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Trump admits Musk ‘susceptible’ on China

Trump admits Musk ‘susceptible’ on China
Tesla and Space X boss Musk has major business interests in China. (Reuters)
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Updated 22 March 2025

Trump admits Musk ‘susceptible’ on China

Trump admits Musk ‘susceptible’ on China

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said Friday that Elon Musk should not be allowed to see top secret US plans for any war with China, in a rare admission that his billionaire ally’s business links raised potential conflicts of interest.
Trump strongly denied media reports that the world’s richest man, who is now leading the cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), would receive a classified Pentagon briefing on its war strategy.
Tesla and Space X boss Musk has major business interests in China but also has huge US defense contracts, while his status as an unelected adviser to Trump has raised concerns about his influence.
“I don’t want to show it to anybody. You’re talking about a potential war with China,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
“Certainly you wouldn’t show it to a businessman who is helping us so much... Elon has businesses in China and he would be susceptible perhaps to that.”

Trump, who was unveiling a contract for Boeing to build the next-generation F-47 fighter jet, described Musk as a “patriot” and hailed his efforts to slash back the US federal government, including the Defense Department.
Musk was at the Pentagon on Friday, but Trump attacked reports, first published in the New York Times, about the visit.
“They really are the enemy of the people,” Trump said of the Times, which reported Musk was to receive a briefing in a secure room dubbed “The Tank” on maritime tactics and targeting plans.
The paper said the briefing was called off after it was publicized.
The US increasingly sees China as its biggest rival and tensions have soared since Trump’s inauguration as the world’s two largest economies hit each other with tariffs.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth hailed the “amazing visit” by Musk to the Pentagon.
“I look forward to continuing our work together,” Hegseth said on X.
Musk joined the chorus of criticism of the Times, labeling it “pure propaganda” on his social media platform X.
“I’ve been to the Pentagon many times over many years. Not my first time in the building,” he wrote.
Musk has long-standing business ties to China, however.
His automaker Tesla produces some of its electric vehicles at a huge so-called gigafactory in Shanghai and is trying to compete with fast-growing Chinese manufacturers.
The entrepreneur has become a cult figure in China and has fostered ties with its leadership. He has also suggested the self-ruled island of Taiwan should become part of China.
In the US, Trump has repeatedly insisted that Musk has no conflicts of interest, even as Musk leads a harsh overhaul of US government agencies that in some cases his companies have dealings with.
Musk’s SpaceX has US government defense contracts worth billions of dollars, including for launching rockets and for the use of the Starlink satellite service.
Trump has recently further blurred the line by promoting Tesla cars after attacks by vandals over Musk’s links to the White House. Trump suggested Friday that such vandals could be deported to prisons in El Salvador.
Democrats have meanwhile blasted Trump for handing administration policy to Musk despite him undergoing no background checks and heading companies with government contracts.


Dozens detained at Serbia anti-government rally: minister

Dozens detained at Serbia anti-government rally: minister
Updated 13 sec ago

Dozens detained at Serbia anti-government rally: minister

Dozens detained at Serbia anti-government rally: minister
“Students have one urgent demand: Call elections,” read a large banner carried by the protesters
After speeches the protesters marched toward the city’s university campus where police used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse them

BELGRADE: Forty-two people were detained at an anti-government protest in the Serbian city of Novi Sad where police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd, the interior minister said on Saturday.
Several thousand people rallied in Novi Sad late Friday seeking early elections in the latest in a series of student-led protests across Serbia sparked by the fatal collapse of the northern city’s train station roof last November.
The tragedy, which killed 16 people, was widely blamed on entrenched corruption, with protesters’ demands for a transparent investigation growing into calls for snap elections.
“Students have one urgent demand: Call elections,” read a large banner carried by the protesters on Friday.
After speeches the protesters marched toward the city’s university campus where police used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse them.
Protesters had earlier thrown flares and bottles at the police, according to the Beta news agency.
Thirteen police officers were injured in a “massive and brutal attack” by the protesters and 42 people were detained, Interior Minister Ivica Dacic told state-run RTS television on Saturday.
The protesters attacked police in front of the faculty of philosophy throwing stones, flares and with bars, he said.
Violence against police was “appalling and apparently planned” to be used as a “political fuel to raise tensions,” the minister stressed.
Almost daily demonstrations, piling pressure on President Aleksandar Vucic, mainly passed off peacefully. But in mid-August they degenerated into violence that protesters blamed on heavy-handed tactics by government loyalists and police.
Authorities have rejected allegations of brutality, despite videos showing officers beating unarmed protesters and accusations that activists were assaulted while in custody.
Vucic late Friday accused the protesters of trying to “threaten the stability and security of Serbia” and “occupy the university premises in Novi Sad.”
“People in Serbia should know that the state is stronger than anyone ... that will always be the case,” he said.
Pro-government rallies will be held across Serbia on Sunday, the president added.
The protests have led to the resignation of the prime minister and the collapse of his government.
But Vucic has so far brushed off demands for snap elections and alleges the demonstrations, the largest of which have drawn hundreds of thousands of people, are part of a foreign plot.

