Friday, January 9, 2026

Cumhuriyet - Özlem Yüzak - Dünya neden artık kurallarla yönetilmeyecek? - 9 Ocak 2026

 Özlem Yüzak

Dünya neden artık kurallarla yönetilmeyecek?

09.01.2026 04:00
Güncellenme: 

“Dünya kurallardan uzaklaşıp güce dayalı bir düzene geçiyor” cümlesi bugün sıkça kuruluyor. Ama dürüst olalım: Bu bir geçiş değil, bir itiraf. Çünkü zaten dünya çoktan bu noktaya gelmişti. Şimdi olan şey, bunun artık gizlenmemesi.

Hepimiz iyi biliyoruz: Libya, Irak, Suriye, Gazze... Bu ülkeler yıllar önce “insani müdahale”, “kitle imha silahları”, “terörle mücadele” gibi kavramlarla parçalandı. O günlerde en azından (inandırıcı olmasa da) bir meşruiyet dili vardı. Bugün ise gerekçe üretme zahmeti bile ortadan kalkmış durumda. Venezüella’ya yapılan müdahale, Grönland’ın satın alınabileceğinin rahatlıkla dile getirilmesi, Ukrayna’da yaşananlar, Gazze’deki yıkım... Hepsi aynı hikâyenin farklı sahneleri. Artık kimse dünyayı kurallarla yönettiğini iddia etmiyor. Güç konuşuyor. Bu yeni değil; fütursuzluğu yeni.

Bir zamanlar Birleşmiş Milletler vardı. Güvenlik Konseyi vardı. Uluslararası hukuk vardı. En azından kâğıt üzerinde. Bugün o kurumlar ya felçli ya da dekoratif. Veto mekanizmaları, büyük güçlerin çıkarları söz konusu olduğunda hukuku askıya almanın kibar bir adı haline geldi. Ortaya çıkan tablo net: Büyük güçler, kendi “etki alanları” içinde diledikleri gibi davranabileceklerini düşünüyor. Pekâlâ ABD’nin Batı Yarımküre’de yaptığını, Rusya eski Sovyet coğrafyasında, Çin ise Pasifik’te (örneğin Tayvan) yapabilir. Neden olmasın ki? Kimse bunu yüksek sesle ilan etmiyor ama herkes buna göre pozisyon alıyor. Sessiz bir pazarlık, sessiz bir kabulleniş söz konusu.

Grönland vakası bu açıdan çarpıcı. Şimdilik Avrupa Birliği ülkeleri için bir “kırmızı çizgi” gibi görünüyor. Ama Trump strateji değiştirirse? Doğrudan ilhak ya da satın alma yerine daha dolaylı yollar devreye girerse? Askeri ve stratejik fiili kontrol, ekonomik ve teknolojik kuşatma gibi adımlar çok daha olası. ABD’nin askeri varlığını artırması, kritik madenlere erişim sağlaması, altyapı yatırımları üzerinden fiilî bir bağımlılık yaratması... Hukuken egemenlik sürer, ama pratikte karar mekanizmaları Washington’a bağlanır. Avrupa buna yüksek sesle itiraz eder, sahada ise “krizi büyütmeyelim” refleksiyle geri çekilir. Venezüella karşısındaki sessizliğin Avrupa versiyonu neden olmasın?

Bu sessizliğin nedenleri de ortada. Avrupa’nın askeri kapasitesi hâlâ ABD’ye bağımlı. Enerji, teknoloji ve istihbarat alanlarında Washington belirleyici. Üstelik siyasi birlik kırılgan. Macron, Scholz ve Starmer aynı dili konuşmuyor. Trump bütün bunları biliyor.

ABD 66 ULUSLARARASI ÖRGÜTTEN ÇEKİLİYOR

Bu tabloyu daha da netleştiren bir gelişme ise önceki gün yaşandı. Donald Trump, ABD’nin 66 uluslararası örgüt ve yapıdan çekilmesini öngören bir başkanlık kararnamesi imzaladı. Çekildiği kurumların yaklaşık yarısı BM sistemiyle bağlantılı. En kritik adım, BM İklim Değişikliği Çerçeve Sözleşmesi’nden çıkış. Bu karar, ABD’nin küresel iklim işbirliğinden neredeyse tamamen kopması anlamına geliyor. Gerekçe tanıdık: pahalı, verimsiz, ABD çıkarlarına aykırı, egemenliği tehdit eden kurumlar ve yapılar...

Bu yalnızca iklim meselesi değil. DSÖ’den UNESCO’ya, insan hakları yapılarından bilimsel kuruluşlara uzanan bir kopuştan söz ediyoruz. Uluslararası Kriz Grubu’nun ifadesiyle bu, “Washington’un kurallarıyla işbirliği, aksi halde hiçbiri” anlayışının kristalleşmesi. Yani çok taraflılık yerine, çıkar temelli ve koşullu bir düzen.

Bu düzenin en tehlikeli yanı, artık istisna değil norm haline gelmesi. Eskiden bir müdahale olduğunda dünya ayağa kalkar, hukukçular konuşur, gazeteler tartışırdı. Bugün ise “zaten bekleniyordu” denip geçiliyor. İşte kırılma noktası tam da burada. Çünkü bir şey normalleştiği anda, ona karşı direnç de zayıflar.

