With legacy on line, Biden gambles on bolder diplomacy

With legacy on line, Biden gambles on bolder diplomacy
With only five months left in his term, US President Joe Biden and his team are going for bolder, higher-risk diplomacy on both Gaza and Sudan, seeking to make progress on intractable hotspots. (Pool via REUTERS/File)
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Updated 10 August 2024
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With legacy on line, Biden gambles on bolder diplomacy

With legacy on line, Biden gambles on bolder diplomacy

WASHINGTON: With less than six months left in office, President Joe Biden and his team are going for bolder, higher-risk diplomacy on both Gaza and Sudan, seeking to make progress on intractable hotspots and — just maybe — burnish their legacy.
Biden, in an unusually personal appeal, joined the leaders of Egypt and Qatar in not only urging Israel and Hamas to reach a ceasefire but setting a date — Thursday — for them to meet in the region.
The approach mirrors a public call by Secretary of State Antony Blinken for the warring parties in Sudan to begin negotiations on Wednesday in Switzerland.
The strategy comes after months of painstaking efforts by US envoys yielded few tangible results in two conflicts that threaten to tarnish Biden, who at 81 decided not to seek a new term and to pass the torch to Vice President Kamala Harris.
Israel’s relentless campaign in Gaza, launched in response to a massive attack by Hamas, has stirred outrage in much of the world and within Biden’s Democratic Party.
While gaining fewer headlines, tens of thousands have also died in Sudan since rival generals went to war last year, with fears the country is on the brink of a famine unseen since Ethiopia in the 1980s.




Children sit together sharing a large bowl of food, as Sudanese families host internally displaced people coming from the central Sudanese state of Gezira to the eastern Sudanese city of Gedaref on June 3, 2024. (AFP)

Biden ran in 2020 on his foreign policy experience and on promises of a more normal presidency than that of his predecessor, Donald Trump.
He has highlighted as achievements his rallying of allies behind Ukraine following Russia’s invasion and his nuanced approach to China of raising pressure while seeking to avoid conflict.
“They came into office with one of their slogans being putting diplomacy first. But it’s really hard for me to pinpoint an area where they’ve had a major breakthrough — a ‘wow’ moment,” said Brian Katulis, senior fellow for US foreign policy at the Middle East Institute.
“They are looking for some sort of legacy” or at least “to put both of these conflicts on a more solid footing for what they hope will be a Harris administration,” Katulis said.
Trump, who is seeking a return to the White House, boasted about fostering the Abraham Accords, in which three Arab states normalized with Israel, and predecessor Barack Obama brokered major deals on Iran’s nuclear program, climate change and normalizing relations with Cuba.
Katulis said Biden’s diplomatic track record was inevitably beholden to events on the ground but also showed growing US risk aversion.
Early in his administration, Biden pursued diplomacy begun under Trump for a negotiated settlement in Afghanistan — which swiftly collapsed when the veteran Democrat withdrew the last US troops and the Taliban seized power.




Displaced Palestinians make their way as they flee the eastern part of Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, following an Israeli army evacuation order on August 8, 2024. (REUTERS)

Leslie Vinjamuri, director of the US and Americas program at Chatham House, said Biden clearly felt a “strong sense of urgency” not to leave office with multiple wars raging.
“The last thing the president wants is for a devastating war in the Middle East to be his legacy. This also has the potential to undermine Kamala Harris’s campaign,” Vinjamuri said.
Biden in recent days has stepped up the tone with Israel, to which he offered sweeping support following the Hamas attack on October 7.
Biden made known his frustration to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the timing of the killing in Iran, presumably by Israel, of the Hamas political chief who was negotiating a ceasefire.
Blinken on Tuesday publicly called for restraint not only by Iran, which has vowed to retaliate, but by Israel.
Blinken has also said he is nearly finished negotiating an incentive package for a historic prize for Israel — diplomatic recognition by Saudi Arabia, guardian of Islam’s two holiest sites.
But the Saudis want movement toward a Palestinian state, an idea long resisted by Netanyahu and his far-right allies.
On Sudan, the United States is still trying to persuade the army to participate, with Blinken placing a call to General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and US mediators meeting a Sudanese delegation Friday in Saudi Arabia.
Biden’s diplomatic approach does not extend to all conflicts.
He secured the release last week of US prisoners in Russia in a swap but has refused to negotiate over Ukraine, a contrast to Trump whose advisers have suggested threatening to withhold military aid to Kyiv to force it into concessions to Moscow.
On Venezuela’s political crisis, the Biden administration has held off on major pressure on leftist leader Nicolas Maduro, preferring that Latin American powers Brazil, Mexico and Colombia take the lead.
 


