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AMERICA FIRST? ME FIRST!
Israelis and Palestinians are hailing their fragile ceasefire. But big hurdles remain to a lasting peace â including Trumpâs bruised ego, if heâs snubbed for the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.
President Donald Trumpâs team is running victory laps after Israel and Hamas agreed to the first phase [ [link removed] ] of a peace deal negotiated by his team, and for good reason. The deal marks a significant breakthrough in peace talks, after two years of fighting that devastated the Gaza Strip and reportedly killed more than 67,000 Palestinians.
Under the deal, Hamas will release all of the remaining hostages on âMonday or Tuesday,â Trump told a Cabinet meeting today. Israeli forces will pull back to an agreed-upon line, according to Trump.
âItâs not like other moments in the war,â Eyad Amawi, a Palestinian aid worker in Gaza, told What A Day this morning. âWe have mixed feelings between hopes and worries and happiness and sadness⌠the main questions for our people are: Where will I go? What will I do? Whatâs the future? How can I manage my life?â
Crucial details remain unclear â including exactly where Israelâs new pull-back line will be, and what might happen if Hamas fails to deliver all of the hostages, including the bodies of those who died over two years of captivity.
Trump also remains a wildcard. His notoriously oversized ego has been driving the process, observers say, including his desperate desire to win a Nobel Peace Prize when the winner is announced tomorrow. Could Trumpâs commitment to the peace process falter, if he feels he didnât get the praise he deserves? Last week, Trump warned that if he doesnât win, âitâll be a big insult to our country, I will tell you that.â
âI think [Trump] rushed this in many ways in order to try and get [the prize],â Mairav Zonszein, a senior analyst on Israel for the International Crisis Group, told What A Day. âI have no idea if heâs going to get it. But I think that if he does get it, that would potentially give him more incentive to keep this going and see [the peace deal] through. If he doesnât get it, who knows?â
One country thatâs worried about Trumpâs reaction: Norway, home of the independent Nobel Committee. The Scandinavian nation should brace for tariffs, or for the U.S. to declare it an enemy, if Trump gets passed over, one Norwegian newspaper columnist warned [ [link removed] ]. The committee reportedly made its choice on Monday, well before the Israel-Hamas deal was announced on Wednesday.
A new motto is emerging for the so-called Trump Doctrine: Itâs Not America First â Itâs Me First.
âTrumpâs desire for a Nobel Peace Prize is driving diplomacy,â wrote The Guardianâs Andrew Roth, adding that the presidentâs âfervid pursuit of the award is believed to have been a key motivator in brokering peace deals in Ukraine and Gaza.â Trumpâs obsession with the prize has reportedly become a ârunning jokeâ among foreign diplomats.
In other words, weâre increasingly living in a world where geopolitical struggles, war and peace, hinge on the ego of one man. In his second term, Trumpâs ego increasingly rests on his self-image as an international âpeacemaker.â This dynamic was made embarrassingly clear when Secretary of State Marco Rubio slipped Trump a handwritten note about the deal yesterday: âVery close,â read the note, according to an image [ [link removed] ] taken by an Associated Press photographer. âWe need you to approve a Truth Social post soon so you can announce deal first.â
Trumpâs âMe Firstâ doctrine is impacting other world conflicts, too, with unpredictable consequences. The latest example: Trump will only attend an upcoming conference of Asian countries if heâs allowed to preside over the signing of a peace deal between Cambodia and Thailand, Politico reports.
Trumpâs actions elsewhere in the world are⌠more concerning. Bombing ships in Venezuela without due process [ [link removed] ] isnât very peaceful. He still wants to take [ [link removed] ] over Greenland. He bombed Iran. The White House still wants [ [link removed] ] the Panama Canal. Trumpâs cuts to foreign aid have caused children to die [ [link removed] ] around the world. And of course, at home, he wants the military to use big, blue cities as âtraining grounds,â while he pushes officials to arrest his political enemies and silence his critics.
Trump has a weird way of making peace. Sometimes, he seems to get results. But more often, his tactics make it clear why heâs unsure if heâll get into heaven [ [link removed] ].
WHAT ELSE?
New York Attorney General Letitia James was indicted [ [link removed] ] for alleged bank fraud in Virginia, making her the latest Trump rival to catch a criminal case after he urged his Department of Justice to go after them. In an unusual move, the case was personally presented to a grand jury by Trumpâs handpicked, inexperienced prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan â who was installed after Trump pushed out her widely respected predecessor, Erik Siebert, for reportedly failing to bring cases like this one. James dismissed the charges as âbaseless.â Trumpâs revenge tour is getting scarily real!
