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Could Trump’s meeting with Putin be the next Reagan-Gorbachev moment?

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Speculation over how the upcoming meeting with President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin has run rampant over the last week, with some expressing concern the Alaska-based powwow could be more games from the Kremlin, while others have begun to draw comparisons to the 1985 breakthrough meeting between President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

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Immediately following Trump’s announcement of the meeting last week, South Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, who has been ardently opposed to Russia’s war in Ukraine, took to social media to argue, «To those who criticize President Trump for being willing to meet with Putin to end the bloodbath in Ukraine – remember Reagan met with Gorbachev to try to end the Cold War.   

«I’m confident President Trump will walk away – like Reagan – if Putin insists on a bad deal,» he added. 

At the closing ceremony for the Geneva Summit, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and President Ronald Reagan face each other, on Nov. 21, 1985. (Bettmann via Getty Images)

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WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT TRUMP’S MEETING WITH VLADIMIR PUTIN IN ALASKA

While some comparisons can be drawn between the upcoming summit and the historic 1985 meeting in Geneva – which then led to the pair sitting down together two more times before the Cold War was finally brought to an end – there are «glaring» differences, warned experts. 

«We could be approaching a breakthrough moment if Putin realizes that Trump is the only world leader who will ever help Russia get out of the Ukraine War and end its isolation,» Fred Fleitz, who served as a deputy assistant to Trump and chief of staff of the National Security Council during the president’s first term, told Fox News Digital.

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«Trump offers Putin a narrow window to greatly improve the lives of the Russian people and make them prosperous,» he added. «Trump hopes to achieve a compromise that will give Putin a face-saving way to end the conflict.»

Trump speaks in front of portrait of Ronald Reagan

A portrait of President Ronald Reagan is seen in the background while President Donald Trump speaks to reporters in the Oval Office of the White House, April 22, 2025. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

But world leaders and security experts alike remain wary that there is any interest from Putin to end his war ambitions in Ukraine. 

«They need to meet. We need to see the results of the meeting, and then we need to see whether those are palatable for Ukraine, for Europe and for us,» Dan Hoffman, former CIA Moscow station chief, told Fox News Digital. 

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«I’ve seen no indication whatsoever that Vladimir Putin wants to end the war. So let’s see if there’s any evidence of that,» he added. 

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President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

VLADIMIR PUTIN TO RETURN TO US FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A DECADE

Hoffman pointed out that the U.S. has tried to incentivize Russia to end its war through various means, including direct military pressure by sending arms packages to Ukraine, and economic sanctions that will not only impact Putin’s war chest, but will cause financial strain across the country. 

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Ultimately, Putin does not appear to have yet changed his war calculus, and experts highlighted that there are some significant differences between Putin and his Soviet predecessor, Gorbachev, that make this upcoming talk vastly different. 

Gorbachev came to power after years of attempts by Reagan to meet with his Soviet counterparts. The then-new Soviet leader was not only interested in ending the decades-long Cold War with the U.S., but he was also looking to implement major changes at home. 

Peter Rough, senior fellow and director for the Center on Europe and Eurasia with the Hudson Institute, explained that Gorbachev – who ultimately oversaw the dissolution of the Soviet Union – was also working to increase transparency in the government and open the economy while he was engaging in talks with Reagan.

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«There is no evidence that Putin is interested in opening up Russia,» Rough told Fox News Digital. «Instead, he wants to defend the course he has set over the past 25 years, especially the invasion of Ukraine. 

«Putin is sending none of the signals Gorbachev sent in the 1980s,» he added. 

Putin listens to former Soviet leader Gorbachev

Russian President Vladimir Putin and former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev speak to each other at a press conference at Gottorf Castle in Germany in December 2004. (Carsten Rehder/picture alliance via Getty Images)

TRUMP GOES AFTER ZELENSKYY OVER ‘LAND SWAPPING’ DISPUTE, LAYS OUT ‘FEEL OUT MEETING’ WITH PUTIN

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There are clear differences in how Putin – who has openly chastised Gorbachev and referred to the collapse of the Soviet Union as the «greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century» in a 2005 speech – operates in comparison to his Soviet predecessor. 

Though some have argued there are similarities in how Trump works as a statesman, in comparison to Reagan.

The White House and other GOP figures have argued that Trump has utilized Reagan’s «peace through strength» approach in his geopolitical maneuvering since taking office in January.

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«I believe there will be compelling comparisons between Trump’s ‘peace through strength’ approach to Putin and Reagan’s approach to Gorbachev,» Fleitz, who serves as vice chair of the America First Policy Institute’s Center for American Security, said. «Reagan’s strong leadership on the world stage promoted global stability and contributed to the fall of the Soviet Union.  

