The White House is reportedly dropping Russia from its list of threats to cybersecurity and is instead honing in on China, part of the Trump administration’s apparent broader effort to curry favor with the Kremlin and push for a peace deal that would end the country’s ongoing war in Ukraine.
Russia is eyeing talks with the Trump administration about re-establishing a significant diplomatic presence in the US as an opening to rebuild its spy network in the West, current and former US officials say.
Michael Crowley, New York Times Diplomatic Correspondent Chris Meagher, former Assistant Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin for Public Affairs joins Nicolle Wallace on Deadline White House with continued reaction to the fallout from the Oval Office meeting this afternoon between President Trump and President Zelesnkyy and what comes next in the War in Ukraine.
Tetiana Hranchak lived in Ukraine when Russia first invaded. Now Hranchak is a visiting assistant professor at the Maxwell School at Syracuse University. She hopes people will pay more attention to the war.
President Donald Trump has been able to count the Rupert Murdoch -controlled media empire as an ally for the past decade – but the New York Post and Fox News Radio drew a red line on Friday, pushing back on the president’s defense of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Analysts say China's vote has to be seen in the context of a changing world order, where Donald Trump is upending America’s long-held role as a leading global player.
When it comes to the war in Ukraine, President Trump finds common cause with the world’s outlier states and stands against traditional U.S. allies like Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Japan and Italy.
The United States voted against a Ukrainian-drafted United Nations resolution condemning Russian aggression in Ukraine.