Global News Podcast - Trump: arrangements under way for Putin Zelensky meeting

Episode Date: August 19, 2025

President Zelensky says work has already started on security guarantees for Ukraine after talks in Washington about how to end the war. European leaders have been meeting to discuss their next steps t...o protect Ukraine from President Putin's Russia. Also: Hamas says it has accepted a peace plan to end the war with Gaza; we're still waiting for Israel's response; the very old men who want to go home to North Korea; the US says it's made Britain drop its secret demand for access to Apple users' data worldwide; why President Maduro of Venezuela wants to mobilise millions of people against the United States; the Ketamine Queen pleads guilty; and a huge operation is taking place in northern Sweden to move a church five kilometres, to save it from subsidence. The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk

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Starting point is 00:00:30 This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Ankara Desai and at 1,300 GMT on Tuesday, the 19th of August, these are our main stories. President Trump says he's begun arrangements for a meeting between the leaders of Russia and Ukraine after talks in Washington on how to end the war. He's also said it will be European nations putting boots on the ground to defend Ukraine in future. A Los Angeles drug dealer known as the Queen of Ketamine has admitted supplying the narcotics that killed the Friends Act,
Starting point is 00:01:00 Matthew Perry, and a huge operation is taking place in Sweden to move a church five kilometres. Also, in this podcast... It's like a book of history. What was living in the seas, what is living now in the seas, and the hour human beings. I better like you get at the back of the place of it. Why scientists are digging up mud from the Antarctic seabed. Donald Trump says he has begun work to arrange a face-to-face meeting between.
Starting point is 00:01:30 between President Zelensky and President Putin to try to end the war in Ukraine. He described Monday's Day of Diplomacy at the White House, which also included several European leaders as a very good step towards peace. The Europeans were also overwhelmingly positive while stressing the need to maintain support for Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression. President Trump also told Fox News he thought Vladimir Putin would most likely move towards ending the war in Ukraine because he said he thought he must be tired of it.
Starting point is 00:01:59 He also said it would be European nations putting boots on the ground to defend Ukraine in future and that Ukraine would not join NATO. Although the fighting has continued, Ukrainians have given a cautious welcome to the outcome of the talks in Washington. Lisa Yasko is an MP in President Zelensky's party and a member of the Ukrainian Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee. We don't want another piece of paper. We need something very tangible, something very effective that would include, not just theoretical theories about security, but we need weapon, we need foreign troops, we need very strict plan about what happens if Ukraine is invaded again.
Starting point is 00:02:41 And that's very sensitive and very difficult topic. And seeing so many European leaders ready to talk about this and making steps on this, this is a big achievement. Fresh back from Washington, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, and the British Prime Minister, Sir Kier Stama, jointly chaired a virtual meeting of the so-called Coalition of the Willing, those who've pledged to support Ukraine and commit forces to a peacekeeping force there once the fighting ends. I heard more about the European position from our World Affairs correspondent, Paul Adams.
Starting point is 00:03:14 Now, the British and the French have been discussing this so-called Coalition of the Willing, involving a number of countries, many of them European, but not exclusively, since around March. And during that time, there's been repeated references to the need for a... some kind of American support or backstop, as Sakea Stama has often called it. He now feels that because of what Donald Trump said yesterday, that may now be a realistic possibility, that the Americans may be willing to offer some kind of practical support to enable this coalition of the willing to mount a properly viable operation inside Ukraine. The details of that operation are still very unclear, and certainly the details of any
Starting point is 00:03:58 American involvement in it are very unclear. But Sekeir Stama and the others, following those meetings yesterday, feel that there is now an opportunity and they are racing to try and fill in the detail. So there was quite a frisson of excitement when he first got the news from the talks. But a few hours on, pulses seem to have calmed, as you also mentioned. In the cold lights of day, how significant was the progress that was made yesterday in Washington? Look, I think most people are relieved that it didn't result in another bust-up. I think they are also relieved that their concerted effort by they, I mean, the Europeans concerted effort to be there, to be seen to be expressing solidarity with Ukraine, backing up some of its
Starting point is 00:04:40 core demands. I think all of this is regarded as having been successful. I mean, if you look at the scenes around the table yesterday, there were some interesting, you know, moments that could have gone wrong when, for example, Friedrich Metz talked about the urgent need for a ceasefire before any further meetings, particularly a meeting between Vladimir Zelensky and Vladimir Putin. Donald Trump, frankly, looked a bit bored by this talk and was quite dismissive, saying we don't need a ceasefire in this process. I can manage this without a ceasefire. I think the Europeans have used up a little bit of the political capital that they have been amassing in recent months, quite successfully, in getting alongside Donald Trump, in flattering him, in showing that they're willing to engage with him.
