White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy

This handout photograph taken and released by the Office of the President of Ukraine in New York on Aug. 29, 2025 shows Head of the Office of the Presidency of Ukraine Andriy Yermak (2L), flanked by Ukraine’s First Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Sergiy Kyslytsya meeting with White House Special Envoy Steve Witkoff. (AFP)
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Updated 29 August 2025
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White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy

  • “This story from Politico is journalistic malpractice,” Vance said
  • The officials did not offer evidence of any foreign party or government behind the story

WASHINGTON: The White House lashed out Friday what it called a “foreign influence operation” by German-owned US news outlet Politico after it criticized President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff’s Ukraine negotiations.

Vice President JD Vance slammed Politico, bought in 2021 by German media giant Axel Springer, over an article that quoted unnamed officials as saying Witkoff’s “inexperience shines through” in his talks with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

“This story from Politico is journalistic malpractice. But it’s more than that: it’s a foreign influence operation meant to hurt the administration and one of our most effective members,” Vance said on X.

A string of other White House officials made similar attacks, with Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair calling the article a “foreign influence operation run through a German-controlled online media outlet.”

The officials did not offer evidence of any foreign party or government behind the story.

The attacks came as Berlin and France cast doubt on whether Trump’s Ukraine peace efforts would bear fruit, with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz saying the war would last “many more months.”

Witkoff is a property tycoon whom Trump has named as his special envoy for peace talks to end the Ukraine and Gaza wars despite having no diplomatic experience.

The Politico article was one of a series of articles in recent days by several outlets, including The Atlantic, that said Witkoff’s negotiations with Russia have caused confusion.

Witkoff has made a number of trips to Moscow to meet Putin. He was meeting Ukrainian officials in New York on Friday. He said the “statement from our amazing Vice President speaks for itself.”


Merz pushes PA’s Abbas on reforms ahead of Israel trip

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Merz pushes PA’s Abbas on reforms ahead of Israel trip

BERLIN: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz called for reforms of the Palestinian Authority in a phone call with its leader Mahmud Abbas early Saturday, hours before taking off for Israel.
Speaking from Berlin, Merz urged Abbas to push through “urgently necessary reforms” at the Palestinian Authority so that the organization could “play a constructive role in a post-war order,” according to German government spokesman Stefan Kornelius.
Merz also underscored German support for US President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza and “welcomed the Palestinian Authority’s cooperative attitude” toward the deal in the call, the spokesman said.
The fragile ceasefire agreement to end the Gaza war is supposed to be just the first phase of the plan.
Germany is among Israel’s closest allies and most outspoken supporters.
Merz’s call with Abbas came hours before the chancellor was scheduled to leave Berlin late Saturday morning for an overnight visit to Israel.
After a brief stop in Jordan, where Merz is scheduled to meet with the Jordanian King Abdullah II, Merz is expected to arrive in Jerusalem for meetings with top Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Merz also plans to visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Israel.
In his call with Abbas, Merz reiterated Germany’s position that a two-state solution remains the ultimate way to achieve peace and security for Israelis and Palestinians, according to the spokesman.
Netanyahu and other senior Israeli officials hvae repeatedly rejected the prospect of an independent Palestinian state.
The Palestinian militant group Hamas, which seized control of the Gaza Strip from the Palestinian Authority in 2007, has also explicitly ruled out a two-state solution.