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All illegal migrants held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba have been sent to Louisiana

All illegal migrants held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba have been sent to Louisiana

All 40 illegal migrants held at the Guantánamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba have been sent back to the United States and are now being held in Louisiana, two U.S. defense officials told Fox News. The group includes 23 “high-threat illegal aliens” who were held at the detention facility on base and 17 migrants who were held at the migrant operations center on base.  The illegal migrants were transported to Louisiana via Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) aircraft and there are currently no migrants being held at the base and no flights scheduled to arrive with more migrants, the officials said.  ‘WEAPONIZED MIGRATION’: US FACES DEADLY CONSEQUENCES WITH MADURO IN POWER, VENEZUELAN OPPOSITION WARNS The U.S. defense officials were not told why the 40 migrants were sent back to the United States, and Homeland Security and ICE have not yet responded to any inquiries about why they were sent back and where in Louisiana they are being held.  It is unclear if the U.S. will continue to hold migrants at the base, commonly known as “Gitmo.” None of the 195 tents that were set up to hold migrants have been used because they do not meet ICE standards, according to several U.S. defense officials, such as having air conditioning and other amenities. In late January, President Donald Trump instructed the Pentagon to prepare 30,000 beds at the base to house “criminal illegal aliens” who pose a threat to the American public, adding that putting them there would ensure they do not come back. The president said the move would bring the U.S. one step closer to “eradicating the scourge” of migrant crime in communities, once and for all. VANCE TAKES VICTORY LAP IN BORDER VISIT AS ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT NUMBERS PLUMMET  But the operation to build more tents was halted back in February, just several weeks after it started. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited the base in late February and met with troops serving there.  The 45-square-mile base, located about 430 miles southeast of Miami, is best known for detaining terrorism suspects, including those behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. It’s been leased from Cuba since 1903 and serves as a key operational and logistics hub for maritime security, humanitarian assistance and joint operations.  News of the migrants being sent to Louisiana comes as President Donald Trump is reportedly expected to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 in an effort to pave the way for faster mass deportations of illegal immigrants.  Trump will use the law to target members of the violent Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, the New York Post reported, citing two sources close to the administration.  Trump campaigned on invoking the wartime law, which allows the president to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy nation.  Fox News’ Louis Casiano contributed to this report. 

Republican AGs praise teamwork with feds on crime ahead of meeting with Trump, Bondi

Republican AGs praise teamwork with feds on crime ahead of meeting with Trump, Bondi