Starting point is 00:05:24 They used a bit of that up yesterday in this effort to initiate a process in which they hope that they will keep the U.S. administration focused on what they regard as the key essentials. Paul Adams. In the first hints of Moscow's response to yesterday's talks, the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has been quoted as suggesting that, as he put it, territorial changes quite often are indispensable parts of reaching agreements. So how are Russians viewing the outcome of that extraordinary summer? in Washington. I've been talking to Sergei Goryosheko of BBC Russian. So the significance of these talks has been downplayed, obviously, even before they have started. And the rather cryptic comment by Putin's aid on the diplomacy and the foreign relations,
Starting point is 00:06:15 Yuri Usakov, who said that Kremlin would consider maybe rising the level of the current delegation involved in the talks with Ukraine, and that's a quote, it's left everyone just trying to guess whether it means that Putin is indeed ready to go to the bilat or Trilat with Zelensky and Zelensky and Trump prospectively, or it just means that Vladimir Medinsky and other Putin's aid, who is now the head of the Ukrainian delegation, would be replaced by the minister of foreign affairs, Sergi Lavrov, or maybe the Putin's aid group of himself.
Starting point is 00:06:49 In terms of what the commentary are saying today in most, How are people feeling because it seemed like Russian commentators were fairly confident after the talks in Alaska last week? Oh, they were, yes. But there has been not anything too different from what you have seen before in terms of Russian media pundits trying to laugh out of the significance of these talks and post some memes with Zelensky and Trump saying that those European leaders from the Coalition of Willing are those who will torpedo those negotiations. So same old, same old, basically. Just very briefly before you go, the crux of the matter then for Vladimir Putin, what would you say is non-negotiable for him? Before yesterday, it seemed that Putin meetings, Zelensky,
Starting point is 00:07:34 before Ukraine surrenders, is a non-negotiable. Putin himself has told multiple times that he would consider meeting Ukrainian president but only to sign an agreement which would fulfill all the Putin's desires and all his needs. In this case, Trump is once put into Mizzolensky to negotiate, and that's something that the permanent leader would not likely to go to. Sergei Goryashko. To the Middle East now, and we have had no word yet from Israel on a new ceasefire proposal put forward by Egypt and Qatar, which Hamas has accepted.
Starting point is 00:08:08 The plan includes an end to the fighting for 60 days and the release of hostages held in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israel. Our chief international correspondent, Lys Tusset, is in Cairo and was travelling with Egypt's foreign minister and the Palestinian Prime Minister on Monday afternoon when news of this latest proposal came through.
Starting point is 00:08:27 She told my colleague Anna Foster that it sounded awfully familiar. I think our listeners will be forgiven for thinking, haven't we heard this before for months now, including even from President Trump, we've heard the deal is 90% done, we've never been so close, and yet it still keeps dragging on. This latest news came yesterday
Starting point is 00:08:46 when we were actually traveling in northern Egypt along the Gaza border with Egypt's foreign minister, Badr Abdelati, and the Palestinian Prime Minister, Mohamed Mustafa. And we suddenly heard news that the Qatari Prime Minister, one of the main mediators in this indirect talks between Israel and Hamas, was also coming to northern Egypt. And then the news came that Hamas has now accepted the proposals. So at the same time that the Egyptians and the Palestinians were trying to draw attention to the growing humanitarian crisis right across the border in Gaza, more and more people, more and more Palestinians, including children, dying of hunger according to the UN, they had to then focus on what was happening on the political front.
Starting point is 00:09:34 So when we landed in Cairo, the Egyptian foreign minister was making some calls to his mediators. And then I asked him, was this really a breakthrough? In order to move forward with a ceasefire. During this period of the ceasefire, we have to work out a final deal in order to make the ceasefire sustainable. But what's very important to allow the flow of humanitarian and the medical aid without any obstructions, also to secure the release of some of the hostages, of course, in return of some of the detainees. touch with the American side, with the Israeli side, in order to move forward with this deal as soon as possible. Because as you see, the catastrophic situation in Gaza is unbearable, unbelievable, whether the humanitarian situation or the daily killings of people, either because of the Israeli attacks or because of the hunger orchestrated by the Israelis. So we hope to move forward.