Related: That bizarre Truth Social post [ [link removed] ] publicly calling on Attorney General Pam Bondi to prosecute his political enemies WAS meant to be a private message, according to the Wall Street Journal. âBondi grew upset and called White House aides and Trump, who then agreed to send a second post praising Bondi as doing a âGREAT job,ââ the outlet reports. So, Trump is now accidentally posting his own Watergate Tapes on his feed? Awesome.
The [ [link removed] ]Defense [ [link removed] ] War Department has investigated [ [link removed] ] nearly 300 employees for comments made online after the assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, the Washington Post reports. The inquiry underscores Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethâs extraordinary efforts to silence criticism of a key MAGA ally, alarming former defense officials and lawmakers.
On that note, journalists are criticizing the Pentagon [ [link removed] ] for a new policy that effectively bars reporters from trying to find out things Hegseth doesnât want the public to know. (AKA âdoing journalism.â) The policy conveys âan unprecedented message of intimidation,â the Pentagon Press Association said in a statement. What is Hegseth hiding??? Iâm sure these journalists will find out! Or if they donât, he may just send it to them on Signal!
Senate Majority Leader John Thune and other top [ [link removed] ] Republicans privately warned the White House against firing federal employees and cutting government assistance programs. âThe only reason we are forced to have these conversations is because the Democrats shut down the government,â White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said. Even Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) doesnât believe that [ [link removed] ]!
Tech weirdo Elon Musk could still score tens of billions [ [link removed] ] of dollars from his new Tesla package, even if he missed nearly all of the goals that the company set for him. Has anyone in history ever failed upwards so incredibly hard? Imagine getting paid tens of billions of dollars to suck at your job. Unbelievable.
Barron Trump might get a spot on TikTokâs board, [ [link removed] ] according to a social media influencer with close ties to Trump. âIâm hopeful President Trump will consider appointing his son Barron and maybe other young Americans to TikTokâs board to help ensure it remains an app young people want to keep using,â Jack Advent told the Daily Mail. I have a feeling that Barronâs appointment might finally make people want to stop using TikTokâŚ
Light at the End of the EmailâŚ
Donald Trumpâs team might give [ [link removed] ] $75 million in foreign aid⌠to save Greenlandâs polar bears and Nepalâs snow leopards? The mind-boggling plan is confusing everyone, in light of Trumpâs steep cuts to conservation efforts. Even researchers who work on this stuff say they wouldnât even know what to do with that much money. How many golden money guns does each polar bear really need?
Pope Leo used his first major document to call [ [link removed] ] on the world to help immigrants, in a thinly veiled critique of the Trump administration. âWhere the world sees threats, [the Church] sees children; where walls are built, she builds bridges,â Leo wrote, referencing Pope Francisâs criticism of Trump as ânot Christianâ due to his U.S.-Mexico border wall plan.
The CDC is quietly expanding access to COVID-19 shots [ [link removed] ] for pregnant women, after HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recommended that the group stop receiving shots (for no science-backed reason).
Trump officials are losing their minds over [ [link removed] ] country star Zach Bryanâs new song bashing ICE raids across the country. But Bryan isnât backing down: âI served this country, I love this country and the song itself is about all of us coming out of this divided space. I wasnât speaking as a politician or some greater-than-thou asshole, just a 29-year-old man who is just as confused as everyone else,â he said in response to right-wing criticism.
Fred Ramsell, a scientist who won the Nobel Prize [ [link removed] ] in medicine, was on a backpacking trip in Yellowstone National Park without cell service when he learned the news. When notifications came flooding onto his wifeâs phone, she excitedly told him the news. âI said, âNo, I didnât,ââ Ramsdell recalled. âShe said, âYes, you did. I have 200 text messages that say you won the Nobel Prize.ââ
A dog named Eeyore led police [ [link removed] ] to an 86-year-old woman who had fallen while walking him in Florida. When the sheriffâs deputy found the woman, she was shocked that Eeyore â who isnât her dog â rescued her. âHe came up to your car?â the woman asked the deputy. âOh, sweetheart ⌠Oh Eeyore, youâre such a good boy. Grandma loves you.â The What A Day fam loves you too, Eeyore.
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