Kurallara dayalı düzenin zayıflaması, halklar için istikrarsızlık demek. Sürekli kriz, sürekli belirsizlik, sürekli geçici çözümler... Demokrasi “lüks”, özgürlük “ertelenebilir”, güvenlik ise her şeyin önüne geçen bir gerekçe haline geliyor.

TRUMP’IN ARKASINDAKİ GÜÇ NE? YA DA KİMLER? 

Burada durup şu soruyu sormak gerekiyor: Küresel düzeni bu yönde yeniden şekillendiren asıl aktör kim? Trump mı? Hayır. Trump’ı “düzeni kuran” değil, düzen değişimini meşrulaştıran siyasi figür olarak görmek gerekiyor.

Bugün çıkar temelli, tek taraflı ve güç merkezli düzeni şekillendiren belli katmanlar var. İlki, Trump’tan önce de var olan ve Trump’tan sonra da var olacak ABD devlet aklının sert çekirdeği: Bu çekirdeğin temel öncelikleri değişmedi: ABD dolarının küresel üstünlüğü; enerji ve kritik kaynaklara erişim; askeri ve teknolojik üstünlük; rakiplerin (Çin, Rusya) alan kazanmasını sınırlamak... Strateji değişmedi, sadece ambalaj düştü.

İkincisi, fosil enerji, savunma ve teknoloji ekseninde şekillenen küresel sermayenin yeni fraksiyonları. Bunlar istikrarlı hukuk değil, hızlı erişim ister. Yatırımın önünde çevre, iklim, insan hakları engel olsun istemezler. Uluslararası anlaşmalar “yavaşlatıcı” bulunur. Devlet gücü, pazar açma aracı olarak görülür. Venezüella petrolü, Grönland madenleri ya da Ortadoğu enerji yolları. O yüzden şunu bilelim:

Trump, çıkar temelli ve güç merkezli yeni düzenin mimarı değil. Onun siyasi tercümanı.

The National Interest - Why Kazakhstan May Be Vladimir Putin’s Next Target - January 8, 2026 - By: Adam Dixon

The National Interest 

Why Kazakhstan May Be Vladimir Putin’s Next Target

January 8, 2026

By: Adam Dixon



Even if it emerges victorious in Ukraine, Russia can still sow the seeds of a future war of expansion in Central Asia.


The claim at the recent press conference with President Donald Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky that peace in the Ukraine War had now been “90–95 percent achieved” struck objective analysts as already wishful thinking. However, President Trump then rocketed into the stratosphere of surreal nonsense by stating repeatedly that “Russia wants Ukraine to succeed.”


In contrast to the pro-Russia voices in the White House, President Kassym-Jomaert Tokayev of Kazakhstan is one observer whose feet are firmly on the ground. He understands the political, ideological, and economic realities with which the Kremlin is dealing. Tokayev is keenly aware that these realities could have a direct impact on the future of his country, because some of the reasons Russian president Vladimir Putin cited for launching the Ukrainian war could also apply to Kazakhstan.


The first reality is that the leaders of autocracies are almost invariably focused on their own interests and those of their closest supporters, not on those of their country. Personal prestige, no matter how spurious, and personal wealth, no matter how ill-gotten, eclipse most other concerns. Unless an autocrat is perceived by his subjects as anointed by God, he (most autocrats have been men) has one fundamental need to maintain his position: the image of power.


This makes him implacably opposed to any rival institutions that could command respect, loyalty, or wealth— elected legislatures, non-aligned churches and religious hierarchies, civil society, academia, a free press, even the entertainment industry. To co-opt the elites of business, the justice system, the security services, and the military, the leader must constantly demonstrate his power. The moment the would-be czar shows weakness or failure, the whole structure begins to teeter.


The second reality is that an aggressive, resentful nationalism has become the tiger of choice for Putin’s ride in power. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, followed by Russia’s decade-long attempt to become a democracy, produced social and economic chaos. At the start of the new millennium, Putin astutely manipulated the resulting widespread sense of disorientation, grievance, and wounded pride to establish himself as the leader who could restore stability, prosperity, and a sense of greatness. He presented Russia’s difficulties and failures as due not to the inherent complexity of establishing democratic institutions where they have not previously existed, but to the deceit, malice, and greed of the West, intent on dismembering and colonizing Holy Mother Russia.


The third reality is that a critical source of the illusion of a recovered greatness is the spectacle of military successes on foreign stages, even if these are achieved against much weaker opponents: Chechnya, Georgia, Syria, and francophone Africa. The assertion of control over Ukraine was meant to be the piece de resistance of this restoration of international “respect,” bringing Russia not just enormous agricultural and mineral wealth but also the satisfaction of humiliating the EU and the United States.


The Kremlin anticipated that the West, cowardly and impotent, would merely watch, shrug glumly, and return to “business as usual.” Had Russia attempted to seize Ukraine back in 2014, it might have succeeded militarily at least in the short term. Yet by 2022, Ukraine, with the help of Western military cooperation, had become a different nut and had surprised the world by refusing to crack.