Starting point is 00:10:42 the last hurdle when there is a sort of acceptance of the Whitkoff proposal in general and we hope that the Israelis will reciprocate that in order to move forward. Is it a breakthrough? We hope so. And it depends now, Lees, on Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, who has varying competing pressures, international pressure, pressure from hostage families to reach a deal, but also pressure from ultra-nationalist members of his cabinet, not to. Yes, pressure mounting on all front, it has to be said. You heard the Egyptian foreign minister referred to Whitkoff, which of course is Steve Whitkoff,
Starting point is 00:11:21 President Trump's envoy for everything, including the Middle East. And I'll just say that under this deal, which is a partial deal, that Hamas would free 10 living Israeli hostages, still being held in Gaza, the remains of 18 who have died in nearly two years there, and in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire. Now, recently, Prime Minister Netanyahu had started saying,
Starting point is 00:11:43 no, no, no, a partial deal is not going to work. We have to go for a final deal. All of the hostages living and dead have to be returned, and we'll discuss an end to the war. Now they've gone back to this partial deal. So there's some discussion. Prime Minister Netanyahu, I'm not wanting to say in public, yes, he's now changed his mind.
Starting point is 00:12:00 They'll accept a partial deal. But he did set out before the conditions, five principles about ending the war. and I think he's going to stick to them, and they are very tough conditions, not just for Hamas to accept, but Arab neighbours who will be called upon to try to make any deal work, which is that not only is Hamas to be disarmed, the whole strip will be demilitarized, and that Israel will maintain a security control in the Gaza Strip. And these are really, really difficult issues, and one of the biggest gaps which will have to be closed. Least two set, six elderly North Korean men, all of those.
Starting point is 00:12:35 them soldiers and convicted spies who've been imprisoned in South Korea for decades have applied to be repatriated back to the north. They were arrested in the 1950s and 60s and are now known as unconverted long-term prisoners because they refuse to renounce their communist beliefs. I heard more from our Asia-Pacific editor Jay Sung Lee. These are men basically who are prisoners of war who fought for the North Korean army during the Korean War in the 1950s and spies that Pyong sent to the South following the war to carry out espionage activities. Now, many of them have died of old age or illness. So these six men are believed to be the last remaining ones still alive in South Korea. Now, as you say, their age
Starting point is 00:13:15 between 80 and 96, and were arrested in the 50s and 60s and then locked away for decades for refusing to denounce their communist beliefs and abandoned their loyalty to Pyongyang. Now, for some context, during the 50s and 60s, South Korea was lagging behind North Korea in terms of economic power in terms of standards of living. And worldwide, it was the Cold War era. So you essentially had two rival ideologies competing for dominance. South Korea was a capitalist society. North Korea was a communist one. So in the eyes of Seoul, not only were these men a threat to national security, it actually viewed them as basically agents of Pyongyang who were helping it to try to overthrow and destabilize the South Korean society.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Just briefly, why do they want to be sent back to North Korea? Well, essentially, they missed their home. You know, they want to go back home. They missed their family members. one of them actually spoke to the BBC five years ago, say he misses, you know, his homeland. They viewed themselves as North Koreans. So Seoul says it will review their requests for repatriation, but acknowledges that it will be quite difficult because one man, Anax-Up said he wanted to be sent back on Wednesday, and that's tomorrow, Wednesday, tomorrow. Soil says this is virtually impossible because more time is needed to carry out such a process and especially they need to consult with the North Koreans first before they can actually carry this out.
Starting point is 00:14:33 Jay Sung Lee. Back in February, the UK government secretly demanded it get access to some data belonging to customers of Apple who thought they could keep material private using a system called advanced data protection. The government was using the Investigatory Powers Act, known to its critics as the Snoopers Charter. Apple said no, privacy campaigners were outraged,
Starting point is 00:14:54 and now U.S. security services say the idea has been dropped. Our reporter Chris Fallence has been following this and told me more. This is quite a major blow-up between two very close allies when it comes to things like surveillance. Essentially, the Investigatory Powers Act is the law that regulates this kind of technical surveillance
Starting point is 00:15:13 and it enables the UK government to issue, if you like, a secret notice to tech firms demanding that they change the way their system works. And earlier this year, news broke from sources that the UK government had issued to notice demanding that Apple allowed law enforcement to access data protected by this advanced data protection system. And it's an opt-in system and that can include things like backups of photos, notes, voice message stored in Apple's cloud, which would otherwise be encrypted and
Starting point is 00:15:50 inaccessible to everyone, including Apple. Now, Apple didn't confirm the existence of the notice, but it has publicly said it will never put a backdoor into its services. And again, the company had filed a complaint, an appeal, if you like, to a court in the UK challenging the Home Secretary's power to issue such a notice. What can we say about the intervention of Tulsi Gabbard then? The US Director of National Intelligence has posted about this online saying that she was instrumental in blocking this. Yes. Well, I mean, it is a significant intervention from Tulsi Gabbard, the Director of National Intelligence.
