The Headlines - Trump Pivots Toward Putin, and R.F.K. Jr. Says ‘Nothing’ Is Off Limits
Episode Date: February 19, 2025Plus, an asteroid alert (for 2032). On Today’s Episode:Trump’s Pivot Toward Putin’s Russia Upends Generations of U.S. Policy, by Peter BakerTrump Issues Order to Expand His Power Over Agencies... Congress Made Independent, by Charlie SavageTrump’s Cuts Could Make Parks and Forests More Dangerous, Employees Say, by Austyn GaffneyMusk Team’s Next Target Is Probationary Pentagon Employees, by Eric Schmitt and John IsmayTrump Administration Moves to Fast-Track Hundreds of Fossil Fuel Projects, by Lisa FriedmanKennedy Says ‘Nothing’ Off Limits in Scrutinizing Chronic Disease, by Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Christina JewettPope Francis, Hospitalized, Has Pneumonia, Vatican Says, by Elisabetta PovoledoWill That Asteroid Strike Earth? Risk Level Rises to Highest Ever Recorded, by Robin George AndrewsTune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today is Wednesday, February 19th.
Here's what we're covering.
The Trump administration is going all in on building closer ties with Russia, upending
decades of American foreign policy.
Yesterday, top U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
met for four hours with Russia's foreign minister
as they began peace talks around the war in Ukraine.
It was the first face-to-face meeting
between Russia and the US since Russia's invasion in 2022.
Rubio said that ending the war would open up, quote,
"'extraord extraordinary business and political opportunities
for the US and Russia, signaling that the administration
is ready to look past Russia's brazen land grab
and its killing of thousands of civilians.
Ukraine said it was not invited to the peace talks at all.
Yeah, please.
After the meeting.
Do you have any message for Ukrainians
who, after three years of fighting,
might feel betrayed or disappointed
at not having a seat at these initial talks in Saudi Arabia?
— Trump faced questions about the negotiations at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago.
My colleague Jonathan Swan was there.
— He was asked about Ukraine not having a seat at the table,
and it was a very revealing exchange.
— I hear that, you know, they're upset about not having a seat.
Well, they've had a seat for three years and a long time before that.
This could have been settled very easily.
Just a half, a half-baked negotiator could have settled this years ago.
President Trump attacked Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky.
I mean, I hate to say it, but he's down at 4% approval rating.
And where a country has been blown to smithereens.
Trump incorrectly said that he had a 4% approval rating and even seemed to suggest that Zelensky
was the one who was responsible for the Russian invasion.
You should have never started it.
You could have made a deal.
We already knew that Trump felt more warmly toward the Russian President Vladimir Putin
than he did toward Zelensky.
But it was illuminating to be there at Mar-a-Lago at this moment, as his team is negotiating,
to see him effectively blame Zelensky for the invasion of his country.
The contempt was stark. Trump didn't say a bad word about Putin. And all of his
criticisms seem directed towards Zelensky.
President Trump's pivot on Putin has raised concerns even among members of his own party.
Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi urged caution in an interview on CNN.
You think that Putin can be trusted in these negotiations?
No. Putin is a war criminal and should be in jail for the rest of his life, if not executed.
I've just finished signing some executive orders and if we could start with that, Wil,
you might want to come up here.
At Mar-a-Lago yesterday, President Trump also signed a new order expanding his power over
independent government agencies.
The agencies range from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the National Labor
Relations Board.
They regulate everything from Wall Street to Internet access to unionizing.
They're agencies that Congress established.
They're designed to be independent.
And they're structured so their day-to-day activities are not under the direct control
of the president.
These agencies do not get to become a fourth branch of government issuing rules and edicts
all by themselves.
And that's what they've been doing.
When Trump was on the campaign trail,
he vowed to change that.
I will require that they submit any regulations
they're considering for White House review.
And his new order follows through.
It requires the agencies to submit their policies
to the White House in advance,
and says the administration can block and cut off funding
for initiatives that conflict with the president's priorities.
Ending the agency's independence has been a longtime goal of the conservative legal movement,
which sees this as a way to reduce government regulation and rules on corporations.
Three more quick updates from Washington.
Three more quick updates from Washington. On the energy front, the Trump administration is moving to fast-track fossil fuel projects.
The Army Corps of Engineers has created a new class of emergency permits to speed up
the approval of projects like pipelines, mines, and power plants.
It's part of President Trump's demand to increase oil, gas and coal production.
The move could limit environmental reviews of the projects and cut out the chance for
the public to weigh in.
At the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. laid out his agenda
in his first address to staffers.
He vowed to investigate the causes of chronic disease, said he would scrutinize childhood
vaccines and prioritize other topics that he said had been considered taboo by mainstream
science, saying, quote, nothing is going to be off limits.
And across the federal government, the Trump administration continues to carry out mass
firings.
At least 3000 employees from the U.S. Forest and National Park Services
lost their jobs this past week. That includes rangers who maintain trails, clean facilities,
and conduct search and rescue missions. Some rangers told the Times that the job cuts could
make parks and forests less safe for the public. And more firings are planned at multiple other departments, including the Pentagon.
Today on The Daily, federal workers on how the cuts have them feeling under attack.
The stress is starting to build. Like, jobs really not secure at this point.
It's like contraction in my stomach and chest. I started to like not be able to eat or sleep.
I started to not be able to eat or sleep. At the Vatican, officials announced that Pope Francis has pneumonia and will remain hospitalized
in Rome.
The head of the Catholic Church is 88 years old.
He went into the hospital last Friday.
The Vatican said his condition is, quote, complex, but that he's in good spirits.
The pope had part of his right lung removed
when he was younger, leaving him prone to respiratory issues.
Over the last few years,
he's faced a number of health challenges.
He's been using a walker or a wheelchair more and more,
but he's kept up a busy schedule.
And finally, a busy schedule.
And finally, astronomers announced yesterday that Earth's chance of being hit by an asteroid
is now at its highest level ever recorded.
To be clear, that is still very low, but they've got their eye on an asteroid called 2024 YR4,
which they just spotted in December.
It's expected to pass very close to Earth in 2032,
on December 22nd, to be exact,
and there's a chance 3.1%
that it could actually hit the planet.
It's smaller than other asteroids
that researchers have tracked,
somewhere between 130 and 300 feet long, but it could
demolish a city with a direct hit. Again, there's a slim chance that could happen.
But it's a good time to remember that NASA has a program designed for these situations.
In the last few years, it ran a test smashing a spacecraft into an asteroid on purpose to
see if it could knock it off course, and it was able to minimally alter its path
that way.
The agency's administrator at the time said the test showed, quote, NASA is serious as
a defender of this planet.
Those are the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
We'll be back tomorrow.