Kazakhstan understands further that these three realities have created several serious problems.


First, Putin’s personal fate depends on avoiding a perceived defeat and on satisfying nationalist fervor to assert de facto control over most of the territories of the imperial and Soviet past.


Second, Russia has been shifted into a war economy that cannot return to a focus on civilian consumers.


Third, an army of roughly 1.2 million men, many of them stunted from birth by the blight and neglect of rural poverty, and now further ravaged by the severe and inescapable psychological damage of modern warfare, cannot easily return home as “triumphant heroes.”


The “common sense” view is that Russia is sufficiently depleted economically and demographically that it cannot open a “second front” in the Baltics or Central Asia. Western analysts, as well as senior Russian officials, have been predicting a collapse from exhaustion for over a year. The fact that Russia continues with a range of hostile activities—political subversion in European elections, covert attacks on key infrastructure such as undersea cables, “accidental” violations of neighboring territory or airspace, to name only a few—should cause some “cognitive dissonance” regarding the imminence of peace.


The Kazakh interpretation is calm and objective: weighing against the logic of “Russia has expended vast wealth, has killed, wounded and displaced millions, has created trauma that will last for generations—it is time for it to admit a mistake, and call a halt to this war” is the potent logic of the tyrant: “Any step back from my maximum demands is an impossible admission of weakness. If I cannot win this war, then I need another that I can.” This is the threat that has been implicit for over a decade but is now becoming more explicit: weakened in Ukraine, Putin needs a more achievable target, and Kazakhstan could be that target.


The Kazakh historical experience has been in important ways similar to that of Ukraine. In the course of the nineteenth century, Russia annexed and conquered the territory of what is now Kazakhstan. Russian immigrants occupied or seized fertile land and scarce water resources in the northern border areas, pushing Kazakhs into more marginal, arid, and semi-desert territories. In the twentieth century, Joseph Stalin’s collectivization of agriculture led to widespread famine and massive loss of life, paralleling the Ukrainian “Holodomor.” Kazakh political and cultural elites were repressed and liquidated, with even their wives sent to concentration camps.


Many of the same Russian motivations, both stated and unstated, for invading Ukraine in February 2022 also hold true in Kazakhstan. The former include the “mistreatment” of the ethnically Russian minority (which in both countries is roughly 18 percent of the total population), the “gift” of Russian investments into agricultural and industrial infrastructure for which Russia does not feel it has been properly compensated, and the existence of prestigious Soviet-era projects such as the Baikonur Cosmodrome and spaceport facility on Kazakh territory.


Furthermore, echoing its condescending rhetoric about the regime in Kyiv, Russia has cast doubt on Kazakhstan’s legitimacy as a nation-state, suggesting that its government is an artifact of its history within the Soviet Empire and has survived only because of Moscow’s indulgence. Astana’s refusal to categorically support the “Special Military Operation” is perceived in Moscow as “disloyal.”


The unstated motivations, which align with neo-colonialist thinking elsewhere in the world, are that Kazakhstan has vast mineral resources, including fossil fuels, uranium, precious metals, and the third-largest proven reserves of rare earths in the world, as well as agricultural wealth. It’s easy to see why Russia would want to control these riches.


In January of 2022, when the impending full-scale invasion of Ukraine was already more than a gleam in Putin’s eye, unrest broke out in Kazakhstan, prompted by higher fuel prices and dissatisfaction with the lack of social and political reform. As in Russia, ownership of the national wealth is dominated by a small group of oligarchs. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev felt obliged to appeal to the CTSO (Collective Security Treaty Organization—Russia’s version of NATO) for assistance. Russia duly dispatched troops to restore order, enabling President Putin to demonstrate in front of his domestic audience that Russia still determines who remains in power in Central Asia—a “spectacle” of control.


Putin vowed to prevent “color revolutions,” threats from Islamist groups, and further interference from “malign foreign agents.” However, implicit in such “support” for the legitimate leadership was that any significant shift toward policies (or towards new political figures) that were not aligned with Moscow would be “unwelcome.” Moscow, in short, wanted and expected that it had ensured a compliant leadership in Astana, which would confirm its vassal status by continuing to rely on Russian transportation networks (railroads and pipelines) for Kazakh trade, by providing diplomatic support with regard to the war in Ukraine, and by helping Russia to evade sanctions.


Russia’s status as a pariah state internationally, as well as its increasing reliance on Chinese support to maintain its war machine, have therefore presented Kazakhstan with both an opportunity and a risk. On the one hand, it can diversify its routes to market by developing deeper ties to China, which might then stand to some degree as a protector. On the other hand, this may risk further antagonizing Putin, who not only resents losing any economic leverage but also will feel compelled to demonstrate his power if he emerges weakened and diminished from the conflict with Ukraine.


Kazakhstan’s studied neutrality has therefore been augmented by the assiduous pursuit of a “multi-vector” diplomacy with new partners, cultivating trade with the United States and the EU, as well as with the Organization of Turkish States (OTS), of which it was a founding member. However, the critical partner is China, which is ravenous for new energy resources, agricultural goods, and raw materials.