Starting point is 00:16:26 She's been a critic of this previously, but now the news she broke on X was that essentially the UK had agreed to drop its mandate for Apple to provide a backdoor that would have enabled access to protected encrypted data of American citizens. The UK government has declined to comment on what it calls operational matters, but says it has a strong joint security and intelligence arrangements with the US. Chris Fallence Still to come on this podcast We have built a road 24 metres wide road And then we have put all the trails And on the new location
Starting point is 00:17:10 We have done a new foundation as well An entire church begins a two-day journey Across a city in Sweden Why would anyone brave icy weather and rough seas sometimes working through the night to dig up mud from the Antarctic seabed? A new mission, part of convex seascape survey, has brought together a team of scientists from around the world. Their samples have now arrived back in labs and analysis has begun to work out how human activity, including a century of industrial whaling
Starting point is 00:17:47 has affected Antarctica and the rest of our planet. Our science correspondent, Victoria Gale, reports. I spent time in the Antarctic Peninsula doing a story about whales last year, and I didn't expect to have quite so many close encounters. We've been all around the boat, under the boat. It's unreal. This icy haven for Marines,
Starting point is 00:18:14 life is changing. So one particularly adventurous team of scientists has gathered some physical evidence of that change. This is the sound from on board a Spanish research vessel earlier this year. Working at night, lashed by ice and wind, scientists are pulling up a coring drill from the bottom of the southern ocean. It brings with it six long tubes of seabed mud. They extracted more than 40 of these mud cores, each a record of what lived and died in the ocean laid down in layer upon layer of sediment over centuries. You can hear the cicadas chirping around me because I am at the University of Barcelona. These pieces of Antarctic seabed have been shipped here 15,000 miles and it's taken six months. So we're going to find out what the scientists here are
Starting point is 00:19:02 planning to do with them. Analyzing the DNA, bacterial communities, carbon. That's lead researcher Dr. Elisenda Beleste. You go to a place where nobody has taken samples and you will have this course of sediments that nobody knows what is there and you have the opportunity to know what nobody knows. Those are the samples? Yes, these are the samples that we give at minus 80 degrees.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Dr. Beleste shows me the carefully labelled frozen samples taken from the cores. So you slice them and then you take those small samples and you put them in these little vials. Yes, it was quite tricky. Cryo preservation in minus 80 degrees. Yes, some samples are at minus 20 and some others at 4 degrees, it's okay.
Starting point is 00:19:44 So it depends of the eye of analysis that we're going to do. That analysis will build a historical record of Antarctic ocean life. The sediment can be dated, and DNA, preserved in the deep freeze, can be decoded to see what marine life it came from. It's like a book of history. What was living in the seas, what is living now in the seas,
Starting point is 00:20:04 and the hour human impact. I better like you get back in the brain. I came from Saudi Arabia to take a look what is the sample that we have to take with us to there. It's an international scientific mission and Dr. Carlos Precler is here to arrange for some of these frozen vials to be taken to his labs at King Abdullah University. What will happen in the labs at... We are specialised in environmental DNA, so we have the laboratory and all the facilities to perform all the analysis there in Saudi Arabia. You have to think that in the water column you have a lot of different creatures living there and they are releasing DNA because they die, sometimes because they poo.
Starting point is 00:20:45 So you have all the DNA that is going through the bottom of the sediment. So we are able to retrieve the biodiversity of the past. Preparing for a long cruise in the Antarctic is the new whaling factory ship Belena of 15... The scientists will also try to measure the effect that industrial whaling in Antarctica had on our ocean and on our atmosphere. It pushed many species to the brink of extinction. And whales have huge amounts of carbon locked up in their giant bodies. This research could reveal how much of that carbon
Starting point is 00:21:18 ultimately gets buried in the seafloor mud for centuries and how removing so many whales from the ocean affected our planet. So look out for those whale meat sausages when Valena returns to pot. If we realise that they can help us with the fight against the climate change, we should enhance the population, not just to keep what we have, but to fight to have much more whales in the ocean. So this evidence of the health and history of the ocean could reveal more about how this vast ecosystem
Starting point is 00:21:51 and its giant residents can help in the fight against climate change. Victoria Gildare. Four and a half million people sounds like a vast number for a militia, But that is what Venezuela's President Nicholas Maduro has announced will stand ready against what he calls outlandish threats from the United States. Announcing the move on television, Mr. Maduro called for rifles and missiles for the peasant force. The empire has gone mad and has renewed its threats to Venezuela's peace and tranquility. So we must advance on all fronts simultaneously
Starting point is 00:22:28 and prepare ourselves to ens sovereignty and peace in any circumstances. I asked BBC Online's America's editor, Vanessa Bush-Luter, why President Maduro is doing this. He's doing this because of two events that happened in the last couple of weeks. One of them is that the U.S. doubled the reward it is offering for information leading to the capture of President Nicolas Maduro to $50 million. And the other one is the fact that the U.S. has deployed air and naval forces to the Southern Caribbean to counter what it says is the threat from Latin America. and American drug cartels. It argues that President Maduro is the leader of such a drug cartel, the cartel of the sons, and that's why President Maduro has reacted in such
Starting point is 00:23:16 strong words. And how big a military threat then does this militia pose? Not a very big one. First of all, I would say that the number of 4.5 million militia men or militia people is wildly inflated. Now, what you have to know about this force, it was created by the previous president Uvo Chavith in 2007, 2008, and everyone can join it. So there's no requirements of fitness or of age. And many of those who have joined it are senior citizens. The reason why they do join it is that when they go and train on the weekends, they are offered free meals and priority access to government aid. So probably the 4.5 million is everyone who's ever gone and trained on a weekend and wanted a free meal.
