Trump wants talks with Putin, Xi to end ‘uncontrollable arms race’

US President Donald Trump said he will discuss military developments with his counterparts from China and Russia in the future in the hopes of ending what he described as an arms race. (File Photo/Reuters)
Updated 03 December 2018
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Trump wants talks with Putin, Xi to end ‘uncontrollable arms race’

  • The US military put countering China and Russia at the center of a new national defense strategy
  • Washington has discussed quitting a landmark nuclear arms control pact with Russia in place since 1987

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Monday proposed future talks with the leaders of China and Russia aimed at halting what he described as an “uncontrollable” arms race.
Trump’s comment follows an October announcement in which he said he would withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), a Cold War deal with Russia to cut missile numbers.
Critics say the move, which has not been finalized, would spark a new arms race with Russia.
Trump at the time said he would build up America’s nuclear stockpile “until people come to their senses.”
In an early morning tweet Monday, the president said: “I am certain that, at some time in the future, President Xi and I, together with President Putin of Russia, will start talking about a meaningful halt to what has become a major and uncontrollable Arms Race.”
“The US spent 716 Billion Dollars this year. Crazy!” he added.

Trump’s tweet came on the heels of a weekend meeting with Xi during the G20 summit in Argentina, during which the leaders called a truce on an intensifying trade war between their two powerhouse countries.
While Trump canceled a scheduled bilateral meeting with Putin in Buenos Aires, the two did have an “informal” conversation at the summit.
The 1987 INF deal did not cover China and was designed to eliminate short- and intermediate-range missiles on Europe’s doorstep.
A date for the US official withdrawal from the treaty has yet to be pinpointed, leaving room for a possible fix that would likely also have to involve China.
Trump’s decision to withdraw from the INF raised global concerns, and administration officials have been engaged on an aggressive public relations campaign with European leaders and the press to explain the move.
They say it is necessary because Russia has long been violating the INF.


Trump says Netanyahu should be pardoned for corruption

Updated 38 sec ago
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Trump says Netanyahu should be pardoned for corruption

  • Under Israeli ‌law, the president has the authority to pardon convicts
  • Trump has ‌publicly urged the Israeli president to pardon Netanyahu ‌several times
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should receive ​a pardon for corruption charges, saying Israeli President Isaac Herzog should be “ashamed of himself” for not granting one.
Trump said Netanyahu has been a great wartime prime minister and that the Israeli people should shame Herzog for not pardoning him. “He’s disgraceful for not giving ‌it. He should ‌give it,” Trump said during ​a ‌White ⁠House ​event.
Netanyahu met ⁠Trump in Washington on Wednesday — the seventh meeting between the two leaders since Trump took office last year — for talks about reaching a deal on Iran’s nuclear program and its ballistic missiles.
Netanyahu is Israel’s first sitting prime minister to be charged with ⁠a crime and denies bribery, fraud ‌and breach of ‌trust charges dating back to his ​2019 indictment.
Trump has ‌publicly urged the Israeli president to pardon Netanyahu ‌several times, and said in late December that Herzog had told him the pardon was on its way. Herzog’s office was quick to dispute it.
Under Israeli ‌law, the president has the authority to pardon convicts. But there is no precedent ⁠for ⁠issuing a pardon mid-trial.
In response to queries about Trump’s comment, Herzog’s office said Netanyahu’s request was under review at the Israeli Ministry of Justice for a legal opinion, and once that process was completed, Herzog would consider the request.
“Israel is a sovereign state governed by the rule of law. Contrary to the impression created by President Trump’s remarks, President Herzog has not yet made any ​decision on this matter,” Herzog’s ​office said.