FIRST ON FOX – GOP state attorneys general previewed their upcoming meeting Friday at the Department of Justice, where President Donald Trump and U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi will discuss collaborating with state top cops to combat crime.  Fox News Digital is told much of the conversation is expected to focus on fighting the scourge of fentanyl in communities.  Trump spoke to reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday previewing his Justice Department speech. He nodded to problems faced in cities, such as subway violence. “We don’t want to have crime in the streets. We don’t want to have people pushed into subways and killed,” Trump said. “We want to have safety in our cities, as well as in our communities, and we’ll be talking about immigration. We’ll be talking about a lot of things. The complete gamut.” Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares championed Bondi’s “proactive” approach, saying he had received more calls from the DOJ in Trump’s first 30 days in office than he did in his prior three years of service under the Biden administration.  “They keep open lines of communication. Whereas, before, the only time I ever heard from Merrick Garland was if he was trying to sue Virginia for some reason,” Miyares told Fox News Digital.  Miyares said he viewed the fentanyl epidemic as both a national security and domestic challenge, citing how an average of 105,000 Americans were dying every 12 months of addiction deaths at the peak of the crisis. By contrast, over 50,000 Americans died in the Vietnam War over the course of 15 years. “It was two Vietnam wars happening every 12 months in this country to absolutely devastating impact. Virginia was not lost on that,” Miyares said.  FENTANYL’S FINANCIAL GRIP ON US SKYROCKETED TO $2.7T AT HEIGHT OF BIDEN ADMIN: STUDY Virginia has seen a 40% reduction in addiction deaths since 2021, one of the most significant drops in the country, Miyares said, arguing he and Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s three-prong approach of prosecution, prevention and treatment can be applied nationally. He noted that Trump’s nominee to lead the Drug Enforcement Administration, Terry Cole, is currently serving as Virginia’s Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security. “He’s going to be an exceptional, exceptional head of a DEA,” Miyares said. “He knows what we’ve done in Virginia because he’s been part of it. I look forward to seeing him bring that nationwide.”  Miyares praised Trump’s Inauguration Day executive order designating cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. As for the Biden administration, Miyares said he “never felt that they took it as seriously.” He said one federal agent told him the Biden administration discouraged posting about drug busts online, describing the attitude at the top of the bureaucracy as signaling,[ “We don’t want to admit we have a drug problem in this country.”  “It was almost like an ostrich with its head in the sand. The other problem was the border. More fentanyl was crossing our southern border in one year to kill every man, woman and child in America three or four times over. It was staggering,” Miyares said. “The reality is the Sinaloa Cartel is the single most dangerous criminal enterprise, I would argue, in the history of the world, they have a reach that is staggering.”  “It was President Trump who has declared the cartels a foreign terrorist organization. The Biden administration could have done so,” Miyares said. “These were criminal enterprises that, in my opinion, were conducting chemical warfare on everyday Americans to levels that we don’t see even lost in war or happening to our kids, our friends and our neighbors. They are terrorist organizations.”  With Democrats having lost control of both houses of Congress, Democratic attorneys general have led their party’s charge against the Trump administration’s agenda on a number of issues, including immigration. Miyares urged fellow state top cops across the aisle to “lock arms and work together” when it comes to the fentanyl epidemic, because “it affects every American Republican or Democrat, red state or blue state.” “Make sure you do that partnership so we can save lives, because our real enemy is not the other political party,” he said. “Our real enemy are the cartels and these dealers poisoning our kids.”  Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday told Fox News Digital that keeping families together is a crucial component to public safety. He also said that Republicans must have a greater presence in inner cities long controlled by Democrats.  “The only way that we can maximize outcomes to keep people safe in this country is when we all work together. And having a Justice Department that’s aligned with my philosophy of public safety, that without safe communities, nothing else matters, it puts us in a position where we can take that collaboration to the next level,” Sunday said. “Citizens have the absolute right to demand that their government works to keep them safe.”  “As I go into this meeting tomorrow, I view this through a positive lens. This is an opportunity for us,” he told Fox News Digital. “This epidemic not only is killing people. It’s destroying our economy, and it’s tearing families apart. And that’s one of the absolute worst parts of this. You know that the family in America is one of the most crucial components to a thriving community and public safety.”  “When you have addiction permeating our community, that tears families apart. And it’s something that I absolutely do not want to see,” Sunday said. “Local law enforcement cannot do the job by themselves.”  SENATE DEMOCRATS SAY THEY’LL OPPOSE GOP FUNDING BILL AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN DEADLINE LOOMS He said from his experience as a local prosecutor that some of the “most painful meetings I’ve ever had are with parents who’ve lost their children to addiction.”  “The thought of having to watch a child slip away into the web of addiction and become someone that’s not even, you know, the person that you knew. It’s so gut-wrenching,” he said.  Sunday said part of

Dems cry foul after Schumer’s announcement on impending vote to avert government shutdown

Dems cry foul after Schumer’s announcement on impending vote to avert government shutdown

