Tuesday, February 18, 2025

UPDATED

US tried to 'blackmail' Zelenskyy into signing the rare mineral deal in Munich. But, he stood his ground

The White House informed Zelenskyy that he would not be allowed to meet Vice-President J D Vance if he didn't sign the deal


Updated: February 18, 2025 

The US tried to intimidate Ukraine into signing a mineral resources deal in exchange for aid at the Munich Security Conference, according to a report. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was told that he wouldn't be allowed to meet US Vice-President J D Vance if he didn't sign the deal.

However, Kyiv refused to bow to the pressure and was finally allowed to meet Vance, reported European Pravda.

The US blackmailing happened last week as Europe scrambled to respond to Vance's warning to European leaders. The US at that time was turning its attention towards pressuring Ukraine.

A meeting between J D Vance and Zelenskyy was to take place on Friday morning at the Commerzbank building designated for the American delegation. Though Vance was present and all arrangements made, the US suddenly informed everyone that the meeting was postponed. Many believed this was due to the delayed arrival of Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

However, the real reason was the high-stakes drama unfolding between Ukraine and the US.

The Ukrainian delegation was told by the White House to agree to US President Donald Trump's version of the mineral resources deal in exchange for aid. They would be allowed to meet Vance only if that pact was signed. The US delegation believed that the setbacks faced in Ukraine, including the current security situation, and the impending peace talks between Russia and the US would force Ukraine to toe the line. However, Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy said no, the report said.

Kyiv was apprehensive about signing the deal as the draft was given to them just two days ago. The Ukrainian side needed time to study the deal and its economic implications. Ukraine had submitted a revised version of the deal, which was rejected by the US.

After Zelenskyy said no, the US dropped its insistence. "The harshness and pressure from US negotiators vanished as if by magic. The demand to sign the agreement was quietly dropped, and the meeting with Vance went ahead as if nothing had happened," the report added.

It also quoted an official of the Ukrainian side, who said the meeting was quite successful as Vance aligned with the Ukrainian position on many issues. "We arrived in Munich feeling pessimistic. But after the conference, our optimism has definitely grown," one member of the Ukrainian delegation told European Pravda.



Talks on Ukraine Without Ukraine? Ukrainians React to Latest Peace Deal

After a week of intense talks on both sides of the Atlantic, Kyiv Post talks to Ukrainians in the capital about their feelings on a potential US-brokered peace deal and what it means for Ukraine.
TODAY

US President Donald Trump reached out to Russian President Vladimir Putin last week to discuss ending the war in Ukraine – without letting Kyiv know.

The administration of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly learned about the start of the talks between the US and Russia on social media, leading to serious concerns among partners about how far Trump is willing to negotiate on behalf of Ukraine without Ukraine’s input.

The call was the first time leaders from the two countries have spoken since the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, but appears to have been just the start of a growing diplomatic relationship between the two countries.

Later this week, high-level Trump and Putin officials will meet in Saudi Arabia to continue the negotiations. Kyiv has not been invited to these talks either.

How do Ukrainians feel about these rapid-fire developments towards a peace deal brokered by the US?

In our latest video, Kyiv Post’s Corrie Nieto asks residents in the capital what they think.



US-Ukraine Deal: Worse Than WWII Reparations?

World » UKRAINE | February 18, 2025, Tuesday //  NOVINITE

Bulgaria: US-Ukraine Deal: Worse Than WWII Reparations?











The United States attempted to pressure Ukraine into agreeing to a burdensome deal regarding its natural mineral resources, in exchange for continued military assistance, reports The Telegraph. The draft agreement proposed by the Trump administration stipulated that the U.S. would receive half of the revenue from resource extraction in Ukraine and have control over future licenses for mineral exploitation. The terms of the deal, which were compared to post-World War II reparations imposed on defeated aggressor states, were seen as highly advantageous to the U.S. and detrimental to Ukraine’s sovereignty.

The deal required Ukraine to grant the U.S. a significant stake in its rare-earth minerals, oil, gas, and other resources. However, it provided Ukraine with no security guarantees, leading President Zelensky to refuse signing the agreement. U.S. officials attempted to pressure Ukraine into agreeing by demanding that the deal be signed at the Munich Security Conference in February 2025. When Zelensky held firm, the U.S. backed off, allowing a meeting with U.S. Vice President JD Vance to proceed.

Despite the failure of the resource-sharing negotiations, the peace talks in Munich saw some unexpected progress. Vance aligned with Ukraine’s position on the need for a lasting peace, signaling that the U.S. might be more willing to consider Ukraine's long-term security needs. The outcome suggested that Ukraine could leverage growing European support in response to the tensions between the U.S. and Europe.

The draft agreement, which did not include financial aid or military assistance for Ukraine, was seen as heavily skewed in favor of private U.S. investors. Critics argued that the deal’s terms, such as the U.S. receiving 50% of revenues, would have placed Ukraine in a vulnerable position. The resource-sharing arrangement would have diverted significant economic benefits away from Ukraine, further exacerbating its struggles during the ongoing conflict.

Following Ukraine’s refusal to sign, discussions regarding the agreement have been put on hold. However, both sides agreed to continue working on a revised deal, with Ukraine still open to negotiating terms that would benefit its economy and security. The standoff highlighted the complexities of balancing national interests and international alliances in a volatile geopolitical landscape.

Sources:

  • The Telegraph
  • Ukrainska Pravda
  • European Pravda
  • Reuters

Elon Musk shares video from sanctioned

state media of Russian delegation’s arrival,

calls them ‘competent leadership’

, February 18, 2025
Source: Meduza

Trump advisor and billionaire Elon Musk commented on the arrival of Russian officials in Riyadh for preparatory talks on Ukraine.

“This is what competent leadership looks like,” Musk wrote on his social media platform X, attaching a video of the Russian delegation’s arrival, filmed by the state-run outlets RIA Novosti and VGTRK. Both RIA Novosti’s parent agency, Rossiya Segodnya, and VGTRK are under U.S. sanctions.

On February 17, members of the Russian delegation arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, to lay the groundwork for U.S.-Russia negotiations. Among them was Kirill Dmitriev, the head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, who has already held initial meetings with members of Trump’s team. Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and presidential aide Yuri Ushakov are also set to take part in the talks.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on February 17 that Kyiv was not aware of the negotiations in Saudi Arabia, would not participate, and would not recognize any of their outcomes.


OPINION: Trump is Selling Ukraine Down the River, and Europe With It

The Trump administration has forced us to face up to harsh new realities and their challenges for Ukraine, Europe and the world generally.

So far, from the Trump administration, it is a one-way stream of concessions to Russia.



By Timothy Ash
February 18, 2025, 
(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on February 17, 2025 shows L-R, US President Donald Trump and France’s President Emmanuel Macron in (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT and Yoan VALAT / various sources / AFP)

As many others have now concluded, a pretty remarkable Munich Security Conference. Indeed, this year’s MSC was perhaps as defining an event as was Putin’s last appearance back in 2007 which I think marked a shift in Russian policy towards the West in a malign direction. The result of that was the subsequent invasion of Georgia in 2008 followed then by his first invasion of Ukraine in 2014, and then the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Hegseth, Vance et al sent a clear message to Europe that it can no longer rely on the US security backstop. That penny, or dollar cent, dropped, but also with Vance’s speech, I think the euro cent also finally dropped that Europe does not share the same values nor interests as Trump’s USA.

Europe does not share the same values nor interests as Trump’s USA.

On the values front, Europe values much more the rule of law, the fight against corruption and kleptocracy, and we can debate free speech herein (Europe has limitations on race hate speech, perhaps a reflection of its own history with regards to the Holocaust, while in the US free speech also has limits when it comes to criticism over Gaza policy).