US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt

US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt
Updated 59 min 14 sec ago
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US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt

US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt
  • Lawyers for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos

WASHINGTON: A US judge said Wednesday he had found “probable cause” to hold President Donald Trump’s administration in contempt in a deportation case, raising the stakes in the White House’s confrontation with the justice system.
The White House said it planned an “immediate” appeal to the decision by District Judge James Boasberg, who had ordered the government to halt flights of more than 200 alleged gang Venezuelan members to El Salvador.
Boasberg issued a temporary restraining order on March 15 to halt the deportations, which were carried out under an obscure wartime law, the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which strips away the usual legal due process.
In a written opinion, the judge cited evidence that the government had engaged in “deliberate or reckless disregard” of his order when it proceeded with the flights.
“Defendants provide no convincing reason to avoid the conclusion that appears obvious... that they deliberately flouted this Court’s written Order and, separately, its oral command that explicitly delineated what compliance entailed,” he wrote.
The administration’s actions were “sufficient for the court to conclude that probable cause exists to find the government in criminal contempt,” Boasberg wrote.
The judge said the government would be offered a final chance to “purge such contempt” or face further court action.
Since his return to the White House in January, Trump has flirted with open defiance of the judiciary following setbacks to his right-wing agenda, with deportation cases taking center stage.
“We plan to seek immediate appellate relief,” White House Communications Director Steven Cheung said in a statement after the judge’s ruling.
“The President is 100 percent committed to ensuring that terrorists and criminal illegal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities across the country.”
In invoking the Alien Enemies Act — which had only been used previously during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II — Trump said he was targeting transnational gangs he had declared foreign terrorist organizations.
That included the Venezuelan group Tren de Aragua, but lawyers for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos.
Trump has routinely criticized rulings that curb his policies and power, and attacked the judges who issued them, including Boasberg.
The Republican president said Wednesday that US courts are “totally out of control,” writing on his Truth Social platform: “They seem to hate ‘TRUMP’ so much, that anything goes!“
His administration is also under fire over its admission that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was living in the eastern state of Maryland and married to a US citizen, was deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador due to an “administrative error.”
A judge has ordered Trump to “facilitate” his return, an order upheld by the Supreme Court, but his government has said the court did not have the authority to order it to have him returned.
Trump has alleged that Abrego Garcia is “an MS-13 Gang Member and Foreign Terrorist from El Salvador,” while Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed that he was “engaged in human trafficking.”
The man has never been charged with any crimes.


French president Macron to make five-day trip to Indian Ocean region

French president Macron to make five-day trip to Indian Ocean region
Updated 16 April 2025
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French president Macron to make five-day trip to Indian Ocean region

French president Macron to make five-day trip to Indian Ocean region
  • Macron will start off his trip in the cyclone-hit French overseas territory of Mayotte
  • The trip will focus on France’s strategy in the Indian Ocean

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron will leave Monday on a five-day trip visiting Madagascar and Mauritius as well as French territories in the Indian Ocean, the Elysee Palace said.
Macron will start off his trip in the cyclone-hit French overseas territory of Mayotte, followed by the French island of La Reunion on Tuesday, then Madagascar on Wednesday and Mauritius on Friday.
The trip will focus on France’s strategy in the Indian Ocean.
“We have a common future to build,” said an adviser to Macron, who will attend the fifth summit of the Indian Ocean Commission in Madagascar.
The integration of Mayotte into the Indian Ocean Commission — which includes Madagascar, Mauritius, the Union of the Comoros, Seychelles and La Reunion — will be on the summit’s agenda, the Elysee said.
In Mayotte, Macron will meet locals and officials and hold a meeting focusing on the agricultural sector, to “ensure that the after-effects, scars and fractures left by the cyclone are being resolved,” the Elysee added.