«Putin is coming to the Alaska Summit because he sees a strong U.S. president and one who is prepared to impose crippling energy sanctions on Russia,» he added. 

Rough echoed this line of reasoning but warned much will be determined in how Trump handles Putin in the upcoming summit.

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«Trump has leverage unlike any other Western leader,» Rough argued. «I like the formula ‘peace through strength’ but the devil will be in the details.»

Trump meets with Putin

President Donald Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, July 16, 2018. (Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)

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«If the president backs his diplomatic effort in Alaska with a concrete threat of economic pressure on Russia and perhaps even talk of arms sales to Ukraine, I think the odds of him pushing Putin into a ceasefire improve,» Rough added. 

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Trump has already said he does not plan on making any deals, and described the talks as a «feel-out meeting» or a «listening exercise,» as White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt detailed to reporters on Tuesday.

The president said he will immediately communicate with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders following his discussion with Putin. 

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¿Nicolás Maduro en la mira? Estados Unidos dice estar preparado para usar «todo su poder» para frenar narcotráfico en Venezuela

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La portavoz de la Casa Blanca, Karoline Leavitt, aseguró este martes que Estados Unidos está preparado para «usar todo su poder» para frenar el «flujo de drogas hacia su país», tras ser cuestionada sobre el despliegue de tres buques con 4.000 soldados en las aguas del Caribe cerca de Venezuela.

Ante preguntas sobre el envío de las tropas, Leavitt respondió en una rueda de prensa que el presidente, Donald Trump, «está preparado» para frenar el narcotráfico y «llevar los responsables ante la Justicia».

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«El régimen de (Nicolás) Maduro no es el gobierno legítimo de Venezuela. Es un cartel del narcotráfico, según la opinión de esta Administración. Maduro no es un presidente legítimo. Es un líder fugitivo de este cartel, acusado en EE.UU. de tráfico de drogas al país», insistió Leavitt.

El pasado viernes, la cadena CNN citó a dos fuentes de la defensa estadounidense que informaron sobre la presencia de la marina estadounidense en aguas del Caribe con la idea de «combatir a los carteles del narcotráfico, además de reforzar su presencia con aviones, barcos y lanzamisiles.

Luego del despliegue de más de 4.000 miembros de las fuerzas armadas estadounidenses, el Gobierno de Cuba denunció que esta presencia militar forma parte de una «agenda corrupta» del secretario de Estado, Marco Rubio, y exigió respetar la región como «una zona de paz».

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Entre los medios asignados a esta misión de vigilancia se incluyen un submarino nuclear, aviones de reconocimiento P8 Poseidon, varios destructores y un barco de guerra equipado con misiles.

Hace unos meses se hizo pública una carta del secretario de Defensa, Pete Hegseth, en la que se interpretaban de un modo amplio las tradicionales competencias del Ejército de Estados Unidos para incluir otras misiones.

El presidente venezolano, Nicolás Maduro, durante un acto con motivo del cierre de campaña correspondiente a las elecciones legislativas y regionales. Foto Xinhua

Hegseth aseguraba que el ejército tiene por tarea defender la patria, y eso incluye «sellar las fronteras, repeler toda forma de invasión, incluida la inmigración masiva, el tráfico de drogas, el contrabando de seres humanos y otras actividades criminales».

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La semana pasada, la tensa relación entre Estados Unidos y Venezuela inauguró un nuevo capítulo. En la más reciente confrontación, el gobierno del presidente Donald Trump reiteró su acusación al mandatario de Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, de ser el líder del grupo criminal del Cartel de los Soles y subió la recompensa a US$ 50 millones por información que conduzca al arresto del mandatario venezolano.

Además, EE.UU. designó al Cartel de los Soles como una organización terrorista internacional, una medida que incluye sanciones económicas, como la exigencia de que los bienes e intereses de las personas designadas que se encuentren en EE.UU. o bajo el control de personas estadounidenses sean bloqueados e informados a la Oficina de Control de Activos Extranjeros (OFAC).

Las acusaciones contra Maduro por supuesto narcotráfico, rechazadas de raíz por el gobierno de Venezuela, no son nuevas. Se remontan a 2020, cuando EE.UU. señaló a Maduro como líder del Cartel de los Soles y ofreció US$ 15 millones por información que llevase a su arresto. Luego, Joe Biden la llevó a 25 millones de dólares.

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El cartel detrás de la acusación

Funcionarios del Gobierno de Maduro están señalados como miembros del Cartel de los Soles, un grupo criminal que, según Washington, ha corrompido las altas esferas políticas, militares y judiciales en Venezuela desde la década de 1990 para enviar drogas a Estados Unidos.