The longer-term conclusions for Europe have surely to be:a) Europe has to plan to be responsible for its own defense, ex the USA, so NATO is dead, and hence European countries will have to massively increase defense spending, from 2% of GDP, to 3% and perhaps on to 5%.
b) Europe might need to look for alternative alliances and security arrangements, defense cooperation, including perhaps with Turkey, the Gulf states, and even China - note given that the Trump - Putin bromance might be part of a “Reverse Nixonian”, i.e., a new U.S. - Russia alliance against China, pushed I think by likes of Dugin, Carlson, et al.

But building an alternative security/defense arrangement to save Europe will take time, and what to do with the near and present danger from Russia?

The assumption from Europe there has to be that Putin will not stop in Ukraine - surely prudence suggests Europe has to plan for the worst, so future Russian encroachments beyond Ukraine, into Moldova, the Baltics states, et al.


The Art (and Pitfalls) of a Ukraine Deal
Talks between the US and Russia have begun. But excluding Ukraine at any stage does not bode well for the security guarantees necessary to prevent Russian aggression in the future.


The best line of defense has to be to ensure Ukraine does not lose or still survives as a buffer for Europe to give it time to shore up its own defenses.

The challenge herein is Trump’s current peace overtures to Putin, and the looming Putin-Trump summit in Saudi Arabia. Having given away much of the leverage the West had over Putin (NATO membership, territorial concessions, and US security guarantees for Ukraine or for a Western peacekeeping force for Ukraine), it is hard to see what Trump can deliver which will now ensure Ukraine’s security.

What is Putin going to give as a concession? So far, from the Trump administration, it is a one-way stream of concessions to Russia.

So far, from the Trump administration, it is a one-way stream of concessions to Russia.


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Putin will surely see Trump as a soft touch, a weak, incompetent negotiator, and will push for maximum concessions from Ukraine, including limitations on its future military capability, regime change in Kyiv, or even constitutional changes in Ukraine to essentially ensure Russia’s veto on its future orientation.

That is a recipe for state failure in Ukraine. Herein either Russia will exploit the limitations on Ukraine’s future military capability to invade again, or the lack of security in Ukraine will ensure its failed future economic development, which will mean future economic, social and political weakness, again to be exploited by Putin.

The nightmare now for Europe is Ukraine’s state failure, which would mean tens of millions of Ukrainians refugees moving West (straining the political, social and economic fabric of Europe, further fueling the far right), and Russia subsuming Ukraine’s now enormous and effective military industrial complex. The combination of Russia and Ukraine’s military industrial complexes - first and second now in Europe - would be an absolutely existential threat to Europe.

No doubt European politicians have argued the above to Trump until they are blue in the face, but clearly, Trump has few cares.

He clearly just sees Ukraine, like Gaza, as a real estate asset, an asset to be leveraged, which was I think seen by the quite remarkable trip last week of Scott Bessant, US Treasury Secretary to Kyiv, armed with an agreement that Ukraine had to sign away half its natural resource wealth for a very vague future commitment of US support.


Actually, as far as Trump is concerned this is all just pay back for the hundreds of billions of dollars of US support already given to Ukraine following the full-scale invasion. Let Trump not let actual facts get in the way of his argument - given well established data suggests that US support has, as yet, been less than $100 billion. Pretty obscene that a country that has lost hundreds of thousands of people dead and injured in the defense of Western liberal market democracy is now being sent an invoice for the pleasure.

When faced with the likely Trump - Putin peace plan, which will likely involve no concessions to Ukraine, and particularly not on the most important point for Ukraine, its future security, I think Ukraine will be minded to walk away from any deal. Why would Ukraine accept any ceasefire that fails to provide any assurance as to its future security?


Why would Ukraine accept any ceasefire that fails to provide any assurance as to its future security?

Trump clearly wants a speedy deal - to secure his Nobel prize - then Ukraine likely will use its leverage while it has it and will play hard to get. It still has close 1 million troops on the battlefield, an ability to produce 40% of its own munitions, considerable munitions and financing (over $140 billion available to it) in reserves, and the prospect that Europe still has an incentive in ensuring it does not lose - as Europe knows it will be the next to feel the sharp end of a Russian bayonet. Europe will continue to fund Ukraine’s defense and hope to secure munitions to assist therein from wherever globally.

For Russia, the above means an extended war, little sanctions relief from Europe, at least, and the reality that while Trump is likely to step aside from supporting Ukraine, Russia still has to take the victory, on the battlefield. This still suggests years of war and sacrifice for Russia, and Russians. And the longer the war goes on, the weaker still Putin will look.

And the leverage Ukraine has will be in embarrassing the US, and Trump, as being wimps in the face of an aggressor, and of damaging US alliances, and trust in the US as a partner, for the bigger US battle for hegemony with China.

As is, Ukraine has little incentive to play ball with Trump’s sell out (down the river) peace plan.

The views expressed in this opinion article are the author’s and not necessarily those of Kyiv Post.

Reprinted from the author’s @tashecon blog. See the original here.


U.S.-Russia talks on Ukraine crisis omit key players: Ukraine and Europe

CGTN






U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio meets with Saudi Arabia Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, February 17, 2025. /VCG

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in Riyadh on Monday, with reports indicating that he will begin talks with Russian officials on the Ukraine crisis there on Tuesday, excluding key players in the conflict: Ukraine and Europe.

In addition to Rubio, U.S. Middle East Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz are expected to attend the talks. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Russian Presidential Assistant Yuri Ushakov will represent Russia in the negotiations.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced on Monday that Ukraine will not participate in the U.S.-Russia talks and will not accept any outcome that excludes Ukraine.

Currently in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Zelenskyy is set to visit Saudi Arabia soon. He clarified that his visit to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday "has no connection" to the U.S.-Russia talks, focusing instead on discussions to lower oil prices with Saudi Arabia. However, he noted that he would use the opportunity to learn about the progress of the U.S.-Russia negotiations through Saudi officials.

Concerned about being sidelined in the negotiations, Europe leaders have taken action.

French President Emmanuel Macron convened an emergency meeting in Paris on Monday, bringing together leaders from NATO, the European Commission, and key European countries, including France, Germany, Britain, Poland, Spain, Italy, Denmark, and the Netherlands, to coordinate a unified European response ahead of the Russian-U.S. talks.

Chen Yu, deputy director of the Eurasian Institute at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, told CMG that Europe considers Ukraine as a core interest. He noted that Europeans are worried that the current U.S.-Russia approach, bypassing Europe, could undermine European interests and lead to a peace solution that sacrifices concerns of Ukraine and Europe. Additionally, Europe fears this could result in further expansion of Russian influence in the West.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (L) meets with the President of the United Arab Emirates Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, February 17, 2025. /VCG

After the meeting, Macron spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Zelenskyy. He later tweeted that Europe seeks a "strong and lasting peace" for Ukraine, one that includes "strong and credible security guarantees" for the Ukrainian people.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz also reiterated Germany's ongoing support for Ukraine, rejecting the notion that Ukraine should accept "everything that is presented to it under any conditions." He emphasized the importance of unity between U.S. and European allies in safeguarding European security. "There must be no division of security and responsibility between Europe and the United States," Scholz stated. "NATO is based on the principle of always acting together and sharing the risks. This must not be called into question."

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, speaking outside the Ukraine summit in Paris, called the future of Ukraine an "existential" issue for Europe. He suggested that Britain may consider deploying forces to Ukraine if a lasting peace agreement is reached.

However, Chancellor Scholz dismissed the idea of European countries sending ground troops to Ukraine, calling it "totally premature." He did confirm that European nations are prepared to allocate "at least two percent" of their GDP to strengthen Europe's defense.

Chen explained that Europe is pushing to play a more prominent role in resolving the Russia-Ukraine conflict amid ongoing U.S.-Russia negotiations. However, there are significant divisions within Europe regarding security guarantees for Ukraine and the potential for troop deployment after a ceasefire.

He pointed out that any realistic peace settlement would likely address Ukraine's security concerns, which are central to the country's interests. If such a solution requires Europe to take on more responsibilities, Europe may be willing to do so, including engaging in discussions about troop deployment. However, he cautioned that the situation remains complex, with substantial differences in positions, requiring ongoing observation of how events unfold.