One dead, nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kherson

One dead, nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kherson
Updated 16 April 2025
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One dead, nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kherson

One dead, nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kherson
  • The attack damaged a sports facility, a supermarket, residential buildings and civilian vehicles, Prokudin added
  • The strike on Kherson followed other deadly attacks in recent days

KYIV: Russian glide bombs and artillery struck a city in southern Ukraine on Wednesday, killing one person and wounding nine others as Moscow forces continued daily attacks across the country.
The city of Kherson was struck with glide bombs on Wednesday morning, and when rescue teams arrived at the scene, Russian forces launched an artillery barrage, said the region’s head, Oleksandr Prokudin. “This is a deliberate tactic by Russia to hinder the rescue of the injured and harm doctors, rescuers, and police,” he said.
The attack damaged a sports facility, a supermarket, residential buildings and civilian vehicles, Prokudin added.


The strike on Kherson followed other deadly attacks in recent days. On Palm Sunday, two Russian ballistic missile hit the northeastern city of Sumy near the Russian border, killing 35 people and injuring more than 100 others in the deadliest attack on Ukrainian civilians this year. The Russian military said that the strike targeted a gathering of senior military officers, but did not offer evidence.
In Sumy on Wednesday, mourners buried 11-year old Maksym Martynenko — one of two children killed in the attack — and his parents Nataliia and Mykola. Their three caskets were open for final farewells at a church in the city center before the bodies were taken to the family’s village for burial in the same plot.
“I can’t believe that one family, just like that, one day … just went away, just like that,” said Daria Doroshenko, Maksym’s school teacher.
Pastor Artem Tovmasian, a friend of the family, said at the service that their deaths were a tragedy that “should be condemned in a real way.” He said the international community’s reaction should not be just “words of condolence,” but action.
The attack on Sumy and other areas came even as Moscow and Kyiv both agreed last month to implement a 30-day halt on strikes on energy facilities. Both parties have differed on the start time for stopping strikes and alleged daily breaches by the other side.
The Russian military said it downed 26 Ukrainian drones over several Russian regions early Wednesday.
Asked Wednesday if Russia is going to stop abiding by the limited ceasefire after 30 days, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov demurred, saying the decision will be made later.
Moscow has effectively refused to accept a comprehensive ceasefire that President Donald Trump has sought and Ukraine has endorsed. Russian President Vladimir Putin has made it conditional on a halt in Ukraine’s mobilization efforts and Western arms supplies, the demands rejected by Ukraine. Kyiv believes Moscow’s forces are gearing up for a fresh offensive.
Russian forces hold the battlefield advantage in Ukraine, pressing attacks in several sectors of the 1,000-kilometer (over 600-mile) frontline, and Kyiv has warned Moscow is planning a new offensive to improve its negotiating position.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff will travel to Paris on Thursday for “talks with European counterparts to advance President Trump’s goal to end the Russia-Ukraine war and stop the bloodshed.”
Rubio will also “discuss ways to advance shared interests in the region,” State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said in a statement.
Wikoff, who visited Russia on Friday for his third meeting with Putin that lasted nearly five hours, told Fox News earlier this week that the Russian leader wants a “permanent peace,” noting that a prospective peace deal would focus on Russian claims for five Ukrainian regions.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky criticized Witkoff’s comment, emphasizing that Ukraine will never recognize any temporarily occupied territories as Russian.
Commenting on ongoing negotiations with the US over a prospective agreement that would give the US access to Ukraine’s valuable mineral resources, Ukraine’s Economy Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko said the US and Ukrainian teams have achieved “significant progress.”
She said that both sides are working on a “memorandum of intent” that would reflect positive developments in the talks, adding that “we are preparing to complete the formalization of the agreement in the near future.”
The deal, which needs to be ratified by the Ukrainian parliament, “will provide opportunities for investment and development in Ukraine, and will also provide conditions for tangible economic growth for both Ukraine and the United States,” Svyrydenko said.
In Russia, the authorities on Wednesday arrested Alexei Smirnov, former governor of the Kursk region on the border with Ukraine, where Kyiv’s forces still hold onto a patch of land after a surprise incursion in August 2024.
Smirnov, who served as the Kursk governor in May-December 2024, his former deputy, three other officials and contractors in the region have been accused of fraud and embezzling the money allocated for building fortifications on the border with Ukraine.
If convicted, Smirnov is facing up to 10 years in prison.
Kyiv’s forces pushed into Kursk on Aug. 6, 2024, in a surprise attack, overwhelming lightly armed Russian border guards and a few infantry units. Russian forces have since driven Ukrainian troops out of Sudzha, the biggest town they have held since the incursion, and some of the other areas, but Kyiv’s forces still hold onto a patch of land there.


