Connect with us
[the_ad id="89560"]

International

Trump speaks with Zelenskyy, European leaders ahead of Putin meeting in Alaska

Published

3 minute read

From The Center Square

By

President Donald Trump met virtually with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and other European leaders before flying to Alaska for a U.S.-Russia bilateral meeting Friday.

European leaders outlined five principles during the emergency summit, including that Ukraine must be involved in future talks with Putin and that no Ukrainian territory will be ceded to Russia in exchange for a ceasefire.

Trump and Putin are set to meet in Anchorage on Friday to continue negotiations to end Russia’s three-year military involvement in Ukraine. Trump originally made Zelenskyy’s presence a condition for Friday’s meeting but later conceded when Putin refused to meet if Kyiv participated.

“The war is happening in Europe, and Ukraine is an integral part of Europe,” Zelenskyy said last week. “Europe must be a participant in the relevant processes.”

Zelenskyy maintained this stance Wednesday after Trump moved forward with a U.S.-Russia bilateral meeting without him, arguing that “what concerns Ukraine must be discussed with Ukraine.”

On Wednesday, Zelenskyy told Trump that “Putin is bluffing” by saying sanctions against Moscow will not be effective in pressuring him into a ceasefire.

The European Union has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia for its military involvement in Ukraine. The U.S. followed suit last month by shortening the 50-day window it gave Russia to broker a peace deal with Ukraine before it faces sanctions.

Putin has reportedly suggested Russian occupation of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region as part of a ceasefire deal. Zelenskyy rejected this proposal and maintained Wednesday that he will not surrender any territory to Moscow in a peace deal.

“[My position] hasn’t changed because it’s based on the Ukrainian constitution and the Ukrainian constitution hasn’t changed,” Zelenskyy said during a news conference after the virtual meeting.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz hosted Zelenskyy in Berlin for the call. During the post-meeting news conference, Merz said Russia’s aggression toward Ukraine “opened the wounds of European separation again,” referencing European conflict during World War II.

Trump has expressed waning optimism for a peace deal with Russia in recent weeks, calling Putin “cold” and repeatedly stating his disappointment in Putin’s empty assurances to work out an end to the war in Ukraine.

When speaking about the upcoming meeting with Putin during a press conference Monday, Trump said that “probably in the first two minutes I’ll know exactly whether or not a deal can get done.” He also said he intends to set up a meeting between Zelenskyy and Putin after Friday’s talks and will make it a trilateral meeting if necessary.

Todayville is a digital media and technology company. We profile unique stories and events in our community. Register and promote your community event for free.

Follow Author

Daily Caller

Mexico Hands Over Notorious Cartel Leaders To Trump Admin

Published on

 

From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Jason Hopkins

The Trump administration extradited dozens of fugitives from Mexico as the White House tightens a noose around criminal syndicates south of the border.

Federal law enforcement took custody of 26 individuals, many of them leaders of dangerous drug cartels and human smuggling organizations that the Trump administration has deemed to be foreign terrorist organizations, according to the Department of Justice (DOJ). The Tuesday announcement came in the aftermath of President Donald Trump reportedly authorizing the use of military force against drug cartels.

Among those handed over to U.S. authorities were top leaders of the Sinaloa Cartel, Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generation and Los Zetas cartels, according to the DOJ. Nearly every individual faces up to life in prison on various charges ranging from hostage-taking, drug-trafficking, kidnapping, human smuggling and a slate of other crimes.

Dear Readers:

As a nonprofit, we are dependent on the generosity of our readers.

Please consider making a small donation of any amount here.

Thank you!

“Today is the latest example of the Trump administration’s historic efforts to dismantle cartels and foreign terrorist organizations,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a public statement. “These 26 men have all played a role in bringing violence and drugs to American shores — under this Department of Justice, they will face severe consequences for their crimes against this country.”

“We are grateful to Mexico’s National Security team for their collaboration in this matter,” Bondi continued.

Those extradited to the U.S. included Martin Zazueta Perez and Kevin Gil Acosta, leaders of a powerful faction of the Sinaloa Cartel that have led hired gunmen armed with grenade launchers and assault rifles in attacks against Mexican military officials, according to the DOJ. Both men were involved in prolific fentanyl trafficking into the U.S.

Also taken into American custody were Leobardo Garcia Corrales, a close friend of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman who has allegedly trafficked fentanyl into the U.S. in exchange for AK-47s, grenades and submachine guns, and Luis Raul Castro Valenzuela, a Sinaloa Cartel gangbanger accused of kidnapping and holding hostage an American citizen, according to the DOJ.

Collectively, the 26 individuals have imported “tonnage quantities” of cocaine, meth, fentanyl heroin and other illicit drugs through the Mexico border, according to the Trump administration.

Just days before the extradition, Trump reportedly authorized the use of military strikes against Mexican drug cartels, a move that would mark a monumental escalation in the White House’s war against criminal syndicates. Immediately upon re-entering office, the president officially designated a number of cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, allowing U.S. authorization to freeze their financial assets, prohibit their entry into the country and the prosecution of members for supporting terrorism.

While the Mexican government has shown a willingness to help take on drug cartels and illegal immigration, their government appears adamantly opposed to U.S. military strikes against criminal syndicates within their territory, with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Friday “absolutely” ruling out the possibility of U.S. military operations on Mexican land.

The Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration across the southern border has wielded unprecedented success, with Border Patrol agents releasing zero migrants into the interior of the country in July, marking the third consecutive month of zero releases.