OPINION: The Art (and Pitfalls) of a Ukraine Deal

Talks between the US and Russia have begun. But excluding Ukraine at any stage does not bode well for the security guarantees necessary to prevent Russian aggression in the future.

By Lord Ashcroft
KYIV POST
February 18, 2025

This handout photograph taken and released by Ukrainian Presidential Press Service in Munich, Germany on Feb. 14, 2025 shows Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (3L) and US Vice President JD Vance (3R) talking on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference (MSC).
 (Photo by Handout / UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SERVICE / AFP)

As discussions on Ukraine’s future intensify, one recurring notion in diplomatic circles is that Donald Trump has set his sights on a Nobel Peace Prize by negotiating an end to the war. However, if he mishandles this delicate process, that prize will remain far beyond his reach. If his proposed deal leaves Ukraine vulnerable, fractures NATO, or emboldens further Russian aggression, his legacy will not be peace – it will be appeasement.

As my recent polling found, while most Ukrainians believe Trump’s election will mean a swifter end to the war, many also fear this will be on terms less favorable to Ukraine. The recent remarks by US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth do not inspire confidence. He stated unequivocally that a return to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders is off the table. Does this mean the United States is prepared to disregard the Belovezh Accords of 1991, which affirmed Ukraine’s sovereignty within internationally recognized borders?

More troublingly, it would mark yet another broken American commitment to Ukraine – following the Budapest Memorandum of 1994, which assured Ukraine’s security in exchange for surrendering the world’s second-largest nuclear arsenal. A failure to uphold these agreements sends a disastrous signal, not just to Russia but to potential aggressors worldwide.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has made it clear that no deal will be accepted without Ukraine’s involvement. He has also implied that the US can no longer be fully trusted to align with European interests in the region. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s top security envoy, recently echoed the necessity of Ukraine’s presence at the negotiating table – but was noticeably vague about European involvement. Excluding Europe from a settlement on European security would be a serious and costly mistake.


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If a peace deal is to have any legitimacy, it must satisfy several key conditions.
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The only real assurance of lasting peace for Ukraine is NATO membership.

First, it cannot leave Ukraine as an exposed buffer state, vulnerable to another Russian invasion in the coming years. A ceasefire that merely freezes the conflict without robust security guarantees would be a repeat of the failed Minsk agreements of 2014 and 2015, which Moscow systematically violated. The only real assurance of lasting peace for Ukraine is NATO membership. Anything short of that leaves the door open for further Russian aggression.

Secondly, any peace deal must consider the reality on the ground. Russia’s economy, despite Western sanctions, has been kept afloat by its ability to bypass restrictions – particularly through the sale of oil to India and other third parties. If Trump is serious about exerting pressure on Moscow, he must address these loopholes rather than force Ukraine into an unfavorable settlement. He must also understand that the very survival of Ukraine as a sovereign state depends on continued military and economic support.

Meanwhile, as these negotiations develop, Europe must step up. The continent has long relied on American military backing, but with Washington potentially shifting its stance, European nations must take responsibility for their own security. Trump has already made it clear that he expects Europe to contribute more to defense, and rightly so. Poland has led by example, committing 5% of its GDP to defense, while the Baltic states are set to reach this benchmark by next year. But others, including key Western European powers, have lagged behind. If Europe wants a real say in shaping Ukraine’s future and ensuring long-term stability on the continent, it must match its words with action.

The recent Munich Security Conference reflected these tensions. While European leaders expressed continued support for Ukraine, the reality is that decisive commitments on increased defense spending and military aid remain insufficient. In the meantime, senior figures from the Trump administration are reportedly in Saudi Arabia to engage in talks with Russian and Ukrainian negotiators. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff are expected to push for an agreement in the coming days.

We must reject the notion that a rushed, ill-conceived deal is the only path forward.

Zelensky, however, remains deeply skeptical of Putin’s intentions, and for good reason. Russia has shown time and again that it does not honor ceasefires or diplomatic agreements. The OSCE monitoring missions that oversaw previous ceasefire lines were ignored and rendered powerless in the face of Russian violations. So, the critical question remains: who will enforce any new ceasefire? Will there be peacekeeping troops on the ground? If so, which nations would be willing to send them? And what happens if – when – Russia violates the terms again?

These are fundamental concerns that must be addressed before any deal is signed. A flawed agreement that fails to ensure Ukraine’s security could lead to an internal crisis, possibly even civil unrest. The thousands of battle-hardened Ukrainian soldiers who have sacrificed so much will not accept a settlement that undermines their cause. Any agreement that leaves Russia with the capacity to strike again, or forces Ukraine into concessions that betray its sovereignty, will not bring peace—it will simply set the stage for the next war.

The stakes could not be higher. We must reject the notion that a rushed, ill-conceived deal is the only path forward. A just peace must be one that guarantees Ukraine’s long-term security, holds Russia accountable, and reinforces the strength of Western alliances. Anything less would be a betrayal of everything Ukraine has fought for – and would all but guarantee that history repeats itself.



Lord Ashcroft KCMG PC is an international businessman, philanthropist, author and pollster. For more information on his work, visit lordashcroft.com. Follow him on X/Facebook @LordAshcroft.

The views expressed in this opinion article are the author’s and not necessarily those of Kyiv Post.



Trump’s Ukraine Envoy ‘Clarifies’ What Europe’s Seat at the Table Means

“If you believe there are going to be thirty-three people sitting at the same table (…) in all probability, the answer is no, not at all,” Kellogg explained.


by Euractiv | February 18, 2025,
Keith Kellogg, National Security Advisor to US Vice President Mike Pence, speaks during a press briefing on September 22, 2020, in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)

European views will be taken into account and Ukraine will not be pressured into a deal, the US envoy for Ukraine and Russia told a group of reporters at NATO HQ.

Keith Kellogg’s two-day visit to Brussels comes amid growing unease among European allies that a future Ukraine peace deal would be struck over their and Kyiv’s heads, as neither of them is expected to participate in the US-Russia talks in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, tomorrow.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said over the weekend that Kyiv would not agree to a deal that would be detrimental to his country or that resulted from negotiations in which he didn’t participate.


Kellogg said “nobody” would impose decisions on Zelenskyy as the “elected leader of a sovereign nation” and the decision about striking a deal would ultimately be the Ukrainians’.

Trump’s Ukraine envoy is expected to travel to Kyiv tomorrow night for a three-day visit, where he is scheduled to meet with the Ukrainian leader. He will then return to Washington and continue a tour of NATO capitals in the next few weeks.

At the table

Asked by Euractiv about his comments made on stage in Munich that “Europeans would not be at the table,” Kellogg clarified that this would not mean European concerns would not be taken into account.

“If you believe there are going to be thirty-three people sitting at the same table – exactly the same table – during the discussion, in all probability, the answer is no, not at all,” Kellogg said.


Trump is Selling Ukraine Down the River, and Europe With It
The Trump administration has forced us to face up to harsh new realities and their challenges for Ukraine, Europe and the world generally.

“If ‘at the table’ means that your views are heard, understood, transmitted, the answer is absolutely,” he said.

Washington sent a questionnaire to European capitals earlier last week to determine what resources they would be ready to contribute to a possible future peacekeeping force.

“Before any type of discussion and security guarantees is finalized, of course, those discussions are going to take place,” Kellogg said.

“Answers to those questions will be determined as you come up with the final process,” he added, throwing the ball back to the Europeans’ court.

Status concerns

Kellogg’s absence from the US negotiating team travelling to Riyadh raised questions over his leverage on Trump’s efforts to draw up a peace proposal – and how European input will find its way into them.

Responding to concerns about his status in the process, Kellogg said, “That doesn’t mean that the team is not fully synced.”

“They are going to come out of the Middle East, I will come out of Ukraine – we will go back to being synched up,” he said, adding he had a joint conference call with the negotiating team over the phone after Munich.

