Politics
Trump and Putin to spar Ukraine peace and arms control at Alaska summit


- Summit to take place at military base in Alaska.
- Trump says he thinks Putin will do a deal.
- Kremlin source says it looks as though terms will be agreed.
MOSCOW: Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin hold talks in Alaska on Friday, with the US president’s hopes of sealing a ceasefire agreement on Ukraine uncertain but with a last gasp offer from Putin of a possible nuclear deal that could help both men save face.
The meeting of the Russian and US leaders at a Cold War-era air force base in Alaska, their first face-to-face talks since Trump returned to the White House, comes amid Ukrainian and European fears that Trump might sell Kyiv out.
Trump, who once said he would end Russia’s war in Ukraine within 24 hours, said on Thursday the three-and-a-half-year conflict had proven a tougher nut to crack than he had thought.
He said if his talks with Putin went well, setting up a subsequent three-way summit with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy – who was not invited to Friday’s meeting – would be even more important than his encounter with Putin.
Trump is pressing for a truce to bolster his credentials as a global peacemaker worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize, something he has made clear is important to him.
Ukraine and its European allies were heartened by their conference call on Wednesday in which, they said, Trump agreed Ukraine must be involved in any talks about ceding land. Zelenskiy said Trump had also supported the idea of security guarantees in a post-war settlement, although the US president has made no public mention of them.
Wednesday’s call eased their fears of a Trump-Putin deal that would leave Ukraine under pressure to make territorial and other concessions.
Putin, whose war economy is showing signs of strain, needs Trump to help Russia break out of its straitjacket of ever-tightening Western sanctions, or at the very least not to hit Moscow with more sanctions, something Trump has threatened.
The day before the summit, the Kremlin leader held out the prospect of something else he knows Trump wants – a new nuclear arms control agreement to replace the last surviving one, which is due to expire in February next year.
Trump says Putin will do a deal on Ukraine
Trump said on the eve of the summit that he thought Putin would do a deal on Ukraine, but he has blown hot and cold on the chances of a breakthrough. Putin, meanwhile, praised what he called “sincere efforts” by the US to end the war.

A source close to the Kremlin told Reuters it looked as if the two sides had been able to find some unspecified common ground beforehand.
“Apparently, some terms will be agreed upon tomorrow (Friday) because Trump cannot be refused, and we are not in a position to refuse (due to sanctions pressure),” said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the matter’s sensitivity.
Putin has set stringent conditions for a full ceasefire, but one compromise could be a phased truce in the air war, although both sides have accused the other of flouting a previous accord.
Analysts say Putin could try to look like he’s giving Trump what he wants while remaining free to escalate in Ukraine if he wants to.
“If they (the Russians) are able to put a deal on the table that creates some kind of a ceasefire but that leaves Russia in control of those escalatory dynamics, does not create any kind of genuine deterrence on the ground or in the skies over Ukraine… that would be a wonderful outcome from Putin’s perspective,” said Sam Greene, director of Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis.
Trump suggests land transfers will be needed
Zelenskiy has accused Putin of bluffing and playing for time to avoid US secondary sanctions and has ruled out handing Moscow any territory.

Trump has said land transfers between Russia and Ukraine could be a possible way of breaking the logjam.
Putin, whose forces control nearly one fifth of Ukraine, wants Trump to start reviving the two countries’ shrunken economic, political and business ties and, ideally, not to make that process contingent on progress on Ukraine.
But it is unclear whether Putin is willing to compromise on Ukraine. In power for a quarter of a century, the Kremlin chief has staked his legacy on coming out of the war with something he can sell to his people as a victory.
Chief among his war aims is complete Russian control over the Donbas industrial region in eastern Ukraine, which comprises the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Despite steady advances, around 25% of Donetsk remains beyond Russian control.
Putin also wants full control of Ukraine’s Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions; Nato membership to be taken off the table for Kyiv; and limits on the size of Ukraine’s armed forces.
Ukraine has said these terms are unacceptable and tantamount to asking it to capitulate.
Politics
Trump says Modi assured him India will halt Russian oil imports amid Ukraine truce push


