Tag: trump

  • Trump hails Merkel’s ‘incredible’ leadership on final day of G20

    Trump hails Merkel’s ‘incredible’ leadership on final day of G20

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday commended German Chancellor, Angela Merkel’s handling of G20 summit in Hamburg amid deep divisions at the meeting and violent protests on the streets.

    It was the most effusive praise Trump has so far had for the Chancellor in many ways, marking a turnaround.

    “You have been amazing and done an incredible job,” Trump told Merkel at a summit forum on women’s rights.

    Merkel is, however, chairing the summit in the northern German port city.

    “Your leadership is incredible and absolutely inspiring,” Trump told the chancellor, after the two had clashed on a range of issues, including trade, defence, climate change and refugees.

    Trump’s “America First” rhetoric and his decision in June to withdraw from the Paris climate accord have riled Germany’s political establishment.

    The president had also railed against the trade gap his country has with Germany, asking in a tweet why there were many German cars on American roads, and why Germany spent so little on its military in relation to Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    As for their personal relationship, it has sometimes seemed strained, especially given tweets Trump has written slamming German policy and, sometime directly on Merkel.

    In 2015, he tweeted that Merkel had made “a catastrophic mistake” in opening Germany’s borders in 2015 to about one million refugees fleeing wars in the Middle East and Africa.

  • BREAKING: Trump, Putin in closed door meeting #G-20

    BREAKING: Trump, Putin in closed door meeting #G-20

    US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin began their first formal face-to-face talks Friday on the sidelines of the G20 summit.

    “It’s an honour to be with you,” said Trump, while Putin told the US leader: “I’m delighted to meet you.”

  • G20 summit: Trump, Putin set to meet as protests get more intense

    G20 summit: Trump, Putin set to meet as protests get more intense

    …Hamburg police call for reinforcements

    Anti-capitalist protesters on Friday set fire to cars, barricades, rubbish bins and wooden pallets on Friday as leaders from the world’s top economies convened for a summit in the northern German city of Hamburg.

    Police said violence that erupted during marches on Thursday continued into Friday, with protesters slashing the tires of a car belonging to the Canadian delegation to the G20 summit and smashing windows of the consulate of Mongolia.

    At least 29 protesters were detained and 111 police officers had been injured as of Friday morning, including three officers who required treatment in hospital.

    A police spokesman said only small numbers of far-left or anarchist protesters were involved in violence, with the majority of an estimated 100,000 demonstrators in the city remaining peaceful.

    Some 12,000 took part in the main march.

    Authorities said 15,000 police were on hand from each of Germany’s 16 states, authorities said they asked for reinforcements late on Thursday after realising the situation on the streets of Hamburg was proving more difficult than expected.

    “We have asked nationwide if police forces are available and those requests are being reviewed,” a police spokesman said.

    Police said on Friday, smaller groups of protesters attacked both manned and empty police cars, one of which was hit by a petrol bomb.

    According to a statement by the police, one of the many police helicopters patrolling the skies was nearly struck by a rocket flare.

    On Thursday the pilots of another helicopter sustained eye injuries after a laser was directed against them.

    Police said they continued to dispel street blockades throughout the port city.

    Meanwhile, German media are reporting that US first lady Melania Trump has been unable to leave her Hamburg residence to take part in the summit’s programme for leaders’ partners because of the presence of demonstrators.

    “We have no security clearance from the police to leave the guest house,” a spokeswoman told German news agency DPA.

    Other partners, including Brigitte Macron, the wife of France’s president Emmanuel Macron, Theresa May’s husband Philip and Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, the wife of Canada’s prime minister Justin Trudeau, are on a sightseeing tour with German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s husband, Joachim Sauer.

  • Trump breaks White House Eid dinner tradition

    US President Donald Trump has broken a nearly 20-year-old tradition by failing to host a dinner marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    The White House event had been held every year since President Clinton’s tenure.

    The Eid al-Fitr feast ends Ramadan, a period when Muslims fast and focus on charitable giving.

    But US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson reportedly rejected a request to hold a reception.

    In May, Reuters said Mr Tillerson had refused a recommendation from the State Department’s office of religion and global affairs to organise a celebration.

    Mr Trump has previously been criticised for his use of anti-Muslim rhetoric, including on the campaign trail when he called for surveillance of US mosques.

    He said in a statement: “On behalf of the American people, Melania and I send our warm greetings to Muslims as they celebrate Eid al-Fitr.

    “Muslims in the United States joined those around the world during the holy month of Ramadan to focus on acts of faith and charity. Now, as they commemorate Eid with family and friends, they carry on the tradition of helping neighbours and breaking bread with people from all walks of life.