As the prospect of a partial government shutdown looms and the Senate is poised to vote on a House-passed government-funding measure that would avert a shutdown, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced on Thursday that he “will vote to keep the government open and not shut it down.” He said that while the “bill is very bad, the potential for a shutdown has consequences for America that are much, much worse.” The senator’s announcement prompted pushback from some Democrats. “I cannot underscore enough how incorrect that is,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said of Schumer’s argument. “What voting for this CR does is that it codifies the chaos and the reckless cuts that Elon Musk has been pursuing, the robbing of our federal government in order to finance tax cuts for billionaires is what is happening. And that is what Senate Democrats will be empowering if they vote for this CR.” CHUCK SCHUMER WILL VOTE TO KEEP GOVERNMENT OPEN: ‘FOR DONALD TRUMP, A SHUTDOWN WOULD BE A GIFT’ “Respectfully Senator Schumer, no,” Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, D-N.J., wrote on X. “This Republican bill is bad for workers, bad for our veterans, bad for our seniors. Republicans should pull it and let us get back to work crafting a budget that works for all of our families.” “WTF? @SenSchumer please grow a spine. And quickly,” wrote Susan Rice, who served as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and then as national security advisor during President Barack Obama’s administration. She later served as domestic policy advisor during a portion of President Joe Biden’s administration. SCOOP: TRUMP CRAFTS PLAN TO CUT SPENDING WITHOUT CONGRESS AFTER SHUTDOWN IS AVERTED “It is clear that some of us understand the present danger & some don’t!” Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, declared on X. “I stand by the NO vote on the blank check for Trump & Elon… I’ve got no explanation nor agreement with Senate Dems being complicit in Trump’s Tyranny.” While Republicans hold the majority in the Senate, even if all GOP senators were on board with the proposal — which they are not, as Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has declared himself a “hell no” on the measure — they cannot advance to a vote unless multiple Democrats join with them to surmount a procedural hurdle.  WHITE HOUSE VIDEO RIPS SENATE DEMS WITH THEIR OWN WORDS FOR ‘HYPOCRISY’ OVER LOOMING SHUTDOWN CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Only one Democrat voted to pass the measure when it cleared the House chamber earlier this week.

Federal safety rule on baby cushions goes too far, contradicts Trump agenda, legal group claims

Federal safety rule on baby cushions goes too far, contradicts Trump agenda, legal group claims

FIRST ON FOX: A baby products manufacturer is challenging a new federal regulation as overly broad and contrary to President Donald Trump‘s agenda of reigning in three-letter agencies and commissions.  New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) filed suit Thursday in Washington, D.C. against the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) over a new federal safety standard for infant support cushions. NCLA, on behalf of Heroes Technology, says the commission misinterprets the term “durable” in the provision to include items not previously covered by the standard, like cushions and other such products.  NCLA argues that the CPSC previously only included items that fell squarely within the accepted definition of “durable” as delineated by congressional statute – cribs, for example, as well as high chairs, swings and other products. SCOOP: TRUMP CRAFTS PLAN TO CUT SPENDING WITHOUT CONGRESS AFTER SHUTDOWN IS AVERTED “We think that this is a pure case of statutory construction that guides agency authority and over here they step their bounds,” Kara Rollins, Litigation Counsel at NCLA, told Fox News Digital.  Rollins said that, via the provision in question, the commission is “shortcutting and bypassing really important procedural checks, evidentiary requirements in order to push out a regulation faster.” NCLA had previously sent CPSC a letter requesting a stay of the rule, saying that it “establishes an arbitrary and ineffective safety standard.” NCLA sought “postponement and reconsideration” in light of one of Trump’s executive orders ordering all executive agencies and departments to halt issuing new rules and regulations pending review and approval.  “The president has said to these agencies, ‘You must do X’, and it’s not clear that they’re actually following through with what’s required of them,” Rollins said.  Rollins said that the rule not only affects Heroes Technology but also extends to “thousands of manufacturers [and] thousands of manufacturing jobs” both in and outside the U.S. LAWSUIT TRACKER: NEW RESISTANCE BATTLING TRUMP’S SECOND TERM THROUGH ONSLAUGHT OF LAWSUITS TAKING AIM AT EOS “It’s emblematic,” Rollins said of the broader implications of the rule. “When an agency is not held to account, when it’s not held to the standards set out by the statute, or is independent and doesn’t answer to the president in its own mind, then these sorts of self-aggrandizements tend to occur.” Rollins said that while the rule applies to a specific sector of businesses and products, “there’s not really anything that stops it from sort of infiltrating further unless there’s a check on their power.” “And one thing we’re very clear on is that it’s not that we don’t think our clients’ products can’t be regulated or shouldn’t be regulated, but how Congress said they should be regulated,” Rollins said. “Congress said if you’re a durable infant good, everything else has to go through the process, and it’s our view that it should have went through the other process.” HERE ARE TRUMP’S TOP ACCOMPLISHMENTS 50 DAYS INTO HIS OVAL OFFICE RETURN Rollins and NCLA argue that infant cushions such as the ones in the case should undergo a separate process that “is more onerous, more rigorous, requires more data, more fact-finding.” The suit comes as the Trump administration works to reel in the administrative state via executive orders, directives and legal challenges. In February, Trump signed one order in particular that requires federal agencies to evaluate all of their regulations that could violate the Constitution as the administration continues to prioritize slashing red tape.  The administrative state was previously dealt a blow by the Supreme Court in 2024 when it overturned the Chevron doctrine.  In the landmark decision, Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court effectively scaled back administrative power by holding that “Courts must exercise their independent judgment in deciding whether an agency has acted within its statutory authority.” The doctrine previously gave deference to an agency’s interpretation of a federal regulation.  Fox News Digital’s Diana Stancy contributed to this report. 