India’s Modi says US ties ‘very positive’ after strains with Trump over Pakistan ceasefire

India’s Modi says US ties ‘very positive’ after strains with Trump over Pakistan ceasefire
Updated 06 September 2025

India’s Modi says US ties ‘very positive’ after strains with Trump over Pakistan ceasefire

India’s Modi says US ties ‘very positive’ after strains with Trump over Pakistan ceasefire
  • Modi’s statement comes after Donald Trump called relationship with New Delhi ‘special’
  • Tensions still persist over US tariffs on Indian goods and New Delhi’s Russian oil imports

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Saturday New Delhi and Washington still shared “very positive” ties, after US President Donald Trump reaffirmed their personal friendship and downplayed his earlier remarks about “losing India” to China.

The exchange comes amid strains after Washington imposed tariffs of up to 50 percent on Indian imports, accusing New Dehli of fueling Moscow’s deadly attacks on Ukraine by purchasing Russian oil.

But Trump and Modi, both right-wing populists, have shared a strong bond since the US president’s first term.

“Deeply appreciate and fully reciprocate President Trump’s sentiments and positive assessment of our ties,” Modi wrote on X, adding that India and the United States shared a “very positive and forward-looking comprehensive and global strategic partnership.”

Earlier, Trump told reporters that he “will always be friends with Modi.”

“India and the United States have a special relationship. There is nothing to worry about,” Trump said, downplaying his earlier remarks about “losing India” to China.

Last week, Modi visited China to attend a gathering of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, his first visit to the country in seven years signalling a thaw between the two Asian powers.

Trump has appeared irritated at New Delhi as he seeks credit for what he said was Nobel Prize-worthy diplomacy for brokering peace between Pakistan and India following the worst conflict in decades between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May.

India, which adamantly rejects any third-party mediation on Kashmir, has since given the cold shoulder to Trump.


Coalition launched to push for UN override of US vetoes protecting Israel

Coalition launched to push for UN override of US vetoes protecting Israel
Updated 06 September 2025

Coalition launched to push for UN override of US vetoes protecting Israel

Coalition launched to push for UN override of US vetoes protecting Israel
  • ‘Uniting for Peace’ mechanism can circumvent Security Council’s failure to act, ex-UN official tells webinar attended by Arab News
  • Support for Palestine must ‘not fade in the face of incredible US and Israeli opposition,’ says ex-presidential candidate

Chicago: A campaign was launched on Friday to push the UN to impose sanctions on Israel and override American vetoes that protect the country at the Security Council.

The Lifeline for Palestine coalition, led by former US presidential candidate Dr. Jill Stein, is backed by leading pro-Palestinian activists and groups. 

During a webinar attended by Arab News, Stein and former UN human rights official Craig Mokhiber explained how the organization’s member states have the legal authority to circumvent the Security Council and impose sanctions on Israel, suspend its membership, impose an arms embargo, and assign a UN peacekeeping force to Gaza and the West Bank.

Mokhiber, who served 30 years with the UN, said Israel’s actions in Gaza far exceed the violence and oppression of apartheid South Africa.

He added that UN member states “have the power” under a 1950s resolution called “Uniting for Peace” to circumvent the Security Council’s failure to act.