Starting point is 00:24:00 And what's happened to the opposition to Maduro, which the US and other countries, who's used to back? Well, in order to know what has happened to the opposition, you kind of need to go back to last year when the elections were held. The opposition had documents showing that it won the election, not President Maduro, but in the wake of that, there were mass protests and a lot of them were arrested. And in fact, its main leader, Maria Corina Machado, is in hiding. Vanessa Bush Luter, a woman who U.S. prosecutors accused of selling the drugs that killed the Friends Act to Matthew Perry has pleaded guilty to five charges in Los Angeles.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Jasveen Sanger, who holds dual British and American citizenship, was due to go on trial next month. From Los Angeles, David Willis reports. Prosecutors say Jasveen Sanger was known to her clients as the ketamine queen. According to her plea agreement, she worked with an intermediary to provide vials of the prescription anesthetic to Matthew Perry's personal assistant who injected the friend's star with the drug. Matthew Perry was found dead in a jacuzzi at his Los Angeles home in October 23 and a raid of Jasmine Sanger's Hollywood apartment led to officers recovering ecstasy tablets, cocaine, methamphetamine and other drugs.
Starting point is 00:25:18 David Willis reporting. Now to a historic town in Sweden whose very existence is being undermined by a mine. Planners in Kiruna say the old city centre is at risk of collapsing into the ground as the community sits above the world's deep. iron or mine. But as the newsroom Stephanie Prentice reports, they have a plan. In the far north of Sweden, above the Arctic Circle, lies Kiranah, a town. The modern community of Kiranah was built around 125 years ago, with robust wooden structures designed to withstand the Arctic cold. The jewel in its crown has always been the church there, dubbed one of Sweden's most beautiful buildings. But now, it's under threat.
Starting point is 00:26:02 And while many people find going to church moving, this one actually is. The 600-ton structure has just started being rolled to a new location. Hel Olofson is project managing the plan, described as one of the most ambitious urban relocation projects in recent history. We have built a road for 24 metres wide road. And we have digged all underneath and lifted it all. up with JECs and then we have put all the traders on it. And on the new location, we have done a new foundation as well. Traveling at a maximum speed of 500 metres an hour, the move is expected
Starting point is 00:26:47 to take two days and is being broadcast live on Swedish TV. But the stakes are high. One delicate aspect is the protection of the church's interior treasures, including a 1,000 pipe organ, and a painting made by a member of Sweden's royal family that's glued into the masonry. And it's not just the church that's on the move. Kierna has had to gradually shift in the past two decades. Niklas Uhansson works for the mining company. We've been mining here since the turn of a century.
Starting point is 00:27:23 And when we went underground in the 50s, what happens is that gravity makes the land want to fall into where we mined out the iron ore. And now we've been mining down to 1,300 meters. It continuously to fall down slowly, slowly, and we need to move. Moving towns isn't new, but moving an entire building in one piece is unusual. And while Kieran's mayor says his wife is angry at him about the old city relocating, he says moving the church is about more than logistics.
Starting point is 00:27:59 It's a symbol of the town's move from the past to the future. Stephanie Prentice And that's all from us for now but there will be a new edition of the Global News Podcast later. If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us an email.
Starting point is 00:28:16 The address is Global Podcast at BBC.co.com. And you can also find us on X at BBC World Service, use the hashtag Global NewsPod. This edition was mixed by Nikki Brough and the producers were Richard Hamilton and Peter Hyatt.
Starting point is 00:28:31 The editor is Karen Martin and I'm Ankara Desai. Until next time, goodbye.

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