alliance led by al-Sharaa, who was later appointed interim president.

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    Once an insurgent leader, al-Sharaa has since renounced both al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

    However, doubts remain as to whether he has fully abandoned extremist ideology and he is still listed on U.S. and EU terrorist lists.

    The last meeting between U.S. and Syrian leaders was in 2000 between then presidents Bill Clinton and Bashar’s father, Hafez al-Assad.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump lands in Saudi Arabia for first multi-day trip of second term

    Trump lands in Saudi Arabia for first multi-day trip of second term

    U.S. President Donald Trump had arrived in Riyadh on Tuesday for his first multi-day foreign trip since he returned to the White House earlier this year.

    Trump was received at King Khalid International Airport by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, seen as Saudi Arabia’s de-facto ruler.

    Riyadh is the first leg of Trump’s Gulf tour, ahead of visits to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

    The trip s expected to focus on economic deals, the war in Gaza and Iran’s nuclear programme.

    Trump is scheduled to attend a Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum on Tuesday before a summit with the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, and Bahrain on Wednesday.

    His talks in Riyadh could lead to an anticipated agreement on civilian nuclear technology with Saudi Arabia.

    The kingdom has already announced it will invest 600 billion dollars in the United States in the coming years.

    Trump said he will be asking the crown prince to increase that to around one trillion dollars.

    Saudi Arabia was the destination for Trump’s first trip abroad as president in 2017 during his first term in office, after the oil-rich country announced 450 billion dollars in investments in the U.S.

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    The stop in Riyadh marked Trump’s first official trip abroad since taking office again in January, although he did made a short visit to Rome last month for Pope Francis’ funeral.

    Trump’s visit to Doha this week could be overshadowed by reports that he is set to accept a luxury Boeing aircraft as a gift from Qatar’s royal family.

    The president has also suggested he could fly to Turkey on Thursday to join a possible meeting between Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump congratulates first U.S. Pope

    Trump congratulates first U.S. Pope

    U.S. President Donald Trump has congratulated Robert Prevost, a Cardinal from Chicago for being selected as the pope.

    Pope Leo XIV was selected on Thursday as the 267th Pope in the history ọf the Catholic Church.

    “Prevost will be known as Pope Leo XIV.

    “It is such an honour to realise that he is the first American Pope.

    “What excitement, and what a great honour for our country,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social Platform.

    He said he is looking forward to meeting the pope.

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    The U.S. President was often at odds with Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis, over his hardline policy toward migrants.

    Francis died on Easter Monday.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump refuses to drop ‘51st state’ threat in meeting with Canada PM

    Trump refuses to drop ‘51st state’ threat in meeting with Canada PM

    President Donald Trump continues to suggest that Canada could divest itself of its sovereignty and join United States as the 51st American state over continued objections of Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney.

    Carney, whose Liberal Party cruised to victory over rival Conservatives last month in part thanks to disgust at Trump’s suggestion that Canada could be annexed as well as the trade war the U.S. president started against the longtime American ally, visited the Oval Office yesterday for his first-ever meeting with his Trump.

    Speaking in the Oval Office, he called the American leader “transformational” and praised his “relentless focus on the American worker” and efforts at “securing your borders … ending the scourge of fentanyl and other opioids and securing the world.”

    But, when Trump was pressed on whether he still would like Canada to become part of the U.S., he refused to drop the line.

     “I do feel it’s much better for Canada, but we’re not going to be discussing that unless somebody wants to discuss it,” he said.

    Trump, who has been divorced twice and has a long history of failing to remain faithful to his spouses, added that Canada becoming part of the United States “would really be a wonderful marriage.”

    Carney, responding to Trump invoking his own background as a real estate developer while discussing why he would like to erase the longstanding U.S.-Canada border, told him that “there are some places that are not for sale” and said Canada remains one of those places.

    “Having met with the owners of Canada over the course of the campaign over the last several months, it’s not for sale. It won’t be for sale ever, but the opportunity is in the partnership and what we can build together,” he said.

    Read Also: Trump sparks online frenzy with AI image of self as Pope

    Carney added that Trump had played a role in having “revitalised NATO” and pushing his country to “playing our full weight” in the 32-member bloc, at which point the American leader acknowledged that Ottawa had been “stepping up the military participation” by spending enough on defence as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product and called the increased spending “a very important thing.”

    But, Trump refused to concede Carney’s point on his country not being up for sale, adding: “But never say never.”

    Carney, sitting silently as the American president spoke, mouthed the word “never” to the television cameras trained on him.

    The sit-down between the Canadian head of government and the American head of state comes after a whirlwind first 100 days of Trump’s second administration, during which he has inflamed once-cordial relations between the longtime allies by imposing successive waves of tariffs on Canadian goods and making a show of disrespect for Carney’s predecessor, Justin Trudeau.

    Trump took to calling the former Liberal Party leader “governor” as if he were already the head of an American state shortly after he won the 2024 presidential election and began proposing that Canada become the 51 state as a way of avoiding the tariffs he has touted as a solution for everything from trade imbalances to fentanyl trafficking across the largely unguarded frontier between the two countries.

    Trudeau, in an effort to be conciliatory, rushed to the president’s Florida home to meet with him shortly after the election in hopes of quelling the discontent, but to no avail. Instead, he and his party grew more and more unpopular as Trump’s attacks on him increased.

    But Trudeau, who had spent nearly a decade in office, upended the table by announcing his resignation shortly before Trump was inaugurated. Carney was chosen as his successor pending last month’s parliamentary elections, and the prospect of new leadership — combined with a rally-around-the-flag effect in response to Trump’s annexation talk and trade wars — caused the Liberal Party to reverse months of dismal polling and retain control of government in Ottawa.

    And even though the trade war he started has spooked financial markets and caused confidence in the U.S. to sink in an incredibly short period of time, Trump looks to be sticking to his guns on the value of taxing his own people.

    He said Carney’s refusal to consider surrendering his country’s sovereignty would not be a hindrance to trade talks as he inexplicably claimed that other governments would pay tariffs — which are taxes borne by American importers and passed on to consumers as higher prices — as a price paid to access American markets.