Según expertos consultados por CNN, este grupo criminal fue identificado en los noventa luego de que en causas judiciales se involucrara a dos generales de división venezolanos en el tráfico de droga colombiana a través de las FARC.

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“A partir de ese caso, se comenzó a identificar a una red de militares y de (agentes de la) Guardia Nacional que estaban involucrados, primero, en el tráfico de cocaína hacia el norte usando infraestructura militar venezolana o de la Guardia Nacional, y, después, en el tráfico de oro, de minerales diversos, a través de minas informales que estaban siendo organizadas ilícitamente por el ejército venezolano”, dijo en entrevista a CNN Edgardo Buscaglia, asesor internacional contra terrorismo y delincuencia organizada, director de Save Democracy y académico principal de la Universidad de Columbia en EE.UU.

Buscaglia añadió que, cuando Hugo Chávez llegó al poder en Venezuela, el mandatario trató de negociar con los militares que formaban la red ilícita, pero finalmente el grupo se expandió hasta funcionarios civiles del Estado y ya no solo militares.

“De alguna manera Maduro hereda la estructura criminal que le deja Chávez y la expande de manera enorme a funcionarios civiles como el ministro del Interior (Diosdado) Cabello, como fue en su momento el jefe de inteligencia Hugo Carvajal, que eran parte de la organización criminal”, aseguró el experto en temas de seguridad.

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El Cartel de los Soles se convirtió eventualmente en un sistema de corrupción que se beneficia de las actividades del crimen organizado y que “a menudo” se asocia con cárteles internacionales, señaló por correo electrónico Imdat Oner, ex diplomático turco que estuvo basado en Venezuela y hoy es analista político en la Universidad Internacional de Florida.

¿Por qué se llama así y cómo funciona?

Según Insight Crime, un grupo de expertos dedicado a temas de crimen organizado, basado en EE.UU. y Colombia, el nombre de Cartel de los Soles proviene de la vestimenta de los militares señalados de actividades ilícitas.

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El nombre “Cartel de los Soles” comenzó a utilizarse en 1993 luego de que se se conocieron denuncias de participación en narcotráfico contra generales de la Guardia Nacional y luego comandantes de división, que llevaban en el uniforme soles dobles por su rango, explica el grupo.

El Cartel de los Soles, dice Insight Crime, no es una organización tradicional de crimen organizado donde hay un líder y abajo están los subordinados, sino de una red compuesta por muchas células dentro de las ramas castrenses venezolanas y del gobierno.

Debido a que el Cartel de los Soles se compondría de células dispersas, la idea de que Maduro lidera a este supuesto grupo criminal es una “simplificación excesiva” por parte de Estados Unidos, menciona Insight Crime.

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“Más que una organización jerárquica con Maduro al mando de las operaciones de tráfico de drogas, el Cartel de los Soles se asemeja más a una red de corrupción en el que funcionarios militares y políticos se benefician de los acuerdos establecidos con narcotraficantes”, detalla el grupo de expertos.

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GOP doctors call out health task force for ‘woke distractions’ amid major reform push

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EXCLUSIVE: The GOP Doctors Caucus is backing a possible effort to overhaul the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or USPSTF, an independent task force that’s used to determine recommendations on what services health insurance companies in the United States have to cover free of charge.

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A letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., led by Rep. Diana Harshbarger, R-Tenn., and Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., and other members of the caucus expressed concerns that the group may be prioritizing social justice issues over other issues.

«Preventive care should be about keeping Americans healthy, not about checking political boxes,» Harshbarger said in a statement. 

«The American people deserve a task force that follows the science, acts with urgency and relies on the expertise of front-line doctors. The USPSTF should be leading the charge in President Trump’s ‘Make America Healthy Again’ agenda, not wasting time on woke distractions while chronic disease rates keep climbing.»

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HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., makes his way to the inaugural Great American Farmers Market on the National Mall Aug. 4, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Specifically, the letter asks for «relevant specialists» to be part of the process when making certain recommendations, greater transparency in decision-making and more of a focus on outcomes as opposed to «substantial attention to divisive social issues,» citing «race and gender identity considerations that extend beyond traditional clinical parameters,» according to a news release.

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«In 2010, the Affordable Care Act expanded the authority of the USPSTF and tied coverage recommendations to Task Force determinations. However, since the USPSTF’s authority was expanded, the rate of incidence of preventable chronic disease in the United States has only climbed,» the letter states.

The letter was also signed by other members of the caucus, including Reps. Andy Harris, Ronny Jackson, Mike Kennedy, Brian Babin, Sheri Biggs and Bob Onder.