Although popular opinion in Kazakhstan is wary of exchanging one regional hegemon for another, and resents many Chinese attitudes and policies, there has been a significant effort in the last two years to step up efforts to develop the “Middle Corridor,” the multimodal (rail, road and marine) transportation system which cuts 1200–1800 miles off of the Russian Trans-Siberian route. The Middle Corridor will ultimately increase Kazakh capacity not just to China, but also westwards from Aktau across the Caspian, and on to the Black Sea.


For the time being, however, Russia’s domination of the transportation system connecting Kazakhstan to the outside world remains overwhelming. Kazakhstan’s largest oil export pipelines, the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC), which carries 80 percent of the total, terminates at Novorossiysk, and the Atyrau-Samara pipeline carries roughly 13 percent. By contrast, the two non-Russian routes, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) to a Turkish port on the Black Sea, takes 2 percent, and the Atasu-Alashankou pipeline, which flows eastwards to China, takes another 2 percent.


The last of these, which has a design capacity of 20 million tons (ten times the current volumes), is now being expanded. Ukrainian drone strikes on Novorossiysk, which crippled the loading facilities for Kazakh oil exports, have justified the diversification of routes and development of alternatives, but have heightened Russia’s awareness that its control is slipping.


Militarily, Russia dwarfs Kazakhstan in both manpower and equipment. The flat, dry steppe offers no natural obstacles along the border (the longest continuous border between any two countries in the world). Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana, in contrast to Kyiv, is indefensible. Russia has a plethora of military bases scattered along the length of this border to provide access points and logistical hubs. Now caught in the trap of his own making, Putin cannot halt the Russian nationalist juggernaut, nor reorient his military-industrial complex, nor welcome his troops home. For these reasons, a conflict to reassert control over Kazakhstan may seem preferable to a further escalation with NATO.


The question, therefore, is Putin’s calculus of the costs and benefits of attempting to subordinate Kazakhstan if that means challenging its emerging patron, China. It would seem obvious that Putin cannot antagonize China, which has played such a crucial role in his war effort against Ukraine. Still, it was equally obvious that invading Ukraine was a perilous project, to the point that most experts in both Russia and the West believed it wouldn’t happen. China’s interests, attention, and ambitions are divided: the main ones, listed in no particular order, include Taiwan, Siberia, Central Asia, access to new Arctic shipping routes, and competing with the United States in world affairs.


In the new world of “spheres of influence” and “might makes right,” geopolitical opportunities and realities will be recalculated daily, and relative benefits reassessed. Kazakhstan clearly understands the problems Putin now faces and that it is the single most attractive target for any follow-on or alternative war that Putin may decide is a personal necessity. President Tokayev can only do his best to play a long game of chess while the increasing turmoil plays out.


The White House pretends that it neither understands the nature of a criminal megalomaniac, nor how a police state can run amok, nor how a rabid nationalist movement can escape the control of those who nurtured it, nor how a bogus “Potemkin” Christianity can savage innocent victims. It does, however, understand that military adventures can be successful theatrical distractions, and has confirmed that it accepts them as a new international norm.


In 1909, Russian ballet patron Sergei Diaghilev launched the extraordinary, groundbreaking “Ballets Russes” in Paris, a spectacle that established Imperial Russia as a protean source of inspiration for modern music, art, dance, choreography, fashion, and set design—and shaped European and American artistic sensibilities for decades. The vastness of Russia was suddenly matched by a greatness of imagination and spirit from which all could benefit.


This throws a spotlight on a crucial question that is too little asked in a world suddenly consumed by “transactional diplomacy” and the projection of “hard power” into “spheres of influence”: what is it that Russia is bringing to its neighbors, and by extension, to the world? Is it able to offer scientific, technological, artistic, or cultural achievements? Or just a blind, malignant desire to dominate and destroy?


Watching the catastrophe in Ukraine unfold, Kazakhstan is under no illusions: Diaghilev is dead. 


About the Author: Adam Dixon

Adam Dixon has extensive experience in Central Europe and the Former Soviet Union as a consultant, businessman, and entrepreneur, working mostly in aviation and telecommunications, and is currently developing a range of innovative military technologies, including a platform for landmine removal. Mr. Dixon studied at Harvard (BA 1983), Oxford (MPhil 1988), and Leningrad State University (1986).


U.S: Department of State - - January 7, 2026 Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth Remarks to the Press

 U.S: Department of State -  - January 7, 2026

Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth Remarks to the Press

Remarks

Marco Rubio, Secretary of State

Washington, D.C.

January 7, 2026


QUESTION: Why were you saying this behind closed doors?


SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, there’s a lot of operational details that can’t be discussed publicly, obviously, for obvious reasons. So, as we move forward we’ll describe our process, which is a threefold process in Venezuela. I’ve described it to them now.


