Politics
U.S. is exploring how to send Soviet-era fighter jets to Ukraine.
The Biden administration is discussing the best way to provide Polish Soviet-era fighter jets to Ukraine, American officers say, after President Volodymyr Zelensky made a passionate plea to American legislators on Saturday for help in acquiring extra deadly navy help, particularly Russian-made jets that Ukrainian pilots know the best way to fly.
The White Home mentioned a cope with Poland was being mentioned that might change Poland’s planes with American F-16s, however Polish officers appeared lower than enthusiastic. After President Andrzej Duda mentioned final week that Poland wouldn’t provide planes, the workplace of Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki wrote on Twitter on Sunday: “Poland gained’t ship its fighter jets to #Ukraine in addition to enable to make use of its airports. We considerably assist in many areas.”
A jet-supply association would require congressional approval and is being mentioned with different NATO international locations. However any such provide can be a sovereign resolution of the nation concerned, not a NATO resolution, as a result of NATO desires to keep away from any direct battle with the Russian navy in Ukraine or over its airspace.
On Sunday, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, visiting Moldova, mentioned the US was exploring the concept of supplying jets to Poland ought to Warsaw select to ship its personal to Ukraine.
“We’re trying actively now on the query of airplanes that Poland could present to Ukraine and taking a look at how we’d have the ability to backfill, ought to Poland determine to produce these planes,” Mr. Blinken mentioned. “I can’t converse to a timeline, however I can simply say we’re taking a look at it very, very actively.”
There are quite a few sensible questions, together with the best way to present alternative planes to Poland and the best way to get the Polish planes to Ukraine. The following tranche of F-16s for export are set to go to Taiwan, American officers mentioned, and they’re reluctant to delay them.
Mr. Zelensky has repeatedly requested for NATO to create a no-fly zone over Ukraine to forestall Russian plane from bombing, however NATO has been adamant that it’s going to not confront the Russian navy in or over Ukraine.
Weapons to shoot down Russian planes, like ground-to-air Stinger missiles, are being despatched into Ukraine in massive numbers by its western borders, however it’s not clear how simply they’re being distributed to Ukrainian troops elsewhere within the nation.
The European Union had explored the concept of supplying Soviet jets to Ukraine, and its international coverage chief, Josep Borrell Fontelles, even promised them. However the thought was dropped. Amongst E.U. international locations, solely Poland, Slovakia and Bulgaria nonetheless use Soviet-era jets.
Bulgaria and Slovakia mentioned final week that there was no deal to ship fighter jets, and Mr. Duda, showing Tuesday at a Polish air base alongside the secretary normal of NATO, Jens Stoltenberg, mentioned, “We aren’t sending any jets to Ukraine as a result of that might open a navy interference within the Ukrainian battle.’’
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“We aren’t becoming a member of that battle,” Mr. Duda mentioned. “NATO isn’t a celebration to that battle. Nonetheless, as I mentioned, we’re supporting Ukrainians with humanity help. Nonetheless, we’re not going to ship any jets to the Ukrainian airspace.”
Russia on Sunday didn’t remark straight on the opportunity of the West offering fighter jets to Ukraine, but it surely threatened international locations that enable the Ukrainian navy to make use of their airfields.
Any use of different international locations’ airfields “for the basing of Ukrainian navy aviation that’s subsequently used in opposition to the Russian armed forces could also be thought to be the involvement of these international locations within the armed battle,” Russia’s Protection Ministry mentioned.
Politics
Ric Grenell under consideration to be Trump's point man on Ukraine: report
Richard “Ric” Grenell, the former acting director of National Intelligence in President-elect Trump’s first administration, is reportedly under consideration to be special envoy for the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Currently, there is no special envoy responsible for bringing an end to the war in Eastern Europe. Trump is strongly considering whether to create the role, Reuters reported, citing four sources familiar with the president’s deliberations.
If he does create the new position, Grenell is said to be a leading candidate, though Trump may select someone else, the sources told Reuters. There is also no guarantee that Grenell would accept the position if it were offered to him, the sources reportedly said.
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Fox News Digital was previously told Grenell was under consideration to be U.S. Secretary of State. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was instead named to lead the State Department.
Neither Grenell nor the Trump transition team responded to requests for comment.
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Trump repeatedly made campaign promises to quickly resolve the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, if elected, although he has never laid out a specific plan to end the war.
Grenell, an outspoken Trump loyalist, has made statements in the past that may be of concern to Ukrainian leadership.
‘NEW’ RUSSIAN MISSILE USED AGAINST UKRAINE NOT HYPERSONIC, DEFENSE OFFICIALS SAY
During a Bloomberg round table in July, he advocated for the creation of “autonomous zones” as a means of settling the conflict, which began after Russia invaded Ukrainian sovereign territory. He also suggested he would not be in favor of Ukraine joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the immediate future, a position he shares with many Trump allies.
Grenell’s supporters note he has had a long diplomatic career and has a deep knowledge of European affairs. In addition to serving as ambassador to Germany, Grenell was also a special presidential envoy for Serbia and Kosovo peace negotiations.