“The world doesn’t have to surrender to a US veto in the Security Council. The UN General Assembly is empowered when it meets to convene under ‘Uniting for Peace.’ There are historical precedents for doing so, and they can take extraordinary action,” Mokhiber said, adding that the UNGA needs a two-thirds majority to act, or 127 of its 193 members.

Last year, 124 nations approved a resolution demanding Israel withdraw from Gaza and the West Bank by Sept. 28, 2025.

In the face of a Security Council veto or failure to act, “any member state can then call for an emergency special session of the General Assembly under ‘Uniting for Peace,’” said Mokhiber.

“A resolution can be proposed … it can be adopted with a two-thirds majority, then the UN can start soliciting troop contributions from member states to participate and deploy troops.”

Stein said pro-Palestine activists “have the power right now to end the genocide” in Gaza. “The essential pieces of a strong resolution are establishing a military embargo and comprehensive sanctions … stripping Israel’s UN credentials as was done to apartheid South Africa in the General Assembly, and then establishing a war crimes tribunal and anti-apartheid mechanisms,” she added.

“It’s time for us to demand that support for Palestine be maintained and that it not fade in the face of incredible US and Israeli opposition, intimidation, threats and bribes.”

The webinar’s participants criticized the US denial of visas to Palestinian leaders to attend the UNGA’s 80th session in New York later this month.

When the same thing happened in 1988, “the entire General Assembly voted to pick up and move to Geneva in order to express its sovereignty, (declaring that) no single member state will dictate to it,” said Ali Abunimah, a Palestinian-American journalist and co-founder of The Electronic Intifada website.

He added that UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has failed to challenge last week’s US decision to deny entry to Palestinian leaders.

The coalition will convene a follow-up webinar on Sunday. Its website is www.lifelineforpalestine.com.


’Large shark’ kills man off Sydney beach

’Large shark’ kills man off Sydney beach
Updated 06 September 2025

’Large shark’ kills man off Sydney beach

’Large shark’ kills man off Sydney beach
  • A “large shark” mauled a surfer to death at a popular Sydney beach on Saturday, Australian police and rescuers said, in a rare fatal attack that led to a string of beach closures

SYDNEY: A “large shark” mauled a surfer to death at a popular Sydney beach on Saturday, Australian police and rescuers said, in a rare fatal attack that led to a string of beach closures.
The 57-year-old local man had gone surfing with five or six friends in the Pacific waters off northern Sydney’s adjoining Long Reef and Dee Why beaches, police and rescuers said.
The man — an experienced surfer with a wife and a young daughter — lost “a number of limbs,” New South Wales police superintendent John Duncan told a news conference.
“I do understand that both him and his board disappeared underwater,” he told reporters.
“The body was found floating in the surf.”
A couple of surfers saw him in the water and got him to shore, Duncan said.
“Unfortunately, by that time we understand he lost probably a lot of blood and attempts to resuscitate him were unsuccessful.”
People nearby saw the ocean predator, leaving police “fairly confident” that it was shark attack.
The man’s surfboard was broken in half, Duncan said.
Government experts will examine the remains of the surfboard and the man’s body to help them determine the species of shark involved, police said.
Most serious shark bites in ocean-loving Australia are from great whites, bull sharks, and tiger sharks.
Images of the scene on local media showed police gathered on the shore and ambulances parked nearby.
Beaches between the northern suburbs of Manly and Narrabeen have been closed for at least 24 hours, Surf Life Saving NSW said.
“For now, please remain clear of the water at beaches in the vicinity and follow the direction of lifeguards and lifesavers,” the organization’s chief executive Steven Pearce said in a statement.
“Our deepest condolences go to the family of the man involved in this terrible tragedy.”
Surf lifesaving clubs nearby have canceled all water activity and training for the weekend.
‘Critical injuries’ 
Drones and surf lifesavers on water skis were patrolling the beaches for shark activity.
It was the first fatal shark attack in Sydney since 2022, when 35-year-old British diving instructor Simon Nellist was killed off Little Bay.
The previous fatal attack in the city was in 1963.
An unnamed surfer told Sydney’s Daily Telegraph newspaper that he saw the aftermath of the attack.
“Four or five surfers pulled him out of the water and it looked like a significant part of his lower half had been attacked,” the surfer said.
People were ordered out of the water, he told the paper.
“There was a surf lifesaving guy waving a red flag,” the surfer said. “I didn’t know what it was ... but thought I should probably go in (to shore).”
Australia’s last deadly shark attack was in March, when a surfer was taken off the remote Wharton Beach of Western Australia.
There have been more than 1,280 shark incidents around Australia since 1791, of which over 250 resulted in death, according to a database of the predators’ encounters with humans.