Step one is the stabilization of the country. We don’t want it descending into chaos. Part of that stabilization, and the reason why we understand and believe that we have the strongest leverage possible, is our quarantine. As you’ve seen today, two more ships were seized. We are in the midst right now, and in fact about to execute, on a deal to take all the oil – they have oil that is stuck in Venezuela; they can’t move it because of our quarantine and because it’s sanctioned. We are going to take between 30 and 50 million barrels of oil. We’re going to sell it in the marketplace – at market rates, not at the discounts Venezuela was getting. That money will then be handled in such a way that we will control how it is disbursed in a way that benefits the Venezuelan people – not corruption, not the regime. So, we have a lot of leverage to move on the stabilization front.


The second phase will be a phase that we call recovery, and that is ensuring that American, Western, and other companies have access to the Venezuelan market, a way that’s fair; also, at the same time, begin to create the process of reconciliation nationally within Venezuela so that the opposition forces can be amnestied and released and – from prisons or brought back to the country, and begin to rebuild civil society.


And then the third phase, of course, will be one of transition.


Some of this will overlap. I’ve described this to them in great detail. We’ll have more detail in the days to follow. But we feel like we’re moving forward here in a very positive way. 


QUESTION: (Off-mike.)


QUESTION: Secretary Rubio, some senators – some senators who were in that briefing describing your operation variously, as that you’re winging it, that there’s no plan for Venezuela going forward, or that this is all —


SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah, I know, they’re going to say that. I used to be a senator too; that’s what you always say when it’s the other party. The bottom line is we’ve gone into great detail with them about the planning; we’ve described it to them. In fact, it’s not just winging it, it’s not just saying or speculating it’s going to happen – it’s already happening. Like, the oil arrangement that we’ve made with PDVSA on their sanctioned oil that they can’t move – understand, they are not generating any revenue from their oil right now. They can’t move it unless we allow it to move because we have sanctions, because we’re enforcing those sanctions. 


This is tremendous leverage. We are exercising it in a positive way. The President described it last night. Secretary Wright will have more to say on it today, who is involved in running this portfolio, and we feel very positive that not only will that generate revenue that will be used to the benefit of the Venezuelan people – and we’ll ensure that that’s what the case is – but it also gives us an amount of leverage and influence and control over how this process moves forward.


QUESTION: (Off-mike.)


QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary, on Denmark. On Denmark, sir. Mr. Secretary, on Denmark. Why has the administration not taken Denmark’s offer to discussion the situation in Greenland? And will you —

SECRETARY RUBIO: Oh, I’ll be meeting with them next week.

QUESTION: But will you take military intervention off the table?

SECRETARY RUBIO: I’m not here to talk about Denmark or military intervention. I’ll be meeting with them next week; we’ll have those conversations with them then. And – but I don’t have anything further to add to that today.

QUESTION: (Off-mike.)

QUESTION: (Off-mike.)

QUESTION: Can you clarify your comments to lawmakers? Does the U.S. intend to buy Greenland?

SECRETARY RUBIO: What? What, what?

QUESTION: (Off-mike.)

QUESTION: Does the U.S. intend to buy Greenland? Can you clarify your comments to lawmakers this week?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, that’s always been the President’s intent from the very beginning. He said it very early on. I mean, this is not new; he talked about it in his first term. And he’s not the first U.S. president that has examined or looked at how could we acquire Greenland. There’s an interest there. But – so I just reminded them of the fact that not only did Truman want to do it, but President Trump’s been talking about this since his first term.

QUESTION: (Off-mike.)

SECRETARY RUBIO: What, what?

QUESTION: The White House put out a statement last night saying that the military option is on the table.

SECRETARY RUBIO: You’ve lost – you’ve really lost a lot of weight. Good job.

QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. Secretary. They said that the military option is on the table. So is the administration really willing to risk the NATO Alliance by potentially moving ahead with a military operation?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Guys, what I think the White House said yesterday is what I will tell you now and I’ve always said. The President always retained the option, if he – every president, not this President, every president – always retains the option – I’m not talking about Greenland; I’m just talking about globally. If the President identifies a threat to the national security of the United States, every president retains the option to address it through military means. 

As a diplomat – which is what I am now, and what we work on – we always prefer to settle it in different ways. That included in Venezuela. We tried repeatedly to reach an outcome here that did not involve having to go in and grab an indicted drug trafficker. Those were unsuccessful, unfortunately. 

QUESTION: On Venezuela, the people of Venezuela are waking up to the same regime. Do you not worry about that? 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, first of all, the bottom line is that there is a process now in place, where we have tremendous control and leverage over what those interim authorities are doing and are able to do. But obviously this will be a process of transition. In the end, it will be up to the Venezuelan people to transform their country. We are prepared, under the right conditions, using the leverage that we have, which includes the fact that they cannot move any oil unless we allow them to move it — 

QUESTION: How long might it take? 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, again, I’m not going to give you a timeline on it. We want it to move as soon as possible. But the – we didn’t expect this would – it’s just been three days since this happened, four days since this happened. So, I understand that in this cycle in society we now live in, everyone wants instant outcomes; they want it to happen overnight. It’s not going to work that way. But work – we’re already seeing progress with this new deal that’s been announced and more deals to follow. You’re already seeing how the leverage the United States has over those interim authorities is going to begin to lead to positive outcomes. 