The team includes Secretary of State Marco Rubio, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz and Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.

See the original report for Euractiv by Alexandra Brzozowski here.


China snow village apologises for fake cotton snow



Fake snow at the Chengdu Snow Village.
PHOTO: Sina Weibo

REUTERS
February 17, 2025 

HONG KONG — A tourist village in China's southwestern province of Sichuan famed for its scenic snow landscape said it was sorry for using cotton wool and soapy water to create fake snow after online criticism from visitors went viral.

In a post on its official Wechat account on Feb 8, the Chengdu Snow Village project said during the Lunar New Year holiday at the end of January, the weather was warm and the snow village did not take shape as anticipated.

China is facing hotter and longer heat waves and more frequent and unpredictable heavy rain as a result of climate change, the country's weather bureau has warned.


"In order to create a snowy atmosphere the tourist village purchased cotton for the snow...but it did not achieve the expected effect, leaving a very bad impression on tourists who came to visit," the Chengdu Snow Village project said in the statement.

After receiving feedback from the majority of netizens, the tourist area began to clean up all the snow cotton.

The village said it "deeply apologises" for the changes and that tourists could get a refund. The site has since been closed.

Photos on Wechat showed large cotton wool sheets strewn about the grounds, only partially covering leafy areas. A thick snow layer appeared to blanket the houses in the zone but as you got closer, it was all cotton, said one netizen.

"A snow village without snow," said another user.


"In today's age of well-developed Internet, scenic spots must advertise truthfully and avoid deception or false advertising, otherwise they will only shoot themselves in the foot."
BBC’s headquarters targeted by Palestine Action Group

Group targets corporation for second time

Ilayda Cakirtekin |18.02.2025 - TRT/AA




ISTANBUL

The BBC’s London headquarters were splashed with red paint Monday by the Palestine Action Group.

The group said that they also broke windows to protest the “BBC’s ongoing complicity in the genocide of Palestinians through its entrenched pro-Israel bias.”


“The BBC’s biased reporting isn’t a simple case of poor journalism – it’s a matter of life and death. By downplaying Israeli war crimes, the BBC is complicit in the genocide unfolding in Gaza,” said Palestine Action.

It pointed to the media’s role in fostering global complicity, adding the BBC had blood on its hands.

It noted that the latest action was a key part of a larger effort to hold them responsible.

“We will not stand by as the BBC sanitizes genocide,” the group added.

The BBC’s headquarters had been sprayed with red paint by the group back in 2023 in protest against its ongoing reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, attracting criticism for not being sufficiently balanced.

Despite promising climate research, ‘wolves won’t be back in Scotland anytime soon’ say experts


Copyright Daniel Allen/ Rewilding Europe/

By Jen Marsden
Published on 18/02/2025 -

Could reintroducing wolves be a viable solution to address the climate crisis? Rewilding experts aren’t convinced.

Reintroducing wolves to Scotland could help native woodland to expand and combat climate change, a new study by researchers at the University of Leeds concludes.

Central Europe has already seen several environmental success stories as wolf populations have “naturally recovered” without a formal reintroduction.

Wolves roamed freely around Britain for many centuries, as chronicled by Roman and later Saxon writers, but were hunted to extinction in Scotland around 250 years ago.

Despite this first-of-a-kind study, local rewilding charities in the UK are dubious that wolves are the best approach to mitigate carbon emissions, particularly with concerns over human conflict and the coexistence of predators and prey.

Richard Bunting, a spokesperson for UK rewilding charities Trees for Life and Rewilding Britain, says that the new study is “much-needed research”, particularly when looking at the “significant positive impact on woodland expansion and carbon storage”.

But, he adds, “substantial stakeholder and public engagement would be essential before any wolf reintroduction could be considered.”
Wolves would help expand native woodland by managing red deer populations

The recent University of Leeds study used a predator-prey model to determine the impact of reintroducing wolves to four areas classed as “Scottish Wild Land” in the Cairngorms and the Scottish Highlands. In these areas red deer eat tree saplings and, in turn, suppress the natural regeneration of woodland.

It’s the first time such a study, which was published in the journal Ecological Solutions and Evidence, has looked at how reintroducing wolves impacts woodland expansion and carbon storage in the UK.

Even with local management measurements, red deer in Scotland have flourished in the last century without any natural predators to keep their numbers in check. The current population is estimated to be around 400,000.

A majestic red deer in the Scottish Highlands
Canva/Suman Shafi

This has led to a long-term decline and loss of native woodland - just 4 per cent of Scotland is covered, which is one of the lowest figures in Europe.

The team found that the wolf population would naturally grow to 167 wolves, which in turn could control red deer populations to a level that would allow trees to regenerate naturally.


This would allow native woodland to expand to an area that could capture one million metric tonnes of CO2 each year. Storing this much carbon would meet about 5 per cent of the British woodland carbon removal target, recommended by the UK’s Climate Change Committee as necessary to reach net zero by 2050.

Based on the research team’s model, each wolf would be responsible for an annual carbon uptake capability of 6,080 metric tonnes of CO2, meaning under current carbon valuations, each wolf would be worth £154,000 (€185,231).
Climate and nature recovery go hand-in-hand says expert

The lead author of the report, Professor Dominick Spracklen from the University of Leeds' School of Earth and Environment, highlighted that “the climate and biodiversity crises cannot be managed in isolation.”

"We need to look at the potential role of natural processes such as the reintroduction of species to recover our degraded ecosystems and these in turn can deliver co-benefits for climate and nature recovery."

The study also mentions other benefits to reintroducing wolves, such as fewer deer-related traffic collisions, reducing the cost of deer culls, and less risk of Lyme disease.
RelatedOne surprising benefit of recovering wolf populations in Europe is ecotourism. Spain now has a thriving wolf-watching tourism industry and accounts for 46 per cent of overnight stays in the mountain range of Sierra de la Culebra. There is also potential for this to happen in Scotland.

Europe has seen a dramatic wolf recovery in the last decade

Once the top predator species in Europe, wolves were hunted and persecuted to extinction in Western Europe. Small populations remained in areas of Italy, Poland, and Bulgaria.

Despite this Europe has seen a huge increase in its wolf population in recent years. This is not due to any official reintroduction, but rather a ‘natural recovery’, says Rewilding Europe.

In the 1990s, wolf hunting was banned in Poland. The native wolf population has grown over the last few decades, spreading west to areas of Germany and even the Netherlands, Denmark, and France.

The total wolf population is now increasing across Western Europe by about 25 per cent each year and is thought to exceed 12,000, occupying 67 per cent of their historical territory.

A pack of four European wolves playing in grass
Canva/AlanJeffery

With more public acceptance of the predators, European legislation has also grown to protect them against poaching and exploitation. In a recent survey of 10,000 Europeans, 68 per cent of Europeans said that wolves should be strictly protected and 72 per cent agreed that they have a right to co-exist.

In addition to red deer, wolves also prey on roe deer, and to a lesser extent, wild boar and beavers.

A field of sheep in Spain
Canva/schnurzipurz

However, while there are concerns that they prey on livestock in some situations, a 2018 study suggested that wolves kill around 31,000 livestock in Europe each year, mostly in areas where the availability of natural prey is low. EU data shows that wolves kill only about 50,000 of Europe's 68 million sheep and goats each year.
Wolves may not be the most suitable species for reintroduction to Scotland

The idea to reintroduce wolves to the Scottish Highlands first began in the late 1960s. It gained wider publicity after the successful reintroduction of both red wolf and grey wolf species into North American national parks in the late 1980s to mid-1990s.

However, most discussions around reintroducing apex predators to Scotland – and particularly wolves – come with many objections within rural communities, particularly from estate gamekeepers, livestock farmers, and deer stalkers.

There have also been concerns that wolves pose a danger to humans, yet in Europe, there have been just 11 non-fatal attacks during a period of 18 years. This is low in comparison to the 221 recorded cattle-related fatalities in Europe between 2000 and 2015, according to a study published in the Wilderness and Environmental Medicine journal.

