Like Reagan in 1981, Trump is about to upend a status quo in total breakdown
USA - Donald Trump defies comparison with anyone else in US history, but his return to the White House today feels a lot like Ronald Reagan’s first inauguration in 1981. Reagan marked a sea change in America’s Cold War strategy and domestic economic policy, and by altering America’s course – which in the late 1970s seemed to be headed toward steady decline – Reagan altered the world’s, too. Trump holds the same promise as he begins his second term, confronting challenges not unlike those that faced Reagan.
Inflation raged under Joe Biden and Jimmy Carter alike. Russian aggression made a mockery of the international order with the invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and the full-scale assault on Ukraine in 2022. Iran’s Islamist revolution produced a hostage crisis and cast the stability of the Middle East into doubt; lately the region has been in turmoil because of Hamas’s October 7, 2023 atrocity against Israel.
Nearly half a century ago and again today, these emergencies have been the symptoms of a systemic breakdown: policies long taken for granted in Washington, so deeply ingrained they came to be thought of as “norms”, have failed. Reagan was a shock to the Washington establishment in 1981, and Trump is an even greater one now.
Should Trump prevail in getting America’s allies to spend more on their own defence, he will strengthen the free world in much the same way Reagan did by increasing America’s military budget. Reagan’s motto was “peace through strength,” and it’s Donald Trump’s as well.
Top Leaders Sidestep World Economic Forum in Davos
SWITZERLAND - The 55th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, has long been seen as a major globalist event, but this year the leaders of the world’s most powerful nations are skipping the meeting. President Donald Trump is scheduled to address the forum by video link on Thursday, but Chinese dictator Xi Jinping, Indian President Narendra Modi, French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer are among the no-shows. The only G7 leader to attend in person is German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
The libertarian man of the hour, Argentina’s Javier Milei, did make the pilgrimage to Davos. Milei’s speech to the WEF last year was a blistering 25-minute indictment of socialism, which was not welcomed by many of the attendees. His opening line was: “Today I’m here to tell you that the Western world is in danger – and it is in danger because those who are supposed to have to defend the values of the West are co-opted by a vision of the world that inexorably leads to socialism and thereby to poverty.”
Later, Milei said “the State is not the solution, the State is the problem,” which annoyed everyone in the audience who was not already furious at him for trashing socialism. Milei returns to Davos this week with a year of undeniable economic achievements under his belt.
Trump is expected to deliver an address ideologically aligned with Milei’s. Neither of them will ever be part of the “in-crowd” at the WEF, but the in-crowd is no longer powerful enough to dismiss them with a sneer. According to Business Insider, Trump was the number one topic of conversation among WEF attendees on Day One.
Time for the Red Cross to call out Hamas
MIDDLE EAST - For the families of the remaining hostages in Gaza, the heart-stopping lottery continues. Sketchy details suggest another release this weekend. But as Hamas continue the drip-drip game of their psychotic playbook it`s impossible to know how long it will take to bring all the captives home. Meanwhile - unbearable as it is to read - we already have confirmation from those who were previously released their noxious October 7 jailers were brutalising monsters who subjected them to unimaginable horror. All of which begs the question - where was the Red Cross ?
Sure they were present at the critical handover last Sunday as three young women - including British hostage Emily Damari, her two fingers shot off by terrorist captors - were released. Surrounded by swarming masked men, the organisation ushered the captives to safety. But this was the sum total of Red Cross involvement: a heart stopping photo opportunity in which their globally recognised insignia broke through a baying mob of green and black as the guns of masked men spiked the skyline.
Otherwise, not once has the Red Cross visited the hostages - including Kfir Bibas, who was just nine months old when kidnapped on October 7. Last Sunday`s release of Emily Damari, 28, Doron Steinbrecher, 31, and Romi Gonen, 24, was the first time members of the organisation had looked into the eyes of any of those ruthlessly snatched by Hamas terrorists. Despite the fact their very mandate is to visit innocent kidnapped individuals and ensure their well-being.
If the shame of their history doesn`t impel the Red Cross to act then the ticking clock should. Every day the hostages spend in captivity is a day too long. Bad enough they could do nothing for the many hostages who have already been killed, if the Red Cross doesn`t act for the living then what use are they at all?
Three people die in snow storm covering southern United States
USA - Three people have died as a powerful winter storm smothered swathes of the southern United States in snow, sleet and ice, and caused travel chaos. The Arctic blast of freezing air covered parts of Florida, Louisiana and Texas that rarely receive any snow with up to 10.5 inches (27cms). The frigid conditions left 170 million people across the country under an extreme warning or a cold weather advisory, according to the National Weather Service. “For parts of the western and northern Gulf Coast, this could be the biggest snow and ice storm in more than 100 years,” AccuWeather, a forecasting company, said. More than 2,000 flights were cancelled at airports across the US, and a further 3,200 were delayed, according to FlightAware.