Trump admin cracks down on groups tied to Iran targeting US citizens, sanctions Iranian-linked Swedish gang

Trump admin cracks down on groups tied to Iran targeting US citizens, sanctions Iranian-linked Swedish gang

The Trump administration unveiled new sanctions on Wednesday against an Iranian-linked Swedish gang that coordinated an attack on the Israeli Embassy in Stockholm in January 2024, according to the Treasury Department.  The sanctions freeze assets for members and those affiliated with the Foxtrot Network, a transnational criminal organization that the Treasury Department said is one of the most “prominent” drug trafficking organizations in the region. The sanctions also single out and target the group’s fugitive leader, Rawa Majid.  “Iran’s brazen use of transnational criminal organizations and narcotics traffickers underscores the regime’s attempts to achieve its aims through any means, with no regard for the cost to communities across Europe,” Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent said in a Wednesday statement. “Treasury, alongside our U.S. government and international partners, will continue to hold accountable those who seek to further Iran’s thuggish and destabilizing agenda.” TRUMP REINSTATES ‘MAXIMUM PRESSURE’ CAMPAIGN AGAINST IRAN  In addition to trafficking drugs, the Foxtrot Network is a criminal organization that conducts violent acts, including shootings, contract killings and assaults, and is responsible for increased violence in Sweden. It is notorious for employing teenagers to conduct these violent acts, according to the Treasury Department.  Iran has increasingly utilized criminal networks to conduct attacks targeting the U.S. as well as attacks against Jewish and Israeli targets in Europe, the Treasury Department said.  For example, the agency accused Iran of colluding with the Foxtrot Network to conduct an attack on the Israeli Embassy in 2024 after Swedish officials identified a “dangerous object” believed to be an explosive device at the embassy. While security forces neutralized the device, Sweden’s security police moved to investigate the attack as a “terrorist crime,” according to Reuters.  The Treasury Department also said on Wednesday that Majid has coordinated with the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security, which is already under U.S. sanctions, and faces charges in Sweden pertaining to narcotics and firearms trafficking.  The White House referred Fox News Digital to the Treasury and State Department’s statements on the sanctions.  The sanctions against Majid and the Foxtrot Network align with President Donald Trump’s maximum pressure campaign against Iran, which he reinstated in February through a series of sanctions aimed at sinking Iran’s oil exports. TRUMP SAYS ‘SOMETHING’S GOING TO HAPPEN VERY SOON’ WITH IRAN AS HE PUSHES TO NEGOTIATE NUCLEAR DEAL  Trump signaled Friday a nuclear deal with Iran could emerge shortly, and he revealed that he sent a letter to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to push for Tehran to agree to a nuclear agreement. Otherwise, he said Tehran could count on facing military consequences.  CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP “I would rather negotiate a deal,” Trump told Fox Business in an interview Sunday. “I’m not sure that everybody agrees with me, but we can make a deal that would be just as good as if you won militarily.”  “But the time is happening now, the time is coming up,” he said. “Something is going to happen one way or the other. I hope that Iran, and I’ve written them a letter saying I hope you’re going to negotiate, because if we have to go in militarily, it’s going to be a terrible thing for them.”

