
Diverting Trump’s Middle East trip to Turkey would be a logistical nightmare. Trump says it’s still ‘a possibility.’
CNN
President Donald Trump has repeatedly floated the possibility of scrapping his Middle East travel schedule and adding a stop to personally mediate Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Turkey.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly floated the possibility of scrapping his Middle East travel schedule — one his team meticulously crafted for weeks — and adding a stop to personally mediate Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Turkey. In comments to reporters aboard Air Force One on Wednesday, Trump continued to express interest in traveling to Turkey for a high-stakes possible Thursday meeting between Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russia President Vladimir Putin, saying Wednesday that Putin would “like me to be there” and it remains “a possibility.” Changing his travel schedule at this point would be a logistical nightmare, but the president is no stranger to upending plans at the last second. There were no obvious signs of schedule reorganization Wednesday, though it is likely that any presidential movement to Turkey would need to be kept under wraps until the last minute for security purposes. And close observers of Trump know not to totally rule it out — he often telegraphs a decision in advance, sometimes publicly musing on the topic multiple times before he makes a final decision, as he’s done here. And the former reality TV star seems to be purposely injecting a “will he or won’t he” dynamic, one that keeps his supporters and even some of his closest aides and allies guessing. Putin would “like me to be there, and that’s a possibility. That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t do it to save a lot of lives and come back,” Trump said in response to a question from CNN’s Kaitlan Collins aboard Air Force One Wednesday. He continued, “I don’t know that he would be there if I’m not there.”

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Most Americans see an immigration officer’s fatal shooting of Minneapolis resident Renee Good as an inappropriate use of force, a new CNN poll conducted by SSRS finds. Roughly half view it as a sign of broader issues with the way US Immigration and Customs Enforcement is operating, with less than one-third saying that ICE operations have made cities safer.