QUESTION: You said – you just said — 

QUESTION: How much does this cost American taxpayers? American – how much – how long can the American public —

SECRETARY RUBIO: It can – it doesn’t cost us – it doesn’t cost us — 

QUESTION: Just the involvement, the U.S. involvement in Venezuela, how much will it cost the taxpayers? 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, it isn’t going to cost us any money. For example, this oil deal that’s happening doesn’t cost us any money – on the contrary. And if it opens up — 

QUESTION: The oil (inaudible) will cost no money to the American taxpayer? 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, these – look, I can’t – I don’t have the numbers. You – what operation are you talking about? The entire thing?

QUESTION: Yeah. 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, these troops are going to be – none of these troops sit in a dry dock waiting for action. They’re deployed somewhere in the world. If they’re not here, they’re somewhere else. Just today, our forces not deployed to the Caribbean seized a boat, a sanctioned boat tied to the IRGC, that tried to flee from us. That happened somewhere else. We are constantly involved in action. We have boats in the Mediterranean; we have ships in the Middle East; we have ships in the Indo-Pacific. These ships – if they weren’t in the Caribbean, they’d be somewhere else conducting activity. That’s what the Navy does.

QUESTION: Yeah.

QUESTION: On that – on that note, sir, is – on that note — 

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah. 

SECRETARY HEGSETH: I want to – I want to emphasize that question from CNN. The question is never asked, how much does it cost when they’re in the Mediterranean or the Red Sea or the Indian Ocean or the Pacific. But now that they’re in our hemisphere on a counter-cartel mission or ensuring that an indicated individual comes to justice, now you’re asking the question of cost. It’s a disingenuous question to begin with. 

QUESTION: Will there be boots on the ground? Will there be boots on the ground? 

SECRETARY HEGSETH: You’re trying to find any angle possible to undermine the success of one of the most historic military missions the world has ever seen. The level of sophistication that Senate just was briefed on and the House was briefed on, a classified level, is something only the United States of America can accomplish. The world is taking notice of that. Certainly, Venezuela is taking notice of that. And it continues, because two oil tankers – two overnight – were seized by the United States of America, stateless or sanctioned, because the oil blockade, the quarantine of oil out of unsanctioned or stateless – sanctioned or stateless vessels continues. That leverage will continue, as Secretary Rubio outlined. 

QUESTION: Are there more tankers to be seized?

QUESTION: (Off-mike.) 

SECRETARY HEGSETH: So our military is prepared to continue this. 

QUESTION: More tankers to be seized?

QUESTION: (Off-mike.) 

SECRETARY HEGSETH: As he said, the President, when he speaks, he means it. He’s not messing around. We are an administration of action to advance our interests. And that is on full display. We’re happy to brief the House and the Senate because we have nothing to hide. 

QUESTION: Sir?

QUESTION: Secretary Hegseth?

QUESTION: (Off-mike.) 

QUESTION: Secretary Hegseth?

SECRETARY RUBIO: No, no, no. Two quick things. Okay, number one – because we have to go, because we’ve got to brief the House, and if we don’t and they’re pissed at us, we’re going to – you guys better defend us. That was because we were talking to you. 

I would make one more point and it’s a very interesting point. One of those ships that was seized that had oil in the Caribbean – you know what interim authorities are asking for in Venezuela? They want that oil that was seized to be part of this deal. They understand – they understand that the only way they can move oil and generate revenue and not have economic collapse is if they cooperate and work with the United States. And that’s what we see are going to happen. 

We’ve got to go talk to the House, guys. I apologize.


POLITICO Main challenger to Turkey’s Erdoğan vows to defeat him from a jail cell - January 8, 2026 4:00 am CET By Elçin Poyrazlar

 POLITICO

Main challenger to Turkey’s Erdoğan vows to defeat him from a jail cell

Imprisoned ex-mayor of Istanbul, Ekrem İmamoğlu, is confident he has the deep popular support needed to bring him to power.


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Turkeys CHP Party Holds Mass Rally Amid Deepening Political Crisis

Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu struck a defiant tone from the notorious Silivri jail. | Serdar Ozsoy/Getty Images


January 8, 2026 4:00 am CET

By Elçin Poyrazlar


The main rival to Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is incarcerated in a high-security prison just outside Istanbul, but that’s not stopping him from vowing to win the presidency from his cell.


In written replies to questions from POLITICO, the former democratically elected Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu struck a defiant tone from the notorious Silivri jail, and insisted he was still the legitimate electoral candidate who could end Erdoğan’s 25-year dominance of Turkish politics.


The popular mayor’s arrest last March triggered massive nationwide protests and international condemnation. Turkey’s opposition views his imprisonment as a politically motivated maneuver by Erdoğan, an Islamist populist strongman, to remove his most effective secular opponent in the NATO nation of 88 million people.


The 55-year-old, who faces a potential jail term of more than 2,300 years, replied via his lawyers and political advisers to a series of questions sent by POLITICO. The rare remarks signal İmamoğlu is confident in the groundswell of his support and is determined to remain a political force from behind bars.