A report by the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research suggests that the risks associated with a wolf attacking a human are "above zero, but far too low to calculate".

Lee Schofield, a co-author of the study, added, "Human-wildlife conflicts involving carnivores are common and must be addressed through public policies that account for people's attitudes for a reintroduction to be successful."
Related


Rewilding supporters are also dubious about a formal reintroduction of wolves to Britain. Trees for Life and Rewilding Britain spokesperson Richard Bunting says, “Wolves could undoubtedly thrive in Scotland, which is one of a handful of European countries still lacking a large terrestrial mammal predator. But wolves won't be back anytime soon because first, we need to learn how to coexist with these animals again.”


Adult female European lynx walking through woodland in Norway Scotland bigpicture.com

Rather than focusing on wolves, Bunting suggests a less controversial apex predator, the reintroduction of the Eurasian lynx, which is being supported by the Lynx to Scotland project.

“A carefully managed lynx reintroduction – another ‘keystone species’ vital for maintaining healthy living systems – is increasingly doable.

“This would make Scotland’s natural world richer and stronger, providing wider benefits for nature restoration, climate resilience and economic prosperity. It would be a huge win for Scotland in the fight against extinction and be hugely popular.”
Trump’s Tales About Me Are Fishy, Says the Delta Smelt

Scapegoated for the L.A. Wildfires, this Bay Area Species Urges Americans to Fight Back on Behalf of Small Fry Everywhere
February 18, 2025
ZOCALO THE PUBLIC SQUARE

It's me, the delta smelt. Donald Trump made me Public Enemy No. 1 with his awful lies, so I'm setting the record straight. 
| Courtesy of Wikimedia.


Do not tell fish stories where the people know you; but particularly, don’t tell them where they know the fish. —Mark Twain

I’m just a little fish, not even three inches long.

But my story speaks volumes.

Which may be why the biggest fish in America is gunning for me.

In the early days of his second term, Donald Trump made me Public Enemy No. 1 taking more shots at me than at Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping. He called me a “worthless fish” on Truth Social. And he blamed me for every bad thing that’s happened in California this year, with the notable exception of Bianca Censori’s Grammys dress.

Worst of all, he pinned responsibility on me, little old me, for January’s Los Angeles fires. I’m not sure I follow his argument, but I gather that I somehow stopped water imports to Southern California, keeping reservoirs and fire hydrants dry. The president also used me as justification for his crazy decision to unleash abrupt and massive releases of water stored in two lakes in the Sierra foothills.

That move wasted water that California farmers will need this summer. I consider the state lucky that no one was killed in Porterville or Tulare County by this Trump-ordered flood. Those deaths surely would have been my fault too.

I haven’t responded to any of this, because what can I say that would change anyone’s mind? Trump keeps repeating his fish stories about me, even though all the Californians who know me have publicly called them lies.

It also hasn’t mattered to Trump that I have one whale of an alibi when it comes to the L.A. fires:

I’ve never been to Los Angeles!

Heck, I’ve never even made it down to the Monterey Bay Aquarium. I’m a fish that can live only in the California Delta, that convergence of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers with the San Francisco Bay Estuary. So, rest assured, I couldn’t have started the Palisades or Eaton fires, or—to get ahead of the conspiracists—framed Roger Rabbit or killed the Black Dahlia.

I’m one of those things that can only be found in Northern California, like good sourdough.

Take it from me. This is a moment to stop blaming, and to start fighting as if your very existence were at stake.

For the record, let me say that I’ve never met Gov. Gavin Newsom, much less convinced him or the State Water Board to keep more water in the Delta to protect me. The truth, if anyone still cares about that, is that Newsom and the state government and just about everyone in California wrote me off long ago.

To be sure, I am very low on the food chain—I eat planktonic copepods and then bigger fish eat me—but still, I deserved better.

Let me take you to school to learn the ABCs of me. I, Hypomesus transpacificus (delta smelt is a nickname), used to be ubiquitous in my particular part of California. And I was considered pretty resilient—able to tolerate the varied salinity of the Delta, where the salty bay and rivers’ freshwater mingle.

But by the mid-20th century, my numbers went into steep decline. There were many culprits: disease; invasive species like clams and mussels; and greater pumping of Delta water to supply California cities and farms, especially in droughts, that impacted the flows of the fresh, cold water that is my lifeblood. By 1993, I was labeled a “threatened” species, in hopes that it would save me, but conditions got worse. By 2009, I officially became endangered.

That designation can sometimes inspire humans to save a species. The yellow-legged frog is making a comeback up in lakes and streams of the Sierra with human assistance. But I haven’t enjoyed that kind of support. California’s agricultural interests made me their bogey-fish, blaming me when the state government, in dry years, cut water imports from the Delta for farmers. Trump, parroting this pastoral propaganda, tried to kill me off during his first term, but the state beat him back in the courts.

The lies about my awfulness may well continue beyond my actual existence. Today, I’m extinct in the wild. For years, scientists have been searching for me in the Delta, but they can’t find me—in the same way that years of investigation haven’t turned up any evidence that the 2020 election was stolen.

More bad news: The delta smelt captive breeding program (which is even less sexy than it sounds), housed at UC Davis, has struggled to produce more of me—and may soon be dead. The Trump administration just pulled federal funding, as retribution for my supposed plot to burn down Los Angeles.

One last thing to know about me: Scientists often called me “an indicator species,” meaning that my health is a pretty good proxy for the health of the Delta ecosystem. I’m afraid that I also might represent how the vulnerable are going to be treated in this new America.

These days, politicians all say they are for the little fish, but when the water is fouled, they are quick to blame trans people, civil servants, children whose parents aren’t citizens, and anyone else too small and unpopular to fight back.

Scapegoating me, or any living thing, doesn’t solve our real problems—it just spreads the cruelty in our own ecosystems. “When we judge, we are always in a psychic space which is circular,” warned the late French philosopher and Stanford professor Rene Girard, who wrote about the human tendency to scapegoat.

Take it from me. This is a moment to stop blaming, and to start fighting as if your very existence were at stake.

I’d join you, but I lack the size and legal authority to fight humans and governments.

What’s your excuse?

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square and is founder-columnist of Democracy Local, a planetary publication.

ISLAM  HOMOPHOBIA


First openly gay Imam shot dead in South Africa


Issued on: 18/02/2025 - 
Video by: FRANCE 24

A man regarded as the first openly gay Muslim imam has been fatally shot while sitting in a car in South Africa in what many are calling an assassination because of his teachings. Muhsin Hendricks was ambushed by two men in a pick-up truck while visiting the southern city of Gqeberha on Saturday

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Germans protest military aid, arm supplies to Ukraine

Issued on: 18/02/2025 - 

Video by: FRANCE 24

The peace movement in Berlin has taken to the streets a few days before the general election. For three years, these activists have been denouncing the German government's arms supplies and support to Ukraine.

Video news


The German election explained through seven essential questions

THE CONVERSATION
Published: February 18, 2025 

The CDU’s Friedrich Merz is the most likely candidate for chancellor. EPA/Filip Singer


Germany is holding a federal election on February 23 – a snap vote called by chancellor Olaf Scholz when his coalition government fell apart at the end of last year. Parties are running to win seats in the national parliament, or Bundestag. And with an unusual level of interest from onlookers outside the country, including the world’s richest man, The Conversation asked Gabriele Abels, the Jean Monnet professor for comparative politics and European integration at the University of Tübingen, to prime us on the basics, via seven essential questions.

1. Who are the main parties running in this election?

The parties standing in the federal election are, from left to right on the political spectrum: Linke (the Left), SPD (social democrats), Greens, FPD (liberals), CDU/CSU (conservatives), AfD (right-wing extremist/populist).

There is also the Buednis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW), but this party is not so easy to fit into the left-right spectrum. The BSW holds leftist positions on social policy issues but is also anti-migration and opposed to sanctions against Russia and against military support for Ukraine.