    “During this holiday, we are reminded of the importance of mercy, compassion, and goodwill. With Muslims around the world, the United States renews our commitment to honour these values. Eid Mubarak.”

    Mr Tillerson also released a brief statement, sending “best wishes to all Muslims celebrating Eid al-Fitr”.

    The first presidential Iftar dinner (the name for a meal held after sunset, when Muslims break their fast), is said to have been hosted by Thomas Jefferson in 1805 for a Tunisian envoy.

    The idea of hosting a dinner was revived by Hillary Clinton in 1996, when she was First Lady.

    It became an annual tradition from 1999 and was attended by prominent US Muslim leaders, diplomats and legislators.

  • Trump’s travel ban will breed more terrorism, says Iran

    Trump’s travel ban will breed more terrorism, says Iran

    Iran on Tuesday accused U.S. President Donald Trump of fanning the flames of terrorism with his travel ban on the citizens of six predominately Muslim countries, one of which is Iran.

    The ban is “the biggest gift for extremist groups,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said in Berlin after meeting his German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel.

    These groups could exploit the discriminatory ban as an argument for recruiting new members, he said.

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday allowed authorities to partially enforce Trump’s ban on travellers from seven Muslim countries.

    They include Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen who have no connection to the United States until it reviews the executive order in the autumn.

    Meanwhile, Zarif praised Germany for its handling of the conflict between Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

    Gabriel called on the countries opposed to Qatar to join the reconciliation talks brokered by Kuwait to end the conflict.

    “The longer the crisis in Qatar continues, the deeper the lines of conflict become,” Gabriel said.

    Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates accused Qatar of supporting terrorist groups leading them to cut diplomatic relations with the Gulf state at the beginning of June and suspend air transport links.

    The countries have also called on Qatar to shut down its broadcaster Al Jazeera.

    Iran and Turkey have offered their support to Qatar.

    During Zarif’s visit, some 100 demonstrators gather outside the Foreign Ministry in Berlin and chanted, “The mullah regime is fascist.”

     

     

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Travel Ban: Supreme Court partially lifts embargo on Trump’s order

    Travel Ban: Supreme Court partially lifts embargo on Trump’s order

    The United States Supreme Court on Monday backed President Donald Trump’s ban on travellers from six Muslim-majority countries until it reviews it later this year.

    The court also allowed ban on all refugees with no connection to the U.S., while agreeing to hear his appeals in the closely watched legal fight.

    The court said that it would hear arguments on the legality of one of Trump’s signature policies in his first month as president in the court’s next term, which starts in October.

    According to Reuters, the court granted parts of his administration’s emergency request to put the order into effect immediately while the legal battle continues.

    Two U.S. appeals courts had upheld lower court decisions halting the ban to allow legal challenges on the basis of religious discrimination. However, the Trump administration appealed to the Supreme Court.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the President’s March 6 executive order banned the issuance of new visas to people from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days.

    It also sought to halt issuances of new refugee admissions from around the world for 120 days.

    The order was, however, blocked by federal judges before going into effect on March 16 as planned.

    Trump issued the order amid rising international concern about attacks carried out by Islamist militants like those in Paris, London, Brussels, Berlin and other cities.

    Trump signed the order as a replacement for a January 27 order issued a week after he became president, but it was also blocked by federal courts.

     

  • ‘I don’t have tapes of conversation with Comey’ – Trump

    ‘I don’t have tapes of conversation with Comey’ – Trump

    U.S . President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he did not have any recordings of his conversations with ousted Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), James Comey.

    With all of the recently reported electronic surveillance, intercepts, unmasking and illegal leaking of information, I have no idea whether there are ‘tapes’ or recordings of my conversations with James Comey.

    But I did not make, and do not have, any such recordings,” Trump tweeted.

    Trump had raised the possibility of tapes in May when he fired Comey, who was heading the FBI investigation into alleged Russia’s meddling in the Nov. 8 2016 U.S. presidential election.

    Comey had, in a leak afterwards, recounted a White House meeting he had with Trump in January when he claimed the president asked him to pledge his loyalty.

    Trump disputed Comey’s version and claimed the former FBI chief actually pleaded for his job.

    The president then tweeted that Comey had “better hope there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations.”

    The House Intelligence Committee, one of the congressional panels probing the Russian alleged collusion, had set a deadline for Friday to turn over any tapes the White House might have.
    NAN

  • Trump says he prefers having rich person in charge of economy

    Trump says he prefers having rich person in charge of economy

    U.S. President Donald Trump said he wouldn’t want a poor person in charge of the economy, as he defended his cabinet, which is thought to be the wealthiest in the country’s history.