USPS signs agreement with DOGE, agrees to cut 10,000 workers: ‘Broken business model’

USPS signs agreement with DOGE, agrees to cut 10,000 workers: ‘Broken business model’

U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy informed members of Congress on Thursday he has signed an agreement with the General Services Administration and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to cut 10,000 workers and billions of dollars from the U.S. Postal Service budget.  In a letter to Congress, DeJoy lamented that the Postal Service has a “broken business model that was not financially sustainable without critically necessary and core change.”  “Fixing a broken organization that had experienced close to $100 billion in losses and was projected to lose another $200 billion, without a bankruptcy proceeding, is a daunting task,” DeJoy wrote. “Fixing a heavily legislated and overly regulated organization as massive, important, cherished, misunderstood and debated as the United States Postal Service, with such a broken business model, is even more difficult.”  DOGE will assist USPS with addressing “big problems” at the $78 billion-a-year agency, which has sometimes struggled in recent years to stay afloat. The agreement aims to help the Postal Service identify and achieve “further efficiencies.” DOGE SAYS 239 CONTRACTS CANCELED OVER 2 DAYS, INCLUDING A GRANT TO TEACH TRANS FARMERS ABOUT ‘FOOD JUSTICE’ USPS listed such issues as mismanagement of the agency’s retirement assets and Workers’ Compensation Program, as well as an array of regulatory requirements that the letter described as “restricting normal business practice.” “This is an effort aligned with our efforts, as while we have accomplished a great deal, there is much more to be done,” DeJoy wrote. HOUSE DEM GOES ON SCREAMING RANT AGAINST ELON MUSK, DOGE: ‘SHAME!’ Critics of the agreement fear negative effects of the cuts will be felt across America. Democratic U.S. Rep. Gerald Connolly, of Virginia, who was sent the letter, said turning over the Postal Service to DOGE would result in it being undermined and privatized. “The only thing worse for the Postal Service than DeJoy’s ‘Delivering for America’ plan is turning the service over to Elon Musk and DOGE so they can undermine it, privatize it, and then profit off Americans’ loss,” Connolly said in a statement.  He added: “This capitulation will have catastrophic consequences for all Americans – especially those in rural and hard to reach areas – who rely on the Postal Service every day to deliver mail, medications, ballots, and more. Reliable mail delivery can’t just be reserved for MAGA supporters and Tesla owners.”  DOGE AND AGENCIES CANCEL 200,000 FEDERAL CREDIT CARDS The National Association of Letter Carriers President Brian L. Renfroe said in a statement in response to Thursday’s letter that they welcome anyone’s help with addressing some of the agency’s biggest problems but stood firmly against any move to privatize the Postal Service. “Common sense solutions are what the Postal Service needs, not privatization efforts that will threaten 640,000 postal employees’ jobs, 7.9 million jobs tied to our work, and the universal service every American relies on daily,” he said. USPS currently employs about 640,000 workers tasked with making deliveries from inner cities to rural areas and even far-flung islands. The service plans to cut 10,000 employees in the next 30 days through a voluntary early retirement program, according to the letter. The agency previously announced plans to cut its operating costs by more than $3.5 billion annually. And this isn’t the first time thousands of employees have been cut. In 2021, the agency cut 30,000 workers. As the service that has operated as an independent entity since 1970 has struggled to balance the books with the decline of first-class mail, it has fought calls from President Donald Trump and others that it be privatized.  Last month, Trump said he may put USPS under the control of the Commerce Department in what would be an executive branch takeover.

Is Trump trying to pull Putin away from China – and can it work?

Is Trump trying to pull Putin away from China – and can it work?