- Calls India’s pledge a “big step” in isolating Moscow economically.
- Says he now expects Chinese leadership to take similar action.
- Indian embassy in Washington yet to confirm Modi’s commitment.
US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told him that India will stop buying oil from Russia, a move Trump described as a “big step” in efforts to isolate Moscow economically.
“So I was not happy that India was buying oil, and he assured me today that they will not be buying oil from Russia,” Trump told reporters during a White House event.
“That’s a big step. Now we’re going to get China to do the same thing.”
The Indian embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to emailed questions about whether Modi had made such a commitment to Trump.
An Indian pledge to halt buying Russian oil would mark a potential turning point in global energy diplomacy, as Washington intensifies efforts to choke Moscow’s oil revenues amid its ongoing war in Ukraine.
It would also signal a major shift by one of Moscow’s top energy customers and could reshape the calculus for other nations still importing Russian crude.
It comes as Trump seeks to leverage bilateral relationships to enforce economic isolation, rather than relying solely on multilateral sanctions.
During his comments to reporters, Trump added that India could not “immediately” halt shipments, calling it “a little bit of a process, but that process will be over soon.”
“I’ve stopped eight wars so far,” said US President Donald Trump, replying to a question, and he added that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told him he had saved millions of lives.
Trump also said that seven planes were shot down during the Pakistan-India war and that the two countries had come very close to a nuclear conflict.
PM Shehbaz on Monday described Trump as a “genuine man of peace”, who had worked relentlessly and untiringly to end global conflicts, including the war in Gaza.
Standing with the US president and other global leaders at a Sharm el-Sheikh press conference, Shehbaz said peace was achieved after months of Trump-led diplomacy, making the world “a place of peace and prosperity.”
He said Pakistan had earlier nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his “outstanding and extraordinary contributions” in halting a potential war between India and Pakistan and securing a ceasefire.
“Today, again, I would like to [re-]nominate this great president [Trump] for the Nobel Peace Prize because I genuinely feel that he’s the most deserving candidate,” PM Shehbaz said, addressing the Gaza peace conference earlier this week.
“He has brought peace not only to South Asia, saving millions of lives, but also to the Middle East through his efforts in Gaza.”
The prime minister hailed Trump as “the man the world needed most at this point in time,” adding that history would remember him as the leader who “stopped seven and today, eight wars.”
“Had it not been for this gentleman [Trump],” Shehbaz said, “a full-scale war between two nuclear powers could have erupted. His timely intervention averted catastrophe.”
The prime minister also said that Trump’s “visionary and exemplary leadership” had made him a symbol of hope and peace for the world, and that his name “will be remembered in golden words.”
The nuclear-armed rivals used missiles, drones and artillery fire during the four-day fighting — their worst in decades — triggered by an April attack on tourists in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad, before agreeing to a ceasefire brokered by the US.
Pakistan has denied involvement in the April attack and offered to participate in an independent and credible probe.
Politics
Greta Thunberg details experience in Israeli custody after Gaza-bound flotilla raid


Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg said she endured physical abuse, humiliation, and threats of being “gassed in a cage” while detained by Israeli forces after the interception of the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla last month.
She was among 450 activists aboard the flotilla, a humanitarian mission comprising more than 40 vessels seeking to break the Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip and deliver essential supplies — including food, water, and medicine.
Her interview was published by Aftonbladet, a Swedish daily tabloid newspaper, where Thunberg said that she doesn’t want headlines about herself and the torture she says she was subjected to.

Thunberg and other activists from the flotilla shared details about their five-day captivity in Israel and how they were left without help by the Swedish foreign ministry.
“This is not about me or the others from the flotilla. There are thousands of Palestinians, hundreds of whom are children, who are being held without trial right now, and many of them are most likely being tortured,” Aftonbladet quoted Thunberg.
She emphasised that the story is about international solidarity, about people coming together to do the work that governments are not doing.
“And above all, it’s about the people who live in Gaza. This shows that if Israel, with the whole world watching, can treat a well-known, white person with a Swedish passport this way, just imagine what they do to Palestinians behind closed doors.”

After the Israeli military seized her boat, they were taken to the lower deck where they were made to sit in a circle without moving while the boat was taken ashore. Several witnesses interviewed by Aftonbladet describe how the weapons were pointed at their faces.
“It was extremely hot down there. We just sat there. Those who weren’t guarding us walked around the boat, tearing things apart and throwing everything around.”
Thunberg said that she was unaware of what happened to the food, medicine, diapers, and infant formula — the aid for Gaza.
After about 20 hours, they arrived in Ashdod, Israel’s largest industrial port, 40 kilometres south of Tel Aviv. A soldier pointed at Thunberg and said: “You first, come on!” she recounts.
She was not allowed to wear her T-shirt with “Free Palestine” on it and was ordered to change, she explains. She put on an orange one with the text “Decolonize” instead.
Thunberg recounted being dragged to a paved area enclosed by iron fencing — an ordeal that, according to her and several flotilla participants interviewed by Aftonbladet, continued for more than six hours.
She was separated from others and repeatedly assaulted while wrapped in a flag. She said officers tore off her frog-shaped hat, threw it to the ground, and stomped on it in apparent anger.