2. When will we know the results?

It will take several days after February 23 to confirm the final results of the election.

Based on the exit polls we will have fairly reliable results that evening but there may still be some uncertainty. It depends on how many people vote by post (a trend which is on the rise) and on how the smaller parties fare.

There are three such parties – Linke, FDP and BSW – hovering around a 5% vote-share in pre-election polls. This is the threshold for qualifying for any seats in parliament at all, so whether or not the three make it past 5% will have quite an effect on the overall composition of the Bundestag and the distribution of seats among the parties in parliament.

There is an additional rule: parties winning at least three districts (basic mandate clause) qualify for the Bundestag and will get seats according to their share of party votes. The Linke is investing its hopes in this option.

3. Who is most likely to become chancellor?


According to all opinion polls, the conservatives (CDU/CSU) will win the election and become the biggest party in government. This means that their lead candidate Friedrich Merz will become the next chancellor.

4. Will one party run the government?

No party will have enough seats to form a government alone, given that the German system makes it extremely difficult to do so, by design. A coalition needs to be formed comprising parties that together hold more than 50% of the seats in the Bundestag.


Even when we have the full results, forming a new government will, most likely, take some time. Talks between parties will start immediately after the election, but it might take several months to put a government together. It depends on the numbers at play and the political arithmetic – essentially the extent to which different combinations of parties agree or disagree on various policy positions.

Governments are formed of multiple parties in Germany. 
EPA/Hannibal Hanschke

During a period in the 1950s, when Konrad Adenauer was chancellor, there was an option to have a single-party government. But even he preferred a coalition. Other than that, there has always been the need to form a coalition after an election.

Unlike the Nordic countries, we in Germany do not have a tradition of minority governments since they are considered to be too weak and unstable. Germans prefer governments which are backed by a clear majority in the Bundestag.

5. Why does Germany have a system that makes coalitions the norm?

It is partly political culture to prefer stable majorities and emphasise compromise. But the proportional voting system and increased political fracturing also play a part in delivering many different parties into the Bundestag.

Until the early 1980s there were usually three parties (conservative, social democrats and liberals). Today, we have seven parties in the Bundestag. Proportional voting gives new parties more possibilities to win seats, while the 5% threshold is a barrier against excessive fragmentation.

6. We hear a lot about the AfD – but will it be in government?


No – at least, not this time. There is what we call a brandmauer (firewall), meaning that, so far, none of the other parties is willing to form a government with the AfD. The most likely partner would be the conservatives. Yet, their lead candidate Merz is very outspoken that cooperation with the AfD would mean selling out the conservative soul. Given that the AfD is becoming more and more radical, this is not likely to change in the near future.

AfD co-leader Alice Weidel. EPA

However, there is already a level of cooperation between the AfD and other parties at the local level and even in some state parliaments, especially in East German Länder (states). Often, new patterns of coalition formation are tried out in Länder parliaments and later serve as models for the federal level. The AfD is hoping this will be the case for them.

7. How important is this election in historical context?


I would not call this election historic on the scale of the one that just took place in the US. But this election is nevertheless important – and is perceived as important by voters in terms of the future of Germany and its economy.

Migration and the economy are the top issues and there is a strong sense of frustration as well as a growing distrust in politics. The majority of voters are happy about the snap election given that the coalition led by Olaf Scholz was no longer efficient and there was constant in-fighting.

However, given that this election has been called at short notice, it’s not clear that turnout will match the current strength of feeling. There has not been much time to register for a postal vote and parties have had only a brief campaign window to win over voters. Which of them will be able to mobilise their voters and also non-voters (recently between 25% and 30% of the electorate will be a crucial deciding factor. Lately the AfD has been successful in terms of mobilising non-voters and also at mobilising young voters. That said, older voters make up the majority, so a lot hangs in the balance.


Author
Gabriele Abels
Jean Monnet Professor for Comparative Politics & European Integration, University of Tübingen


Indonesian students take to the streets against Prabowo's policies

The rallies, coordinated by the All-Indonesia Association of University Student Executive Bodies, oppose cuts in education, repressive policies and the management of the Danantara sovereign wealth fund. The hashtag #IndonesiaGelap went viral on social media, a sign of mounting dissatisfaction. In Surabaya, young people clash with police
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Jakarta (AsiaNews) – Dissatisfaction with Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto's new policies has turned into street demonstrations by thousands of students.

The protests, coordinated by the All-Indonesia Association of University Student Executive Bodies (BEM SI), are accompanied by the hashtag #IndonesiaGelap (Dark Indonesia) vs "Indonesia Emas" (Golden Indonesia) promoted by the president.

In a few hours, the slogan has amassed over 785,000 posts on X. In Surabaya, East Java, a rally turned violent when students clashed with police.

The demonstration, which began yesterday, is expected to last three days. The protest is also trending on social media with images of the national coat of arms, the Garuda against a black background emblazoned symbolising what is happening in the country.

Mem appeared on social media already last year, mocking the expression, with sarcastic alternatives such as "Indonesia Cemas" (anxious Indonesia) or "Indonesia Lemas" (weakened Indonesia).

“Our nation's policies are growing increasingly repressive and harmful to the people,” the BEM SI said in a circular.

The student group is demanding transparency in the free nutritious meal programme (one of Prabowo’s main proposals), it opposes the revised Mining Law, rejects the so-called dual-function policy for the military (embedded in positions of political governance).

Protesters oppose recent budget cuts from the public administration and the education sector in favour of Prabowo administration's flagship programs, including the Danantara sovereign wealth fund, which is expected to manage more than US$ 900 billion for investments in renewable energy, advanced manufacturing and agriculture.

However, many Indonesians fear that these measures could further penalise public services and the weakest sections of the population.


Trump-Musk administration halts Agent Orange clean-up and UXO clearing in Vietnam 

February 18, 2025 


A warning sign stands in a field contaminated with dioxin near Danang airport, a former U.S. military base in Vietnam. The sign reads: 'Dioxin contamination zone - livestock, poultry and fishery operations not permitted.' | Maika Elan / A
P

HANOI—Quang Tri Province in central Vietnam is urgently appealing to the United States Embassy to restore funding for Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) and Agent Orange cleanup projects. These critical initiatives have been significantly impacted by funding cuts implemented by the Trump-Musk administration.

Since taking office, the Trump-Musk regime has drastically reduced foreign aid projects, with the exception of those that support Israel’s wars in the Middle East. This blanket reduction in aid included the cessation of U.S. support for vital projects aimed at addressing the devastating and lasting effects of the Vietnam War, specifically UXO clearance and Agent Orange environmental clean-up.

During the Vietnam War, from 1965 to 1973, the U.S. military conducted one of the most extensive aerial bombardment campaigns in history, dropping approximately 7.5 million tons of bombs on Vietnam. This staggering total amounts to three times the tonnage used in World War II. The munitions dropped included a wide array of deadly weapons such as conventional bombs, aerial mines, cluster bombs, white phosphorus, and napalm. Approximately 30% of these bombs failed to detonate, leaving large swathes of land contaminated with unexploded ordnance.

As of 2025, it is estimated that 20% of Vietnam’s land is still contaminated by UXO. These remnants continue to pose a severe threat to local communities, hindering development and endangering lives. Since 1975, approximately 100,000 Vietnamese have been killed or injured by UXO, with 40% of these victims being children who often encounter these deadly munitions while playing outdoors or assisting their families in farming activities.

From 1961 to 1971, the U.S. military also conducted extensive chemical warfare operations under Operation Ranch Hand, spraying more than 20 million gallons of herbicides over Vietnam, including 12 million gallons of Agent Orange. This toxic defoliant contained dioxin, a highly carcinogenic compound that contaminates soil, water, and the food chain. Nearly five million Vietnamese were directly exposed to these chemicals, and the effects continue to be felt across generations. Today, Vietnam is witnessing the health consequences of dioxin exposure among second and third generations of victims, including congenital disabilities, cancers, and other chronic illnesses.