Rubio, Jordanian prime minister discuss boosting investment, State Department says

Rubio, Jordanian prime minister discuss boosting investment, State Department says
Updated 16 April 2025
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Rubio, Jordanian prime minister discuss boosting investment, State Department says

Rubio, Jordanian prime minister discuss boosting investment, State Department says
  • Pair discussed the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories of the Gaza Strip and West Bank

WASHINGTON, DC: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Jordanian Prime Minister Jafar Hassan discussed ways to expand economic cooperation and increase investments between the two nations, the State Department said in a statement on Tuesday.
The pair also discussed the situation in Gaza and the West Bank, the statement added.


US senator in El Salvador seeking release of wrongly deported migrant

US senator in El Salvador seeking release of wrongly deported migrant
Updated 16 April 2025
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US senator in El Salvador seeking release of wrongly deported migrant

US senator in El Salvador seeking release of wrongly deported migrant
  • Kilmar Abrego Garcia remains imprisoned in a notorious jail in his native country despite a US federal judge’s order, backed by the Supreme Court, for his return to the US
  • US Senator Chris Van Hollen said after landing in San Salvador that he hoped to meet with high-level government officials and possibly Abrego Garcia, who he said had been ‘illegally abducted’

SAN SALVADOR: A Democratic senator arrived in El Salvador on Wednesday to press for the release of a US resident thrust to the center of a storm over President Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration policies when he was mistakenly deported to the Central American country.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia remains imprisoned in a notorious jail in his native country despite a US federal judge’s order, backed by the Supreme Court, for his return to the United States.
US Senator Chris Van Hollen said after landing in San Salvador that he hoped to meet with high-level government officials and possibly Abrego Garcia, who he said had been “illegally abducted” and wrongly deported.
“I told his wife and his family I would do everything possible to bring him home, and we’re going to keep working at this until we’re successful,” Van Hollen, who represents Maryland, Abrego Garcia’s home state, said in a video.
Van Hollen said before taking off that he wanted to show the Trump administration and El Salvador that Abrego Garcia’s supporters would not let up in the campaign for his return.
A legal US resident, Abrego Garcia was protected by a 2019 court order determining that he could not be deported to El Salvador, but he was sent there around a month ago.
The Trump administration has admitted its mistake, and has been ordered by the Supreme Court to “facilitate” the 29-year-old’s return.
But the administration — pressed on what action it was taking to remedy its error in lower court hearings — has not announced any efforts toward Abrego Garcia’s return.
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele said during a White House visit on Monday he did not have the power to return Abrego Garcia to the United States.
Trump told reporters he did not have the authority to intervene, leaving the man in limbo.
Trump’s critics have warned that his defiance of the courts has placed the country on the cusp of a constitutional crisis.
“This is about due process. This is about rule of law,” Van Hollen said.
“What bullies do is they begin by picking on the most vulnerable. But if we get rid of the rule of law and due process in the United States, it’s a short road from there to tyranny.”
The White House claims that it is complying with the courts and says, without providing evidence, that Abrego Garcia is a gang member. He denies the accusation and has never been charged of crimes in either country.
District Judge Paula Xinis said the case against him amounted to “nothing more than his Chicago Bulls hat and hoodie, and a vague, uncorroborated allegation from a confidential informant” of his gang membership.
West Virginia Republican congresswoman Riley Moore posted on X Tuesday that he had also traveled to El Salvador to see the prison where immigrants deported by the Trump administration are being held.
He declared himself supportive of Trump’s actions, however.
Another Democratic senator, Cory Booker, was also mulling a trip to the country but has not yet made an announcement on timing.
Two Democrats in the House of Representatives — Maxwell Alejandro Frost of Florida and Robert Garcia of California — were also reportedly planning to visit.