According to Thunberg, she was then dragged to a corner, facing the wall, where one officer mockingly said: “A special place for a special lady.”
She and other Swedish participants told Aftonbladet that anyone who lifted their head was forced down again.
In the corner where Thunberg sat, officers placed a flag so close that it brushed against her — and each time it did, they shouted at her and kicked her. Eventually, her hands were bound tightly with cable ties as several guards posed for selfies beside her.
Thunberg recounted undergoing repeated interrogations, during which officials pressured her to sign documents admitting she had entered Israel illegally — a claim she refused to acknowledge. After declining, she said her hands were once again bound with cable ties, her eyes blindfolded, and she was placed in a cramped vehicle cell for the night.
“It was freezing cold,” she recalled. “We were only wearing T-shirts.”
According to Thunberg, upon arrival at the detention facility, she was ordered to undress while being filmed and subjected to mocking remarks.
“They handled us roughly; it was all very humiliating,” she said, adding that detainees’ essential medicines — including heart and cancer treatments as well as insulin — were discarded in front of them.
Inside the prison, she described a mural covering an entire wall depicting a bombed Gaza scene with fleeing civilians and the words “The new Gaza” written beside a large Israeli flag.

At one point, around 60 people were put in a small cage outdoors, in the middle of the sun, according to several participants of the flotilla. Most of them did not have enough room to sit down.
“When people fainted, we banged on the cages and asked for a doctor. Then the guards came and said, ‘We’re going to gas you.’ It was standard for them to say that. They held up a gas cylinder and threatened to press it against us.”
At the port, the Swedish detainees were granted only a brief five-minute consultation with a lawyer before being denied further legal access. It was not until Friday that three representatives from the Swedish embassy in Tel Aviv were permitted to meet them — in an outdoor holding cage under strict supervision.
According to her, the response was that their job was to listen to them. Then it took two days before the embassy staff showed up again.
Finally, the Swedish group decided, in the presence of the embassy staff, to refuse to return to their cells until they were given water, according to several witnesses that Aftonbladet has spoken to. But then the embassy staff wanted to leave the prison, they claim.
Several participants reported that a female activist became enraged and kicked the trash can where the guards had thrown their water bottles. Bottles spilled onto the floor, and Greta and the others threw themselves on the floor and hurried to open the bottles and drink the water left behind by the guards.

“The embassy staff see this but continue walking anyway.”
On the same day the flotilla participants were freed after five days in detention, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told local media it was “very foolish” to travel to Gaza despite prior warnings.
However, Aftonbladet’s review of emails sent by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to relatives — compared with testimonies given by detainees to embassy officials — suggests the gravity of the situation was downplayed.
The ministry’s description of events at the port, where Greta Thunberg says she was beaten for hours, merely stated: “She reported harsh treatment and said she had been sitting on a hard surface for a long time.”
Three other flotilla members who spoke to Aftonbladet largely corroborated Thunberg’s account, each describing experiences of physical abuse and humiliation. Relatives of the detainees also expressed strong criticism of the Swedish embassy’s response.
Politics
Golden Visa holders gain access to exclusive Emirati-only consular services


DUBAI: Golden Visa holders in the United Arab Emirates will now be able to access consular services that were previously reserved exclusively for Emirati citizens, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Under the newly announced initiative, the UAE government has extended a range of overseas support services to long-term residents holding the 10-year Golden Visa.
Golden Visa holders will now have access to emergency assistance during crises overseas. A dedicated hotline will soon be launched, allowing them to directly contact the ministry for urgent guidance and support.
In cases where a passport is lost, stolen, or damaged abroad, the ministry will issue special travel documents to ensure safe return to the UAE. Officials said the initiative also includes support in evacuation operations and assistance with repatriation or funeral arrangements in case of death abroad.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the expansion reflects the UAE’s commitment to enhancing the welfare of its long-term residents.
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