“What we are living through today is not a genuine legal process; it is a strategy of political siege,” he wrote.


“President Erdoğan’s aim is not only to shape the next election. It is to erase my candidacy now and in the future, and to push me completely out of politics. The reason is clear: They know that in a free and fair election, I can defeat President Erdoğan at the ballot box, and they are trying to prevent that.”


Political tide turns


The sweeping crackdown against İmamoğlu — along with many other mayors from the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) — came amid signs that the country’s political tide was shifting dramatically to the secularists.


The Islamists were defeated by an unexpectedly high margin in municipal elections in 2024, and the authorities moved to charge İmamoğlu on multiple counts, just as he was about to be nominated as the CHP’s official presidential candidate. Despite his detention, more than 15 million Turks still voted in a CHP primary to name him as the official challenger — a highly symbolic public outpouring, as he was the only candidate.


İmamoğlu and members of his team were charged with corruption, extortion, bribery, money laundering and even espionage.


The sheer scale of the case revealed its weakness, İmamoğlu explained. He complained of “1,300 inspections at Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality that produced no concrete findings; a 3,900-page indictment based largely on rumors and witnesses whose credibility is contested; a demand for prison sentences totaling up to 2,352 years; and a maximum trial duration set at 4,600 days.”


The next election isn’t expected until 2028, but İmamoğlu is still seen as posing a particular risk. He has defeated Erdoğan’s party allies in Istanbul mayoral elections three times; crucially, his party won in traditionalist, religious quarters of Turkey’s biggest city, which the Islamists had long seen as their political bastions. Erdoğan himself used the mayoral office in Istanbul as a springboard to win national power years ago.


Figurehead behind bars


Despite his incarceration, İmamoğlu continues to campaign online through platforms like X, Instagram and TikTok, with help from his team.



According to Soner Çağaptay, İmamoğlu has little chance of being allowed to take on Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in a free and fair race. | Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images


But can a candidate really run a serious presidential campaign from prison, while Erdoğan controls all the vital levers of state? İmamoğlu’s main campaign account on X, which has nearly 10 million followers, was blocked in Turkey in May.


The incarcerated mayor fully acknowledges the limits imposed on him but insists a campaign without his physical presence or podium speeches can succeed.


“What defines a campaign is its ideas, its values, and the shared will of citizens. We have all of these on our side … Everyone is aware that my arrest is unjust. Even a significant portion of Justice and Development Party (AK Party) voters consider my detention unfair and see it as a grave blow to justice,” he wrote.


He also stressed the importance of the CHP primary in demonstrating the swell of popular support for him beyond the traditional party base.


“The presidential primary on March 23, 2025 demonstrated this clearly. Although I was detained, around 15.5 million citizens voted to support my candidacy. Only 2 million of that number were CHP members; the other 13.5 million came from every segment of society,” he explained. “The campaign launched by my party to demand trial without detention and early elections has gathered 25.1 million signatures. All of this reflects a demand that transcends party lines: a demand for justice, merit, and dignity.”


Yet the legal fate of his candidacy now rests with a judiciary that has a poor record of independence.


Last February, Istanbul’s chief prosecutor’s office opened an investigation alleging that İmamoğlu’s diploma from Istanbul University had been forged; one day before his arrest, the university annulled the diploma. Under Turkey’s constitution, presidential candidates must be over 40 and hold a university degree.


Another hearing is expected later this month.


According to Soner Çağaptay, an expert on Turkey at the Washington Institute think tank, İmamoğlu has little chance of being allowed to take on Erdoğan in a free and fair race, as the president will use the advantages of incumbency and state institutions to block his candidacy, stigmatize him and weaken support for the CHP.


“Even though İmamoğlu can declare his candidacy virtually from a jail cell, there is no way this will be legally allowed — because for Erdoğan this would be a mortal political threat if this were a free and fairly contested race,” he said.


Foreign policy flop

In his responses, İmamoğlu took aim at Erdoğan’s “aggressive” foreign policy and his close relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump, linking both to the erosion of rights at home.



İmamoğlu took aim at Erdoğan’s close relationship with Donald Trump. | Pool photo by Evan Vucci via Getty Images

“It is clear that President Trump’s presidency has opened a turbulent era … Diplomacy has increasingly shifted from institutions to leader-to-leader dealings, squeezed between rapid bargains and gestures that rarely lead anywhere,” he wrote.


He argued Erdoğan was seeking the legitimacy he had lost domestically in Washington, but questioned whether Ankara was really getting what it wanted.


“We must ask what the concrete gains of this alleged success are. Despite claims that relations with Washington are improving, Türkiye still has not returned to the F-35 [U.S. stealth fighter] program and [associated] sanctions have not been lifted,” he wrote.


“Our neighbor Greece continues, in violation of agreements, to militarize the Aegean islands. The alliance among Greece, Israel, and Southern Cyprus against Türkiye strengthens and extends steadily. Israel is pursuing provocative policies towards Kurds in various regional countries. The Gaza peace plan, struck with a ‘real-estate-dealer mentality,’ has still not ended Palestinians’ suffering and hunger. What is the government doing in response?” he asked.