Continue Reading

International

Rubio Push to Label Muslim Brotherhood a Terror Group Tests Carney’s Palestinian Statehood Stance

Published on

Canada’s current approach treats Brotherhood-linked extremism as episodic — an audit here and there — without a cohesive strategy to counter its structural inroads into politics, community institutions, and advocacy networks. A U.S. designation will demand more

With Prime Minister Mark Carney’s surprise recognition of a Palestinian state still reverberating in Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s pledge this week of ongoing legal work to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a foreign terrorist organization sets up a direct test of whether Ottawa will align with its closest ally on a transnational movement long tied by American lawmakers to Hamas financing, radicalization, and political subversion — or risk deepening a posture critics say panders to an influential Islamist diaspora base in Canada’s largest cities.

“All of that is in the works,” Rubio told a reporter, referencing legislation on terror designations for the Muslim Brotherhood advanced to the House Judiciary Committee in June. The push follows a 2018 congressional hearing in which senior lawmakers and expert witnesses drew direct lines between Hamas, the Palestinian cause, and the Brotherhood.

At that hearing, Subcommittee Chairman Ron DeSantis described Hamas as “the Muslim Brotherhood’s Palestinian branch,” noting its 1997 U.S. terror designation and a record of “thousands of rockets against Israeli civilians” and suicide bombings killing both Israelis and Americans.

“The Muslim Brotherhood is a militant Islamist organization with affiliates in over 70 countries, including groups designated as terrorist organizations by the U.S.,” DeSantis said, adding, “whether the Muslim Brotherhood writ large should be designated as a foreign terrorist organization has been the topic of debate here in Congress in recent years.”

He outlined Justice Department evidence that, in the early 1990s, the Brotherhood sought to build U.S.-based organizations to spread militant Islamist ideology and raise funds for Hamas, culminating in the Texas-based Holy Land Foundation’s 2008 conviction for providing material support.

Dr. Zuhdi Jasser, president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, testified to a “revolving door” between Brotherhood leaders and designated terror groups, including Hamas, and argued that U.S.-based “legacy groups” function as political cover for violent affiliates.

During questioning, Rep. Paul Gosar pressed Jasser on the Holy Land Foundation’s role as part of the Brotherhood-created “Palestine Committee” to aid Hamas through charitable fronts operating in North America.

Many of these same charitable and political fronts, critics say, are expanding north of the border in Ontario and elsewhere — networks that Canadian leaders, including Carney, his predecessor Justin Trudeau, and Ontario Premier Doug Ford, have engaged with politically. Carney’s formal recognition of Palestinian statehood is likely to be seen in Washington through the prism of Hamas’s identity as the Brotherhood’s Palestinian arm.

National security experts such as Casey Babb of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute warn that the Brotherhood’s self-described “civilization-jihadist process” — outlined in a 1991 strategy memorandum entered as evidence in the Holy Land Foundation terror-financing case — aims to “eliminate and destroy Western civilization from within” and is now rapidly gaining strength, “materializing just north of the U.S. border.” Babb cites Canada’s “shockingly permissive immigration policies, multiculturalist ethos, and general complacency toward national security threats” as fertile ground for the Brotherhood’s ambitions.

In a recent New York Post column, Babb argued that in Canada, critical scrutiny of the Brotherhood’s influence — “for jihadist groups like Hamas and al Qaeda … and Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind of the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel” — is “almost entirely absent from public conversation or debate.” He also pointed to the role of state actors such as Qatar and Turkey in providing the resources and legitimacy needed to expand the Brotherhood’s reach across the West.

Canadian enforcement history supports parts of Babb’s assessment, particularly regarding charitable fronts flagged by federal investigators. Ottawa designated the International Relief Fund for the Afflicted and Needy–Canada (IRFAN-Canada) as a terrorist entity for transferring $14.6 million to Hamas-linked organizations. The CRA’s revocation of IRFAN’s charitable status in 2011, followed by RCMP raids in 2014, documented the operational ties.

More recently, the CRA has sustained a years-long audit into one of the country’s largest Muslim charities, alleging senior figures had links to an “apparent Hamas support network.”

Allies have acted more decisively.

Canada’s current approach treats Brotherhood-linked extremism as episodic — an audit here and there — without a cohesive strategy to counter its structural inroads into politics, community institutions, and advocacy networks. A U.S. designation will demand more: border measures, financial sanctions, visa bans, intelligence coordination, and possibly parallel listings under Canada’s Criminal Code or Special Economic Measures Act.

The implications extend beyond security cooperation. In Washington, a Brotherhood designation will sharpen scrutiny of Ottawa’s Palestinian statehood stance — especially if it emerges, that politically connected lobbyists, including current or former elected or government-appointed officials with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, have influenced Carney’s Liberals on the issue. Such findings could fuel congressional questions about Canada’s reliability as a security partner, with potential ripple effects on cross-border policing and counterterrorism financing.

For years, Ottawa has treated ideological affinity with the Brotherhood — absent direct material support for terrorism — as protected political and religious expression. The United States now appears ready to draw a bright red line. If Canada refuses to follow, it risks transforming the current standoff with President Donald Trump over deepening vulnerabilities in border controls and migration policy into an explosive break with Washington — a geopolitical rupture that could further erode the Western alliance and fracture North America’s security architecture.

And this, of course, would align with the Brotherhood’s stated divide-and-conquer objectives, as outlined in the strategy memorandum that surfaced in the Holy Land Foundation terror-financing case cited by DeSantis.

As reported by Babb in the New York Post, “the Muslim Brotherhood laid out its long-term strategy to conquer North America through what it called a ‘civilization-jihadist process’ aimed at ‘sabotaging’ and ‘eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within.’”

The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.

To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Continue Reading

Trending

X