Dangerous winds risk spreading California wildfires
USA - Dangerous winds returned to Southern California on Tuesday as firefighters battled new fires amid dry conditions while two major blazes burned for a third week in the Los Angeles area. Forecasters warned that gusts could peak at 70 mph (113 kph) along the coast and 100 mph (160 kph) in the mountains and foothills during extreme fire weather that is expected to last until Tuesday morning. Wind speeds ranged from 35 mph (56 kph) along the coast to 63 mph (101 kph) at elevation overnight, according to the US National Weather Service. The weather service warned of a “particularly dangerous situation ” in Los Angeles, Ventura and San Diego counties owing to low humidity and damaging Santa Ana winds.
Donald Trump has a new mission: to be America’s messiah
USA - If his first inaugural address was menacing, delivered with a clenched fist – a series of threats to all those disruptors of the ideal American way of life – this one was messianic. All the promised measures were there – the immediate removal of illegal migrants being the most widely anticipated – but they were embedded in a larger theme, which was his personal mission which, he made clear, had been entrusted to him by God.
The tone this time was more controlled, more calibrated to suit the solemnity of the occasion. If the previous presidency had been chaotic, this one was going to be thoroughly under his control and its objectives would not be up for argument.
He would usher in, rather paradoxically, both an era of common sense and one of radical reform. There would be a new glorious rebirth of America’s standing in the world, but this incarnation of the great patriotic dream would also remain true to the nation’s original spirit.
So the past and the future would be melded into a greatness never seen before: a country infused with a spiritual purpose which was both true to its origins and utterly different from anything it had ever attempted – and this transformation would be accomplished immediately. The “golden age of America begins right now”.
Withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization
USA - "By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered: The United States noticed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2020 due to the organization’s mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic that arose out of Wuhan, China, and other global health crises, its failure to adopt urgently needed reforms, and its inability to demonstrate independence from the inappropriate political influence of WHO member states. In addition, the WHO continues to demand unfairly onerous payments from the United States, far out of proportion with other countries’ assessed payments. China, with a population of 1.4 billion, has 300 percent of the population of the United States, yet contributes nearly 90 percent less to the WHO."
Trump to make online address to global elite's Davos meeting
SWITZERLAND - Donald Trump will make an online appearance at the annual meeting of global political and business elites in Davos next week, days after he takes office as US president, the World Economic Forum said on Tuesday. "He will join us digitally" on Thursday January 23, WEF president Borge Brende said in a press briefing previewing the annual meeting, adding it would be a "very special moment" to learn more about the new US administration's plans.
"There is a lot of interest, of course, among our participants - also the rest of the world - to decipher and understand the policies of the new administration," he said. The US president's return to the White House was already expected to dominate discussions in Davos, a gathering that he attended in person during his first term in office.
Brende said organisers expected "high-level representation" from the Trump administration during the last few days of WEF, which closes January 24. Trump's plans to cut taxes and impose trade tariffs have raised concerns that his policies could rekindle inflation and stifle global economic growth.
Trump's thinking is in stark contrast to the multilateralism championed at Davos, where the forum's agenda this year is held under the official theme "Collaboration for the Intelligent Age". There will be a "different dynamic for this Davos", said Josh Lipsky, senior director of Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center, where attendees "will be reacting over the week to what's coming out of the new White House".
The United States enters a new era
UK - What can we expect from a second Trump presidency? His first term began with overblown predictions of chaos both at home and around the world. His detractors thought him capable of triggering a world war and yet global tensions have worsened under his successor Joe Biden. The ceasefire in the Middle East was agreed only because Mr Trump’s arrival made it an imperative for both sides. Whether it holds is another matter, but the president is clearly intent on seeing that it does.
He has pledged to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict, though on what terms no-one yet knows. Kyiv is clearly concerned that he will give too much to Vladimir Putin, not least because some members of the new cabinet are ambivalent on the subject. But if there are doveish noises towards Moscow, China and Iran are feeling the full blast of hawkish rhetoric. Mr Trump is preparing to sign dozens of executive orders within days that will give an early indication of whether he will follow up on his campaign pledges.
He has threatened tariffs against China of 60 per cent or more, yet one of his advisers, Elon Musk, is implacably opposed to measures that interfere with free trade and his own business interests in particular. A global trade war will help no-one except some US commercial interests and certainly not the UK. It is a paradox that some of Mr Trump’s biggest cheerleaders profess themselves to be anti-protectionist. Perhaps they believe Britain will not be in the Trump sights but any impact on world trade will affect our economy and the Government’s growth ambitions. History is being made but on which side of it are we?
Trump starts dismantling Biden’s legacy
USA - Donald Trump has wasted no time in dismantling the legacy of the Biden administration, promising to “identify and remove” more than a thousand of his successor’s appointees. The 47th US president announced on his social media platform Truth Social at 12.38 am (5.38 am GMT) that four officials “not aligned with our vision to Make America Great Again” had already been dismissed. “You’re fired!” Mr Trump wrote, referencing his catch phrase from the reality TV show The Apprentice.
The Republican said he had removed Jose Andres from the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition, Mark Milley from the National Infrastructure Advisory Council, Brian Hook from the Wilson Center for Scholars, and Keisha Lance Bottoms from the President’s Export Council.