GOP SENATORS RALLY AROUND EFFORT TO END ‘RADICAL WOKENESS’ IN HHS TASK FORCE

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Diana Harshbarger

Rep. Diana Harshbarger, R-Tenn., speaks during the Republican Study Committee news conference to introduce a «Women’s Bill of Rights» outside the Capitol May 19, 2022.  (Getty Images )

Earlier this month, three Republican senators wrote a similar letter raising ideological concerns about the current task force.

«In particular, the USPSTF departed from its proper activities in its December 2023 Health Equity Framework. The framework criticizes ‘equal access to quality health care for all’ as an inadequate goal of public health and announces that the Task Force will instead use equity as ‘a criterion of the ‘public health importance’ of a topic’ for consideration,» that letter stated.

The Wall Street Journal reported that, in July, Kennedy was considering removing members of the board.

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CDC headquarters in Atlanta

A sign stands at an entrance to the main campus of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta Feb. 14, 2025.  (AP Photo/Jeff Amy, File)

«No final decision has been made on how the USPSTF can better support HHS’ mandate to Make America Healthy Again,» an HHS spokesperson told Fox News Digital in a statement when asked about the WSJ report at the time.

The American Medical Association has opposed an overhaul of the task force.

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«USPSTF plays a critical, nonpartisan role in guiding physicians’ efforts to prevent disease and improve the health of patients by helping to ensure access to evidence-based clinical preventive services. As such, we urge you to retain the previously appointed members of the USPSTF and commit to the long-standing process of regular meetings to ensure their important work can continue without interruption,» the AMA wrote.

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Meanwhile, a group of physicians, including those from the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, America’s Frontline Doctors and the Pennsylvania Direct Primary Care Association, signed another letter in support of possible changes.

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The signers wrote that new members should have an «ideological balance to develop recommendations based on facts and science.»

Fox News Digital reached out to HHS for an updated comment.

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Russia launches largest attack on Ukraine this month following Trump’s meetings with Putin, Zelenskyy

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Russia launched its largest attack of the month against Ukraine while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with U.S. President Donald Trump and European leaders at the White House.

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The attack also comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s meeting with Trump in Alaska last Friday, during which Putin refused an immediate ceasefire and demanded that Ukraine give up its eastern Donetsk region in exchange for an end to the conflict that began with a February 2022 invasion by Moscow. Trump later said he had spoken on the phone with Putin about arrangements for a meeting between the Russian president and Zelenskyy.

Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 270 drones and 10 missiles into Ukraine on Monday night and into Tuesday, but that 230 drones and six missiles were intercepted or suppressed. The air force reported that 40 drones and four missiles struck across 16 locations, and debris was said to have fallen on three sites.

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Russia launched its largest attack of the month against Ukraine on Monday night. (Getty Images)

«While hard work to advance peace was underway in Washington, D.C. … Moscow continued to do the opposite of peace: more strikes and destruction,» Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha wrote on X. «This once again demonstrates how critical it is to end the killing, achieve a lasting peace, and ensure robust security guarantees.»

Energy infrastructure in the central Poltava region was a target of the strikes, according to Ukraine’s Energy Ministry. The casualty figures were not immediately released by officials.

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WHITE HOUSE REJECTS ‘BLANK CHECKS’ FOR UKRAINE, PRESSES NATO TO SHOULDER COSTS

Ukrainian firefighters search for survivors after a Russian air strike on a residential building

Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 270 drones and 10 missiles into Ukraine. (Getty Images)

«As a result of the attack, large-scale fires broke out,» the ministry said in a statement.

Oil refining and gas facilities were attacked, the ministry added, saying the strikes were the latest «systematic terrorist attacks against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, which is a direct violation of international humanitarian law.»

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The attack was the largest since Russia launched 309 drones and eight missiles into Ukraine on July 31, according to the air force.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said its forces shot down 23 Ukrainian drones on Monday night and into Tuesday morning.

Ukrainian firefighters search for survivors

The attack was the largest since Russia launched 309 drones and eight missiles into Ukraine on July 31. (Getty Images)

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Both sides have been targeting infrastructure, including oil facilities.

Zelenskyy had criticized Moscow for earlier strikes on Monday ahead of his meeting at the White House in which at least 14 people were killed and dozens more were injured.

«The Russian war machine continues to destroy lives despite everything. Putin will commit demonstrative killings to maintain pressure on Ukraine and Europe, as well as to humiliate diplomatic efforts. That is precisely why we are seeking assistance to put an end to the killings,» he wrote Monday morning on X.

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Reuters contributed to this report.



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