    “Somebody said, ‘Why did you appoint a rich person to be in charge of the economy?’” he told supporters at rally in Iowa.

    “So I said …. because that’s the kind of thinking we want… because they’re representing the country.”

    Making a particular reference to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, a billionaire former investor, Trump said:, “They don’t want the money. And they had to give up a lot to take up these jobs.”

    Trump, himself a billionaire, went on to refer to Gary Cohn, his chief economic advisor.

    “This is the president of Goldman Sachs. Smart. Having him represent us, he went from massive paydays to peanuts, to little tiny … I’m waiting for them to accuse him of wanting that little amount of money.

    “These are people that are great, brilliant business minds, and that’s what we need, that’s what we have to have so the world doesn’t take advantage of us.

    “We can’t have the world taking advantage of us any more. And I love all people, rich or poor, but in those particular positions I just don’t want a poor person.

    “Does that make sense? Does that make sense?

    “If you insist I’ll do it but I like it better this way, right?”

    Trump’s Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos is also a billionaire heiress, while Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, the former boss of oil giant Exxon, is thought to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Other rich appointees include Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, a former hedge fund manager, and Housing Secretary Ben Carson, who made his fortune selling books on his career in medicine and his political ideas.

     

    NAN

  • Trump ratchets up the use of guns, bombs, troops, and insults by Jesse Jackson

    By Jesse Jackson

    In his campaign, Donald Trump promised “we’re going to start winning again.” In office, he has defined winning largely in military terms.

    His budget decimates the State Department while adding billions to the Pentagon. He boasts that he’s delegated decisions on force levels abroad to the Pentagon. Secretary of Defense Mike Mattis recently announced that 4,000 more troops would be sent to Afghanistan.

    Four thousand more troops won’t produce a “win” in Afghanistan. The president has it wrong. America’s military is already the best in the world. But for America to “start winning,” we need more smart diplomacy, not more smart bombs.

    Since coming to office Trump has ratcheted up the use of force. He dropped the “mother of all bombs” on Afghanistan, while adding troops there. He rained cruise missiles on an airbase in Syria, and a U.S. jet recently shot down a Syrian jet in Syrian airspace, a clear act of war. He’s added troops to Iraq and to back rebels in Syria. He lavished arms and praise on the Saudis, backing up not only their merciless war on Yemen but also their blockade on tiny Qatar.

    Not one of these actions will “start America winning.” The war in Afghanistan is in its 16th year. Even Secretary Mattis admits we have no strategy for victory there. Four thousand more troops will add to the violence and the costs. They will help insure we don’t lose, but the war will go on.

    In Syria, Trump had suggested on the campaign trail that he would focus on defeating the Islamic State, not on regime change in Syria. That opened the possibility of a working coalition with Russia and Syria against the Islamic State. Instead we’re now clearly at war with Syria as well as the Islamic State.

    In the Persian Gulf, we’re backing the Saudi destruction of Yemen, creating a failed state that will mint more terrorists. And bizarrely, Trump seems to have turned on Qatar, a tiny emirate that is an ally and the site of a vital American air base. The recent announcement that the U.S. will sell $12 billion in arms to Qatar makes our policy utterly incoherent.

    In our own hemisphere, Trump has repeatedly acted to worsen relations rather than ease them. He’s insulted the Mexican president and alienated the Canadians, our closest trading partners. When Venezuela descended into desperate hunger, the administration passed up the opportunity to offer humanitarian assistance, and come to the aid of a neighbor in need. With the reversal of Obama’s opening to Cuba, Trump is isolating the U.S. from its neighbors.

    In the State Department, offices on the top floors remain empty. Trump’s budget calls for a 30 percent cut in the department. At a time when the U.S. desperately needs creative diplomacy — a combination of the State Department’s professionals and skilled political appointees — Trump is demoralizing the department, chasing away professionals and scaring away the experts who might lead real change.

    America is a great nation. Our economy is still one of the greatest in the world. Our military is unmatched. Our so-called “soft power” — in culture, language and commerce — is without rival.

    Yet we find ourselves unable to “start winning.” The military is mired in conflicts in the Middle East with no exit and no victory. Trump is alienating our neighbors, even when we should be strengthening our bonds. Our allies are increasingly perturbed by the president’s erratic bluster. Voters may have thought that Trump the businessman would be a strong negotiator, as he promised. Instead, he’s turned out to be a showman, infatuated with military gestures, scornful of the quiet arts of diplomacy. He isn’t putting America first; he’s putting America at risk.