Earlier on Monday, the US President issued pardons for 1,600 January 6 rioters, including those convicted of violent crimes, and commuted the sentences of 14 others who stormed the Capitol four years ago. He also signed a flurry of executive orders to withdraw the US from the Paris climate agreement and World Health Organisation, delay the ban of TikTok, stop federal employees working from home, and end government “censorship”.
Every executive order Trump has signed in the last 24 hours
USA - Donald Trump has issued a flurry of executive orders and directives as he seeks to put his stamp on his new administration on issues ranging from immigration, gender and energy, to criminal pardons. The President signed some orders from the US Capitol, where his swearing-in ceremony took place, and more later at the White House. Executive orders allow presidents to enact some policies without the consent of Congress and can take effect immediately. Some could later be challenged in court.
Members of Mr Trump’s team have been working on the orders for months, and intend to use them to signal an abrupt change in direction from the Biden administration. Here are some of the key executive orders signed on Mr Trump’s first day back in office:
- Diversity initiatives dismantled
- Only two genders will be recognised
- TikTok ban paused for 90 days
- US Capitol rioters pardoned
- US-Mexico border security beefed up
- End birthright citizenship (for illegals)
- National energy emergency plan
- End working from home
- Restrictions on fossil fuel extraction reversed
- Gulf of Mexico renamed
- Death penalty for police murders
- EV mandate scrapped
- US to leave World Health Organization
What wartime leaders have said so far
USA - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky: “President Trump is always decisive, and the peace through strength policy he announced provides an opportunity to strengthen American leadership and achieve a long-term and just peace, which is the top priority.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin says he is now open to dialogue with the US: “I want to emphasise that its goal should not be a brief truce... but a lasting peace based on respect for the legitimate interests of all people.”
NATO chief Mark Rutte says Mr Trump’s return to office “will turbo-charge defence spending and production” at the alliance.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu believes “working together again we will raise the US-Israel alliance to even greater heights.”
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas is ready to work with Mr Trump “to achieve peace during your term, based on a two-state solution.”
China ‘concerned’ over Trump’s withdrawal from climate agreement
USA - China said it is “concerned” by Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement for a second time. “Climate change is a common challenge faced by all of humanity, and no country can remain unaffected or solve the problem on its own,” foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said. In 2006, China overtook the US to become the world’s largest annual emitter of greenhouse gases and by 2019 the nation was emitting more greenhouse gases than the entire developed world combined, according to research by the Rhodium Group. “I’m immediately withdrawing from the unfair, one-sided Paris Climate Accord rip-off,” Mr Trump said to cheering supporters during the inaugural parade inside Capital One Arena. “The United States will not sabotage our own industries while China pollutes with impunity.”
The war in Gaza must and will resume
MIDDLE EAST - The war in Gaza must and will resume. It’s just a question of when. The newly brave terrorists of Hamas have not yet had their full dose of medicine. Until yesterday the survivors of Hamas’s terror army were skulking inside what’s left of their tunnel network, hiding in civilian houses, mosques, schools and hospitals or embedding themselves into humanitarian areas on the coast. They disguised themselves as civilians, sometimes dressed as women and journalists and never daring to openly carry weapons above ground. Today they are out on the streets of Gaza proudly wearing their green bandanas and combat uniforms while flaunting assault rifles and rocket launchers.
Even at the point of handover we have seen pictures of these newly courageous fighters closing in to intimidate and torment the first three women hostages to be released. At the same time the ceasefire-emboldened terrorists are laughing in our faces, handing gift bags to the released women as well as “completion certificates” to show they have spent well over a year in Hamas’s tunnels.
Since the cessation was agreed the terrorist leaders have been been renewing their vows to kill more Jews and launch repeated 7th October style massacres. Meanwhile hordes of Gazan civilians have flooded into the streets, mostly healthy in appearance, well dressed and many visibly over-fed. A far cry from the picture Hamas, the UN, human rights groups and so much of the media have painted for the last 15 months: of disease and famine at the hands of the Israelis. Despite claims of fuel and energy starvation in Gaza, cars now seem to be able to freely drive the people about and their ubiquitous smart phones are obviously well charged. Like their Hamas leaders, these “innocent” civilians have been screaming themselves hoarse with “Khaybar, Khaybar ya yahud”, an Arabic rallying cry calling for the slaughter of Jews.
Trump ‘not confident’ Gaza ceasefire will hold
USA - Donald Trump said earlier that he is “not confident” the Gaza ceasefire deal will be upheld. Responding to questions while signing executive orders in the Oval Office earlier, the president said: “That’s not our war, it’s their war. But I’m not confident.” Mr Trump, however, said he believed Hamas had been “weakened”. The real estate mogul added that Gaza, which now looked like “a massive demolition site”, could see a “fantastic” reconstruction. “Gaza is interesting. It’s a phenomenal location on the sea - the best weather. You know, everything’s good. Some beautiful things could be done with it,” he said.
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The views expressed in this section are not our own, unless specifically stated, but are provided to highlight what may prove to be prophetically relevant material appearing in the media.