Anonymous ID: 040dd6 Feb. 22, 2025, 9:26 p.m. No.22637833   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7997 >>8035 >>8060

White House press secretary suggests Russia-Ukraine conflict could end ‘this week’

 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Saturday the president is confident in his ability to strike a deal with Russia to end the conflict in Ukraine, suggesting an end to the three-year-long war could come as early as this week.

 

“The president, his team are very much focused on continuing negotiations with both sides of this war to end the conflict and the president is very confident we can get it done this week,” Leavitt told reporters on the South Lawn after returning from the Conservative Political Action Conference.

 

The comments come as President Trump suggested Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “has no cards” and should sit out conversations with international leaders involving peace negotiations going forward.

 

Leavitt mentioned that National Security Advisor Matt Waltz would be working “around the clock” this weekend on a deal and shared that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been involved in discussions surrounding a proposed deal with the Ukrainians to harness raw minerals.

 

“When it comes to the critical minerals, this is an important piece for the president. It’s very important for the president, because it will recoup American tax dollars,” Leavitt stated.

 

“And it also will be a great economic partnership between the United States of America and for the Ukrainian people as well as they rebuild their country following this brutal war.”

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio proclaimed the venture would yield $200 million in funds and add a “vested” security interest in Ukraine pending legislative approval. The State Department said the U.S. has provided $65.9 billion in military assistance to Ukraine since the start of the war.

 

https://thehill.com/policy/defense/5159512-white-house-press-secretary-suggests-russia-ukraine-conflict-could-end-this-week/amp/

Anonymous ID: 040dd6 Feb. 22, 2025, 9:27 p.m. No.22637838   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7997 >>8035 >>8060

Trump at CPAC said US 'pretty close' to minerals deal with Ukraine

 

"I'm dealing with President Zelenskiy. I am dealing with President Putin. We are trying to get the money back that, or secured, because, you know, Europe has given $100 billion. The United States has given $350 billion because we had a stupid, incompetent president and administration, 350. But here is worse. Europe gave it in the form of a loan. They get their money back. We gave it in the form of nothing. So, I want them to give us something for all of the money we put up. And, I am going to try to get the war settled. And I’m going to try and get all that death ended. So we are asking for rare earth and oil, anything we can get. // We are going to get our money back because it is not fair. It's just not fair. And we will see. But I think we are pretty close to a deal. We better be close to a deal.”

 

He said the United States wanted to recoup the billions of dollars in military aid Washington has given to Ukraine in its fight to repel Russian invaders. He said the United States is asking for rare earths, oil or "anything we can get."

 

Ukraine has valuable deposits of strategic minerals that the U.S. wants. These include uranium, lithium, cobalt, rare earths and more and are used in applications such as batteries, technology and aerospace.

 

"We're signing an agreement, hopefully in the next fairly short period of time," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office Friday when asked about a possible deal for Ukraine's minerals.

 

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said separately that Ukrainian and U.S. teams were working on a draft agreement. "I am hoping for … a fair result," he said in a video address after sharp exchanges this week between the two leaders.

 

Zelenskiy on Wednesday rejected U.S. demands for $500 billion in mineral wealth from Ukraine to repay Washington for wartime aid, saying the United States had supplied nowhere near that sum so far and offered no specific security guarantees in the agreement.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-says-us-pretty-close-232111847.html

Anonymous ID: 040dd6 Feb. 22, 2025, 9:29 p.m. No.22637849   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7866 >>7997 >>8035 >>8060

Rubio condemns Hamas, says group would be 'wiped out' if it were next to US border - Fox News

 

Rubio said Hamas "is not a government, it is not simply an ideological movement, [but] evil, terrible people."

 

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the actions of Hamas during the release of the four Israeli hostages on Thursday and stated that if a group like Hamas existed on the other side of the US border, "we would wipe them out," during an interview with Fox News on Friday.

 

It appeared that Rubio gave the interview prior to Israel's identification process of the four slain hostages and, therefore, before the discovery that Shiri Bibas's body was not returned, as agreed to in the deal between Israel and Hamas.

 

However, addressing Thursday's hostage body release, Rubio told Fox it was a "reminder of who Hamas really is."

 

"Just thinking about the fact they went in, grabbed this family, this young woman with her two infant children, and they died in their captivity. Who does that? Who kidnaps families? And they the way that they were released, with people cheering in the streets," he said.

 

Rubio continued that Hamas "is not a government. It is not simply an ideological movement, [but] evil, terrible people."

 

"The idea that they would ever be allowed to continue, to have arms, to be militarized, and to control territory anywhere in the world, is unfathomable," he said.

 

Rubio added that he was heartbroken for the families [of the returned bodies of hostages] and that while "you can't be happy that remains are returned, it's very important to these families, from a religious standpoint, it's a sacred thing [to be able to bury a body]."

 

When asked about the success of Israel's stated aim of destroying Hamas, Rubio said he couldn't discuss intelligence, but he could say that Hamas is now weaker than they once were.

 

However, he added that the terror group "clearly have enough people to put on these shows, they clearly have enough people to be a threat at some level, but they can't be allowed to reconstitute."