As US President Donald Trump sat in the Oval Office on February 28 with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for an explosive meeting that would reveal deep fissures between Washington and Kyiv, he was also asked by a reporter about another world leader: Vladimir Putin. In the very setting in which he joined forces with Vice President JD Vance to berate Zelenskyy for not being grateful to the US for its military and financial aid, and for not backing his attempts at diplomacy with Moscow, Trump had more sympathetic words for the Russian president. “Let me tell you, Putin went through a hell of a lot with me,” Trump said, referring to the persistent allegations from opposition Democrats that Russia helped him come to power, which overshadowed his first term. Two weeks later, as Ukraine has accepted – under Trump pressure – a ceasefire with Russia without offering Kyiv the security guarantees it seeks, the question of what’s driving the United States president to go relatively soft on Putin is once again grabbing headlines. Advertisement One theory has gained some ground in recent days. Trump, some strategists argue, is attempting a subtle geopolitical manoeuvre: By pulling Russia closer to the US, he is trying to wean it away from China, Washington’s biggest long-term rival and Moscow’s biggest benefactor. They’re calling it the “reverse Nixon”, after US President Richard Nixon’s historic rapprochement with China in the 1970s. The move normalised US-China relations after nearly 25 years and deepened a wedge between the Soviet Union and China in a defining moment for the Cold War. So are Trump’s moves part of a diplomatic calculus to weaken the bond between Russia and China that has dramatically strengthened in recent years? And can the US succeed in that endeavour? The short answer: That’s unlikely. Experts point out that the US president has also sent feelers to China in a bid to improve ties – undercutting suggestions that he’s trying to pull Moscow away from Beijing. And nothing that the US does, they say, will make Putin risk relations with China. Instead, Trump’s moves could end up helping Beijing. Visitors view a photo showing late Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai meeting with former US President Richard Nixon during a photo exhibition on the life of Zhou to mark the 110-year-anniversary of his birthday, on March 5, 2008 in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China [China Photos/Getty Images) A ‘broader rehabilitation’ of ties with Russia While Trump ran for president on the promise that he would end the Russia-Ukraine war, his recent outreach to Putin since taking office has gone “far beyond” peace talks, according to William Jackson and Mark Williams, economists at Capital Economics, an independent macroeconomics consultancy based in the United Kingdom. By some accounts, the president appears set on a “broader rehabilitation of US-Russia relations”, they wrote in a late February note. Advertisement They cite Trump’s frequent use of Russian talking points on the war in Ukraine – the US president has alleged that Kyiv was responsible for starting the war – and his suggestion that Russia should return to the Group of Seven (G7), a select group of highly industrialised democracies, among other examples. Russia was a member of the grouping – then named the G8 – until its 2014 invasion of Crimea, when it was booted out by other members. Trump has publicly discussed the “potentially historic economic partnerships” and “incredible opportunities” for US companies in Russia should its war with Ukraine end. Russia has been economically isolated for the past three years due to international sanctions, and the end of the war could change that. Since Trump’s very public dismissal of Zelenskyy during their White House meeting two weeks ago, the US president has also spoken about how he finds it easier to deal with Russia than Ukraine at times, especially when it comes to peace negotiations. But behind Trump’s approach to Russia lies a larger game plan, some members of his administration, and some experts, have suggested. At the Munich Security Conference in February, Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy for the Russia-Ukraine conflict, said that the US wanted to “break” the alliance between Russia, China and North Korea. In an interview with the right-wing website Breitbart, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke of how Russia’s dependency on China – which has grown during the war with Ukraine – was not a “good outcome” for Washington. In a March article, historian and strategist Richard Luttwak argued that the White House bust-up with Zelenskyy and the push to get Ukraine to compromise in a bid to end the Russia war “was all done in the service of Trump’s larger and longer term ambition of neutralising China”. Luttwak, who did not respond to a request for comment from Al Jazeera for this article, described Trump’s policy as a “reverse Nixon”. Advertisement Other facts, however, raise questions about the idea of a grand strategy underpinning Trump’s efforts to woo Putin, say several analysts. A demonstrator holds a banner depicting a playing card with portraits of Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump during a rally against Trump’s stance on the Russia-Ukraine war in front of the US Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine on March 8, 2025 [Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters] Is this a ‘reverse Nixon’? For Michael Clarke, a historian and strategic expert at Australia’s Deakin University who specialises in China’s foreign policy, “there is a real ahistoricism with the ‘reverse Nixon’ argument”. “The current situation bears almost no resemblance to the situation confronted by Nixon and Kissinger in 1969-70,” Clarke told Al Jazeera, referring to Henry Kissinger, a former US national security adviser and secretary of state. A key difference, he said, is that by the time Nixon met with Chairman Mao Zedong in Beijing in 1971, relations between the USSR and China were in steep decline. The two sides were engaged in protracted ideological conflict over the future of the global Communist movement and they had recently engaged in a military confrontation over their