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Prior to working for the first Trump administration, Grenell was a U.S. State Department spokesman to the United Nations under President George W. Bush. He has advised various Republican candidates and was a foreign policy spokesman for Mitt Romney during the 2012 presidential campaign.
Grenell was previously a Fox News contributor.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Politics
Column: Trump lied incessantly and still won. Should others do the same?
Donald Trump said violent crime was exploding across the U.S.
It wasn’t.
He said Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were “eating the dogs. They’re eating the cats.”
They weren’t.
He said the Federal Emergency Management Agency diverted disaster relief money to fund benefits for people in the country illegally.
It hadn’t.
Trump lied incessantly and extravagantly in his bumptious bid for president, after racking up more than 30,500 false or misleading statements during four years in the White House, according to fact-checkers at the Washington Post.
Trump won anyway. Some voters might even have backed him because of his relentless falsehoods.
Which raises several questions.
Is honesty, as in telling the truth, no longer a requirement for seeking and holding public office? Has veracity become one of those quaint relics of a bygone era, like straw boaters and torchlight parades? Should candidates of any and every persuasion feel free to emulate Trump and lie their heads off?
Maybe.
Not necessarily.
First, before we go on, an obligatory nod to the what-about chorus. Yes, politicians of all stripes have been known to lie, fib or shade the truth. It’s been ever thus. But no one in modern memory has done so with the velocity, shamelessness and torrential outpouring of Trump.
Indeed, there may be some hope and comfort in the notion the 45th and soon-to-be 47th president of these United States is sui generis, a one-off, a fabulist political unicorn.
As Kevin Madden, a veteran Republican communications strategist noted, Trump “was a celebrity first and a politician second” after marinating for decades in New York’s saucy tabloid culture, then residing in America’s living rooms as a make-believe boardroom baron in “The Apprentice.”
Simply put, Trump has never been viewed the same way other office seekers are, which is arguably his greatest strength. Even after nearly a decade in which he’s utterly dominated the nation’s political discourse — four of them in its highest elected office — many still don’t see Trump as a politician.
“He’s a unique figure with a unique set of capabilities that defy gravity,” Madden said, and any imitators would find themselves quickly plummeting to earth. “He blocks out the sun against any of his critics. He controls the media cycle with one click on his phone, with one sound bite every single day.”
Does truth even matter?
“Truth always matters,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster and strategist, who said any client thinking otherwise would be shown the door. “That doesn’t mean it always prevails, but it always matters. Reality matters.”
And yet.
An NBC News survey, taken in mid-October, showed Democrat Kamala Harris holding a 10-point lead over Trump on the question of which candidate was viewed as honest and trustworthy. The findings were consistent with other polls conducted throughout the Trump era.
Even so, Trump didn’t just win a second lease on the White House, sweeping all seven of the decisive battleground states. He is on track to narrowly win the popular vote, something he failed to manage in either of his previous two presidential campaigns.
Christine Matthews, a pollster for center-right campaigns and causes, has researched Trump‘s political appeal.
Although certain facts are objectively true — about the crime rate falling, about Haitians not devouring household pets, and so on — Matthews said those truths weren’t necessarily getting through to Trump supporters who took in their information “through highly siloed, very fractured sources. In some cases it’s social media, or memes. It’s YouTube. It’s TikTok. It’s ‘what people are saying.’ ”
And even if they saw Trump’s deceptions for what they were, Matthews said, those inclined to support the GOP nominee — out of concern for inflation, border security or because they didn’t like Harris’ policies or her laugh — found plenty of reasons to excuse his hyperbole and outright lies. Such as: “He exaggerates. He’s a loudmouth. He says things, but he doesn’t really mean them.”
That sound you hear is a thousand fact-checkers, weeping.
Joe Trippi, who has spent decades managing Democratic campaigns from the local to presidential levels, said the party and its candidates can no longer count on conventional media — the three major broadcast networks, CNN, MSNBC, newspapers such as this one — or most social media to counter the lies and distortions billowing from Fox News, Elon Musk’s execrable X or other assertively pro-Trump outlets.
“Journalism and a party that relies on buying ads to combat the lies doesn’t work,” said Trippi, who has started his own social media platform, Sez Us, in hopes of boosting a media ecosystem that elevates civility, credibility and truth-telling.
Jane Kirtley is a professor of media ethics and law at the University of Minnesota, who’s spent years writing about those subjects.
She said the erosion of truth-telling standards and the rise of what Kellyanne Conway, the Trump advisor, famously called “alternative facts” have been a long time coming. “The issue goes back decades in terms of lack of media literacy, lack of critical thinking, platforms that are now viewed by many as news delivery systems when they’re little more than propaganda,” Kirtley said.
Despite the challenges — shrinking audiences, political antagonism, a dire economic landscape — she said independent media must continue “to call out lies and call them lies, if that’s what they are” and, whenever possible, refute them “with concrete evidence.”
But she has no illusions. Kirtley has a relative, she said, who shuts down any familial fact-checking by stating, “ ‘I have other sources of information than you do.’” And that ends the discussion.
“It may be insurmountable, and if that’s true, we may as well give up,” Kirtley said of efforts to fight truth decay and make politicians pay a price for flagrantly lying. “But I’m not quite ready to give up.”
Neither am I.
Politics
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