 

"Hamas cannot be allowed to once again be a group that can do three things: terrorize the people of Gaza; attack Israel; and actually be a government or anything like a government anywhere in the world," he said.

 

"As long as Hamas is in Gaza, there will never be peace in Gaza because they are going to go back to attacking Israel, and Israel is going to have to respond." Rubio continued.

 

"I just ask everybody, if a group like that was operating on the other side of our border with Canada or Mexico, constantly launching attacks, if a group existed in Mexico that came across our border, kidnapped Americans, babies, and launched rockets, we would eliminate them, we would wipe them out, and no country in the world can coexist alongside a group whose intended purpose is the destruction of our state, and is willing to commit atrocities like this," Rubio said.

 

"It's in the best interest of everyone, including Palestinians, to get rid of Hamas because Hamas terrorizes them too. They hide behind these people," he added.

 

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-843149

Anonymous ID: 040dd6 Feb. 22, 2025, 9:32 p.m. No.22637871   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7997 >>8035 >>8060

How many federal workers have been fired so far:

 

Some 30,000 federal workers have been given notice since Elon Musk’s DOGE began its work in January, of a workforce of 2 million. Many senior officials at affected agencies have also stepped down. This is all part of Musk’s plan to allegedly save the government $2 trillion. Information on firings is still trickling out. Below, what we know so far.

 

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

At least 73 probationary workers and a similar number of contract personnel were pushed out, including senior litigation-counsel members. The firings came after the acting head, Russell Vought, ordered his staff to halt their work.

 

Department of Agriculture

4,200 probationary employees were terminated, including about 3,400 from the Forest Service, which manages some 200 million acres of land, halting road maintenance and environmental stewardship. Farm loan processing slowed down as loan officers were fired along with economists and food scientists. Among the dismissed workers were researchers tracking bird flu; the government is now trying to rehire them.

 

Department of Defense

No cuts so far; Secretary Pete Hegseth directed the DoD to plan an 8 percent cut to its $850 billion budget, and the administration requested a list of its probationary employees.

 

Department of Education

More than 60 probationary workers across the Department of Education lost their jobs, including in offices that handle federal student aid and civil rights. Workers in the legal and communications departments face termination.

 

Department of Energy

1,000 probationary workers were fired, nearly half of them people who were managing the power grid for the western U.S.

 

Department of Health and Human Services

Around 2,800 were fired, including 1,500 probationary employees at the National Institutes of Health, just one day after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confirmed as HHS secretary. Ditto for 10 percent of the 13,000 workers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where jobs like ensuring the safety of medical devices and helping communities prepare for infectious outbreaks were cut. The Food and Drug Administration’s food-division head resigned, writing that it would be “fruitless” to continue.

 

Department of Homeland Security

More than 400 were fired, at least half from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, including the chief financial officer, who was cut after trying to reimburse New York City for funds used to house and feed migrants. One seven-member FEMA team that helped low-income communities secure disaster-mitigation funding was wiped out, and a senior member of the agency’s flood-insurance program was let go.

 

Department of Housing and Urban Development

The administration is reportedly considering a 50 percent cut to HUD’s workforce of 9,600, including more than 80 percent of the office responsible for natural-disaster recovery.

 

Department of the Interior

2,300 probationary workers were fired, including 1,000 at the National Park Service. Another 240 workers at the Geological Survey, responsible for monitoring earthquakes and volcanoes, were terminated. Workers at the Bureau of Land Management and Fish and Wildlife Service were axed.

 

Department of Justice

More than 20 employees involved in January 6 investigations and criminal prosecutions of Trump were fired. Seven federal prosecutors, including Interim U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Danielle Sassoon, resigned in protest of pressure from the administration to drop corruption charges against Eric Adams.

 

Department of State

More than 10,000 probationary workers were fired from or put on leave by the Agency for International Development. USAID projects that predict famines, facilitate water access, and offer job training in regions where terrorist groups are active have gone offline. Billions in allocated humanitarian funding sit unspent and without oversight. One source at State has suggested that the agency could be further reduced to just 294 personnel.

 

Department of Transportation

400 probationary employees were cut from the Federal Aviation Administration after several high-profile domestic plane crashes, including one above Washington, D.C., that killed 67 people. No air-traffic controllers were fired, but other DoT employees with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, and the Maritime Administration were pushed out. The depth of those cuts is unclear, prompting one senator to submit a letter to the department’s new head demanding answers.

 

Department of the Treasury

6,000 probationary workers from the Internal Revenue Service workforce of 100,000 are being cut. Before the purge, a top-ranking official resigned when Elon Musk’s team began pushing for access to the Treasury’s governmentwide payroll system.

 

Department of Veterans Affairs

About 1,000 of the department’s 43,000 probationary employees received termination notices, among them doctors and nurses providing direct care to veterans.

 

Environmental Protection Agency

388 workers with probationary positions were let go. An additional 171 workers in offices focused on DEI and environmental justice were placed on leave.

 

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and National Labor Relations Board

The general counsels and three board members of these agencies were removed: one Democrat at the NLRB and two at the EEOC. The administration has left both independent agencies without enough present members to vote on motions. Gwynne Wilcox, the former NLRB board member, has sued for reinstatement.

 

https://archive.is/vHlTt#selection-1673.11-1849.224