Quang Tri Province is one of the most heavily affected areas in the country. The province has suffered significantly from both large-scale UXO contamination and the long-term environmental and health effects of Agent Orange. Since the end of the war, nearly 10,000 people in Quang Tri have been killed or injured in UXO accidents. Tens of thousands of tons of unexploded munitions remain buried beneath the ground, posing an ongoing danger to the local population.

Clearing UXO and remediating Agent Orange contamination is an expensive and complex task. Vietnam, as a developing country, lacks the financial and technical resources needed to complete this work independently.

After the 1996 normalization of relations between Vietnam and the United States, the U.S. government committed to assisting in cleaning up the remnants of the war it waged on this country. This included efforts to clear UXO, address environmental contamination from Agent Orange, and provide technical support for decontamination efforts. However, the U.S. has historically failed to provide adequate assistance for the human victims of Agent Orange exposure.

Quang Tri Province has been at the center of these cleanup efforts, with collaboration between local authorities and international organizations, including the Mines Advisory Group (MAG), Project RENEW, and Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA). These groups have worked tirelessly to make land safe for agricultural use and to educate communities about the dangers of UXO.

The recent freeze in foreign aid funding has forced thousands of specially trained workers—both Vietnamese and foreign—to abandon this critical work due to a lack of resources. The funding cuts have jeopardized years of progress, leaving contaminated areas unaddressed and communities vulnerable to further casualties.

The United States cannot ignore its legal, historical, and ethical responsibilities to address the consequences of its actions in Vietnam. The Vietnam War was an unprovoked conflict, and its aftermath remains a lasting tragedy.

It is imperative that the U.S. restores funding for UXO and Agent Orange cleanup projects to uphold its commitment to ensuring the safety, health, and well-being of those affected by the war. This renewed support would help prevent further deaths and injuries, promote economic development, and demonstrate a genuine commitment to reconciliation and justice.

We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!

CONTRIBUTOR

Amiad Horowitz
 lives in Hanoi, Vietnam. He studied at the Academy of Journalism and Communications at the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics with a specific focus on Vietnam and Ho Chi Minh.


Vietnam paves way for Musk's Starlink, seen as "olive branch" amid US tariff threats
FILE PHOTO: A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off carrying 53 Starlink internet satellites, from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. May 18, 2022. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo

 Feb 18, 2025, 

HANOI - Vietnam plans to adopt rules that would allow Elon Musk's Starlink to provide satellite internet services in the country while maintaining full ownership of any local subsidiary, a draft of the regulations shows.

The change paves the way for Starlink to launch in Vietnam and follows protracted talks with its parent company SpaceX, a government official said.

It represents a sudden shift in stance and can be seen as "an olive branch" to SpaceX amid nervousness in Vietnam about tariff threats from U.S. President Donald Trump, according to a person familiar with the matter.

It's a "demonstration from the Vietnamese side that they can play the transactional diplomacy game if the Trump administration wants that," said the person.

All sources declined to be identified so they could speak more freely.

Attempts by SpaceX to enter Vietnam - a market of nearly 100 million people - were put on hold in late 2023 after the Communist-run country declined to lift a ban on foreign control of satellite internet providers - a precondition for Musk, who is now a key adviser to Trump.

The draft rules, set to be adopted by parliament in an extraordinary sitting on Wednesday, allow for full foreign control of operations for internet providers who have a network of low-orbit satellites, under a pilot scheme that would run until the end of 2030.


The provision is included in a 12-page resolution that seeks "to remove obstacles in scientific, technological and innovation activities". Projects submitted under the pilot scheme would require the approval of Vietnam's prime minister.

SpaceX and Vietnam's information ministry did not reply to requests for comment.

SpaceX has been expanding its network of suppliers in Vietnam. The Vietnamese government has said the company wants to invest $1.5 billion in the country.

If many Vietnamese firms and individuals were to subscribe to Starlink that could help trim the large surplus in goods and services that the country has with the United States, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions.

Its surplus last year hit a record high of $123.5 billion, the fourth biggest among U.S. partners, according to U.S. data.

Trump last Thursday directed his team to devise reciprocal tariffs on every country that taxes U.S. imports by April 1 and his aides have said countries with large imbalances will be closely scrutinised.

U.S. duties have the potential to seriously disrupt Vietnam's export-reliant economy, which counts the U.S. as its main market. Vietnam hosts many China-based manufacturers which have invested heavily in the Southeast Asian country after Trump's first administration imposed tariffs on China in 2018.

To narrow its surplus with the U.S., Vietnam has also separately offered to import more U.S. agricultural products, and is discussing other possible imports. REUTERS
Egypt announces first discovery of a royal tomb since King Tutankhamun's was found over a century ago


By Ahmed Shawkat
February 18, 2025 
CBS News

Egyptian officials announced Tuesday the discovery of the tomb of King Thutmose II, the last of the lost tombs of the kings of ancient Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty, which reigned for over two centuries between about 1550 BC and 1292 BC. It's the first royal Egyptian tomb to be discovered since King Tutankhamun's final resting place was found in 1922.

A joint Egyptian-British archaeological mission discovered Thutmose II's tomb in the mount of Thebes area, west of Luxor and the renowned Valley of the Kings. The team and the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, which made the announcement, said evidence was discovered that clearly indicates it was King Thutmose II's tomb during excavations of what had previously been known only as tomb No. C4.

The entrance and main passage into the structure were discovered in 2022, and internal excavations have continued meticulously since then.

Dr. Mohamed Ismail Khaled, Secretary-General of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, said when the mission first found the entrance to the tomb and its main passage almost three years ago, the team believed it could belong to one of the wives of the kings, given its proximity to the tomb of the wives of King Thutmose III and its proximity to the tomb of Queen Hatshepsut, which was prepared for her as a royal wife before she became ruler of the ancient kingdom. She ended up being buried in the Valley of the Kings, due to her ascent to the throne
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Evidence of New Female Pharaoh11 PHOTOS

As the excavation work and examination of artifacts continued, the mission found new evidence that identified the owner of the mysterious tomb as King Thutmose II, suggesting also that his burial rites were carried out by Queen Hatshepsut, who was his wife and half-sister.


Khaled said parts of alabaster vessels found in the ruins have inscriptions bearing the name of King Thutmose II and identifying him as the "deceased king," along with the name of his wife, Hatshepsut, all of which he said had helped to confirm Thutmose II as the owner of the tomb.

He described the discovery as one of the most important archaeological finds in recent years. The artifacts discovered are important additions to the body of knowledge around the history of the area and the reign of King Thutmose II.

The mummy of King Thutmose II, who ruled during the Eighteenth Dynasty of ancient Egypt, is seen on display in a file photo provided by the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF EGYPTIAN CIVILIZATION

The mummy of King Thutmose II was discovered during the 19th century, not far away at another archaeological site known as the Deir el-Bahari Cachette, to which the it was likely moved centuries after being looted by tomb raiders, according to the relatively new National Museum of Egyptian Civilization. His mummy is now on display, among those of other ancient royals, at the museum.

The tomb is in a poor state of preservation due largely to exposure to floods shortly after Thutmose II's death, according to Mohamed Abdel Badie, Head of the Egyptian Antiquities Sector at the Supreme Council of Antiquities and Head of the Egyptian team that has worked on the dig. Abdel Badie said initial studies also indicate much of the original contents of the tomb were moved to another location after the ancient floods.


He said the teams had discovered mortar in the tomb with remnants of blue inscriptions and yellow stars, and some paragraphs from the book of "Imydwat," which is one of the most important funerary books found in ancient Egyptian tombs, written to help guide the late royals through their underworld journey.