İmamoğlu also insisted that Erdoğan’s security-driven policy had narrowed the space for democratic politics at home.


“Fundamental rights are restricted, pressure is placed on elected officials, and media and civil society are silenced, justified by ‘security’ and geopolitical importance. Over time, the idea that freedoms can be pushed aside ‘for stability’ becomes normalized.”


If elected president, İmamoğlu said, rebuilding ties with Europe would be one of his top priorities, alongside fulfilling the democratic criteria to be a candidate EU member.


“As the CHP, our goal of full EU membership remains intact. In the short term, we will work to modernize the Customs Union to include services, agriculture, public procurement and digital trade, and to align with European standards,” he wrote.


Missing the city


İmamoğlu said he is maintaining a strict routine in prison despite the bleak short-term prospects. He writes, reads and follows the news as closely as possible — not only for personal resilience, but out of a sense of public duty.


“That responsibility does not end at the prison gate … I am treated within the official framework, but I believe detention should never be normalized in a democracy. Especially when it is used as a tool of political containment. The issue is not the conditions, but the principle: Detention and prolonged legal uncertainty must not become instruments of politics.”


What he misses most is his family; his wife Dilek, his children, parents and friends. A large share of visitation requests are rejected without justification.


“I also miss the ordinary rhythm of the city, walking freely in the street, direct contact with people, and sharing unplanned moments,” he wrote.


He added that he keeps up his strength, knowing he is still part of a democratic movement larger than his personal circumstances.


“That is what truly determines everything, not the walls around me.”


 







The New York Times We Pressed Trump on His Conclusion About the ICE Shooting. Here’s What He Said.- By Zolan Kanno-Youngs - Jan. 8, 2026

 The New York Times

We Pressed Trump on His Conclusion About the ICE Shooting. Here’s What He Said.

The exchange was a glimpse into the president’s reflexive defense of his federal crackdown on immigration.


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Trump Responds to ICE Shooting in Minnesota


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During an interview with The New York Times, President Trump said that a woman who was shot by federal agents in Minnesota “behaved horribly” and ran an agent over. Analysis by The New York Times showed the motorist was driving away from — not toward — a federal officer when he opened fire. CreditCredit...Doug Mills/The New York Times


Zolan Kanno-Youngs

By Zolan Kanno-Youngs

Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent. He and his colleagues interviewed President Trump in the Oval Office on Wednesday.


Jan. 8, 2026

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President Trump wanted to run the tape.


Just hours after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot a 37-year-old woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday, Mr. Trump told a group of New York Times reporters that the woman was at fault because she had tried to “run over” the officer.


We were in the Oval Office for an interview with the president, and the unfolding situation in Minneapolis was high on our list of questions. As soon as we started asking him about the incident, he said: “I want to see nobody get shot. I want to see nobody screaming and trying to run over policemen either.”


When we pressed Mr. Trump on his conclusion that the victim, Renee Nicole Good, tried to run over the agent, he asked an aide to pull up the video on a laptop in an effort to prove his point.


“That was a vicious situation that took place,” Mr. Trump said, apparently referring to what federal officials have said was an effort by Ms. Good to run down an ICE agent.


The exchange was a glimpse into Mr. Trump’s reflexive defense of what has become a sometimes violent federal crackdown on immigration, which in this case claimed the life of an American citizen who was protesting ICE’s presence in Minneapolis.


On Thursday, after our interview with the president, a Times analysis of footage from three camera angles showed the motorist was driving away from — not toward — a federal officer when he opened fire.


But on Wednesday night, Mr. Trump stuck to his position even as we pointed out the inconsistencies in his account and the lack of clarity in videos circulating on social media. We asked if, in his mind, firing into a vehicle like that was acceptable.


“She behaved horribly,” Mr. Trump said. “And then she ran him over. She didn’t try to run him over. She ran him over.”


We told the president that the early videos circulating online were unclear.


“I’ll play the tape for you right now,” Mr. Trump said.


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Mr. Trump’s aide Natalie Harp brought a laptop over to the Resolute Desk to show us what he said would be evidence of the woman’s wrongdoing.


Before the video began, Mr. Trump acknowledged the tragic nature of the shooting. “With all of it being said, no, I don’t like that happening,” he said, before pivoting to his common refrain of criticizing illegal immigration.


As a slow-motion surveillance video of the shooting played on the laptop, we told him that this angle did not appear to show that an ICE officer had been run over.


“Well,” Mr. Trump said. “I — the way I look at it … ”


“It’s a terrible scene,” Mr. Trump said at the end of the video. “I think it’s horrible to watch. No, I hate to see it.”


But did this fatal shooting mean his ICE operation had gone too far? Mr. Trump sidestepped the question, instead blaming his predecessor’s immigration policies.


Mr. Trump’s willingness to make a near-immediate conclusion about the deadly shooting appeared to be at odds with one of his senior advisers. Tom Homan, Mr. Trump’s border czar, told CBS News that he would not make a judgment call on video of the shooting circulating on social media.


“Let the investigation play out,” Mr. Homan said, “and hold people accountable based on the investigation.”


Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.