US yet to approve any help following Afghanistan earthquake, sources say

US yet to approve any help following Afghanistan earthquake, sources say
Updated 06 September 2025

US yet to approve any help following Afghanistan earthquake, sources say

US yet to approve any help following Afghanistan earthquake, sources say
  • Trump administration ended virtually all aid to Afghanistan in April
  • UN aid chief says quake latest crisis to expose impact of funding cuts on humanitarian work

WASHINGTON: Nearly a week after an earthquake killed more than 2,200 people in Afghanistan and left tens of thousands homeless, the United States has not taken the first step to authorize emergency aid, and it was unclear if it plans to help at all, two former senior US officials and a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.
The lack of response by Washington to one of Afghanistan’s deadliest quakes in years underscores how President Donald Trump has forfeited decades of US leadership of global disaster relief with his deep foreign aid cuts and closure of the main US foreign assistance agency, said the source and the former officials.
The US Agency for International Development was officially shuttered on Tuesday.
The State Department on Monday extended its “heartfelt condolences” to Afghanistan in an X post.
As of Friday, however, the State Department had not approved a declaration of humanitarian need, the first step in authorizing US emergency relief, said the former officials, both of whom worked at USAID, and the third source, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.
Such a declaration is usually issued within 24 hours of a major disaster.
The sources said State Department officials had considered recommendations for US disaster aid for Afghanistan. One former senior official said the White House also has considered the issue, but decided against reversing a policy of ending aid to Afghanistan. When asked if the US would provide any emergency aid to Afghanistan following the magnitude 6 quake on Sunday, which was followed by powerful aftershocks on Thursday and Friday, a State Department spokesperson said: “We have nothing further to announce at this time.”
The United States was, until this year, the largest aid donor to Afghanistan, where it fought a 20-year war that ended with a chaotic US withdrawal and the Taliban’s seizure of Kabul in 2021. But in April, the Trump administration ended virtually all aid — totaling $562 million — to Afghanistan, citing a US watchdog report that humanitarian groups receiving US funds had paid $10.9 million in taxes, fees, and duties to the Taliban.
Asked whether the US would provide emergency relief for earthquake survivors, a White House official said, “President Trump has been consistent in ensuring aid does not land in the hands of the Taliban regime, which continues to wrongfully detain US citizens.”
’STUCK IN STORAGE’
United Nations aid chief Tom Fletcher said the Afghan earthquake was “the latest crisis to expose the cost of shrinking resources on vital humanitarian work.”
“Massive funding cuts have already brought essential health and nutrition services for millions to a halt; grounded aircraft, which are often the only lifeline to remote communities; and forced aid agencies to reduce their footprint,” he said in a statement on Thursday.
The Trump administration also has yet to respond to a request by the International Rescue Committee humanitarian organization to send $105,000 worth of US-funded medical supplies following the first earthquake.
The materials include stethoscopes, first aid supplies, stretchers, and other essentials, said Kelly Razzouk, vice president of policy and advocacy for the IRC.
“The stocks are stuck in storage,” said Razzouk, who served on former US President Joe Biden’s National Security Council. “In recent memory, I can’t remember a time when the US did not respond to a crisis like this.”
The IRC needs Washington’s permission to send the equipment to Afghanistan because it had been funded by an unrelated US grant that the Trump administration had since canceled.
“Beyond the loss of life, we have also seen basic infrastructure and livelihoods destroyed,” Stephen Rodriguez, the representative in Afghanistan for the UN Development Programme, told reporters on Friday.
He said donations of money, goods, and services have come from Britain, South Korea, Australia, India, Pakistan, Iran, Turkiye, and other countries.
“Far more is needed.”