Photos shared by the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities on Feb. 18, 2025, show the inside of a tomb discovered in the mount of Thebes area, west of Luxor and the renowned Valley of the Kings, determined to have belonged to King Thutmose II, who ruled during ancient Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty.
EGYPTIAN MINISTRY OF TOURISM AND ANTIQUITIES

Dr. Piers Litherland, head of the English team at the site, said the tomb is characterized by a simple architectural design typical of those chosen by the successive rulers of Egypt who came after Thutmose II.

Litherland said the mission would continue its survey work and try to determine where the rest of the contents from Thutmose II's tomb were relocated to, and to uncover any further secrets that may have been locked beneath the earth for millennia.


Archaeologists push to restore Syria’s war-torn heritage sites, including Palmyra

Some of Syria’s most renowned heritage sites coud soon undergo restoration as experts return to the sites decimated by nearly 14 years of war. Conservationists hope the historical and cultural significance of once-thriving landmarks such as the ancient city of Palmyra will help to draw international visitors and boost the country’s ailing economy.


Issued on: 18/02/2025 -
By:  FRANCE 24

01:32
The remaining standing columns at the Baths of Zenobia at Palmyra in central Syria on February 7, 2025. Palmyra is on the UNESCO elite list of world heritage sites that sustained damage throughout the 13-year civil war. © Omar Haj Kadour, AFP



Experts are returning to Syria’s war-ravaged heritage sites, hoping to lay the groundwork for restoring them and reviving tourism, which they say could provide a much-needed boost to the country’s decimated economy after nearly 14 years of war.

Once-thriving landmarks like the ancient city of Palmyra and the medieval Crusader castle of Crac des Chevaliers remain scarred by years of conflict, but local tourists are returning to the sites, and conservationists hope their historical and cultural significance will eventually draw international visitors back.

One of Syria’s six UNESCO World Heritage sites, Palmyra was once a key hub to the ancient Silk Road network linking the Roman and Parthian empires to Asia. Located in the Syrian desert, it is renowned for its 2,000-year-old Roman-era ruins. It is now marked by shattered columns and damaged temples.

Before the Syrian uprising that began in 2011 and soon escalated into a brutal civil war, Palmyra was Syria’s main tourist destination, attracting around 150,000 visitors monthly, Ayman Nabu, a researcher and expert in ruins told The Associated Press. Dubbed the “Bride of the Desert,” he said “Palmyra revitalized the steppe and used to be a global tourist magnet.”

The ancient city was the capital of an Arab client state of the Roman Empire that briefly rebelled and carved out its own kingdom in the third century, led by Queen Zenobia.

In more recent times, the area had darker associations. It was home to Tadmur prison, where thousands of opponents of the Assad family’s rule in Syria were reportedly tortured. The Islamic State group demolished the prison after capturing the town.

IS militants later destroyed Palmyra’s historic temples of Bel and Baalshamin and the Arch of Triumph, viewing them as monuments to idolatry, and beheaded an elderly antiquities scholar who had dedicated his life to overseeing the ruins.

Between 2015 and 2017, control of Palmyra shifted between IS and the Syrian army before Assad’s forces, backed by Russia and Iran-aligned militias, recaptured it. They established military bases in the neighboring town, which was left heavily damaged and largely abandoned. Fakhr al-Din al-Ma’ani Castle, a 16th-century fortress overlooking the city, was repurposed by Russian troops as a military barracks.

Nabu, the researcher, visited Palmyra five days after the fall of the former government.

“We saw extensive excavation within the tombs,” he said, noting significant destruction by both IS and Assad government forces. “The (Palmyra) museum was in a deplorable state, with missing documents and artifacts — we have no idea what happened to them.”

At the theater, the Tetrapylon, and other ruins along the main colonnaded street, Nabu said they documented many illegal drillings revealing sculptures, as well as theft and smuggling of funerary or tomb-related sculptures in 2015 when IS had control of the site. While seven of the stolen sculptures were retrieved and put in a museum in Idlib, 22 others were smuggled out, Nabu added. Many pieces likely ended up in underground markets or private collections.

Inside the city’s underground tombs, Islamic verses are scrawled on the walls, while plaster covers wall paintings, some depicting mythological themes that highlight Palmyra’s deep cultural ties to the Greco-Roman world.

“Syria has a treasure of ruins,” Nabu said, emphasizing the need for preservation efforts. He said Syria’s interim administration, led by the Islamist former insurgent group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, has decided to wait until after the transition phase to develop a strategic plan to restore heritage sites.

The U.N.’s scientific, educational and cultural organization UNESCO, said in a statement that the agency had since 2015, “remotely supported the protection of Syrian cultural heritage" through satellite analyses, reports and documentation and recommendations to local experts, but it did not conduct any work on site.

It added that UNESCO has explored possibilities for technical assistance if security conditions improve. In 2019, international experts convened by UNESCO said detailed studies would need to be done before starting major restorations.

Beyond Palmyra, other historical sites bear the scars of war.

Perched on a hill near the town of Al-Husn, with sweeping views, Crac des Chevaliers, a medieval castle originally built by the Romans and later expanded by the Crusaders, was heavily bombarded during the Syrian civil war.

On a recent day, armed fighters in military uniform roamed the castle grounds alongside local tourists, taking selfies among the ruins.

Hazem Hanna, an architect and head of the antiquities department of Crac des Chevaliers, pointed to the collapsed columns and an entrance staircase obliterated by airstrikes. Damage from government airstrikes in 2014 destroyed much of the central courtyard and the arabesque-adorned columns, Hanna said.

“Relying on the cultural background of Syria’s historical sites and their archaeological and historical significance to enthusiasts worldwide, I hope and expect that when the opportunity arises for tourists to visit Syria, we will witness a significant tourism revival," he said.

Some sections of Crac des Chevaliers were renovated after airstrikes and the deadly 7.8 magnitude earthquake in 2023 that struck a wide area of neighboring Turkey and also Syria, Hanna said. However, much of the castle remains in ruins.

Both Nabu and Hanna believe restoration will take time. “We need trained technical teams to evaluate the current condition of the ruin sites,” Nabu said.

In Northwest Syria, more than 700 abandoned Byzantine settlements called Dead Cities, stretch across rocky hills and plains, their weathered limestone ruins featuring remnants of stone houses, basilicas, tombs and colonnaded streets. Despite partial collapse, arched doorways, intricate carvings and towering church facades endure, surrounded by olive trees that root deep into history.

Dating back to the first century, these villages once thrived on trade and agriculture. Today, some sites now shelter displaced Syrians, with stone houses repurposed as homes and barns, their walls blackened by fire and smoke. Crumbling structures suffer from poor maintenance and careless repurposing.

Looters have ravaged the ancient sites, Nabu said, leaving gaping holes in search of artifacts. Local visitors carve names and messages into centuries-old walls. Sheep enclosures dot the ruins, plastic debris blending with ancient stone.

Moustafa Al-Kaddour, a local resident, returned after eight years. Touring the ruins with family members he brought from Quneitra, he reflected on childhood memories.

“This is where we went to school,” he said, pointing in the distance. “In the middle of class, we used to leave and come here to see the ruins.”

“My feelings are indescribable,” al-Kaddour, who also saw his father for the first time in years, told the AP. “My brain still cannot comprehend that after eight years, by God’s will, we made it back home.”

He said the Assad forces had established a military position in the village, subjecting the ruins to heavy shelling and gunfire. The area was then controlled by rebels, who made the area off-limits to most Syrians and international tourists, unlike Palmyra, which still saw some visitors during the war.

The Dead Cities were added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 2011 as an open-air museum, said Nabu. Idlib province alone hosts “over 1,000 heritage sites spanning different time periods — about a third of Syria’s total ruins,” he added.

Beyond the bombings and air raids, looting and unauthorized digging have caused significant damage, Nabu said, adding that new construction near the ruins lacks planning and threatens preservation.

“Tens of thousands” of looted artifacts remain undocumented, he said. For those documented, authorities are compiling case files for international circulation in coordination with the Directorate of Antiquities and Museums to locate them and hopefully retrieve them.

(AP)