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  • Trump Vowed to End the Ukraine War Before Taking Office. The War Rages On.


    After they win elections and move into the White House, plenty of presidents at some point eventually break a campaign promise. Donald J. Trump will not even wait that long. He will break an important campaign promise the moment he takes the oath of office.

    While stumping for a return to power in the fall, Mr. Trump repeatedly made a sensational if implausible pledge with profound geopolitical consequences: He would broker an end to the war in Ukraine in 24 hours. And not just in 24 hours — he would do so before being sworn in as president.

    Before I even arrive at the Oval Office, shortly after we win the presidency, I will have the horrible war between Russia and Ukraine settled,” Mr. Trump vowed in a June rally. “I will get it settled before I even become president,” he said during his televised debate with Vice President Kamala Harris in September. “I will settle Russia-Ukraine while I’m president-elect,” he said again during a podcast in October.

    This was no offhand comment, no one-off that he did not repeat. It was a staple of his public argument when it came to the biggest land war in Europe since the fall of Nazi Germany. Yet he not only has failed to keep his promise; he has also made no known serious effort to resolve the war since his election in November, and the fighting will still be raging even after noon on Monday when President-elect Trump becomes President Trump again.

    “Wars can’t be settled by bombast,” Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, said in an interview. “And the missing link in his thinking is the failure to understand that Ukrainians will reach the settlement only if they are at the negotiating table from a position of strength. He’s in effect undermined their position, and that’s one reason why he hasn’t reached a solution before his inauguration.”

    Mr. Trump, of course, is no stranger to hyperbole. The brash assertion that he could easily, expeditiously and single-handedly halt the war with the proverbial snap of his fingers was in keeping with the longstanding I-alone-can-fix-it image that Mr. Trump likes to present to the public.

    But time and again over nearly a decade in national politics, rhetoric has run into reality and grandiose promises have fallen by the wayside. And while other presidents paid a price when they broke a promise (ask George H.W. Bush about reading his lips on taxes), Mr. Trump just plows forward without evident consequence.

    He did not, for instance, fully build his much-heralded border wall, much less force Mexico to pay for it. He did not wipe out the federal budget deficit or shrink the national trade deficit. He did not forge a permanent peace between Israel and the Palestinians, which he said would be “not as difficult as people have thought over the years.” He did not repeal and replace Obamacare. He did not boost economic growth to “4, 5 and even 6 percent.”

    During this transition to a second term, Mr. Trump did help force a temporary halt in the fighting in Gaza that took effect on Sunday, dispatching an envoy to press Israel to agree to the longstanding cease-fire President Biden had first put on the table. While the deal was hashed out by Mr. Biden’s team, Mr. Trump’s pressure played a critical role in finally getting it enacted, a major success for the incoming president.

    But Ukraine in many ways is a far more daunting challenge for Mr. Trump because he will be starting from scratch. Unlike Gaza, there is no existing peace plan from his predecessor, with all the intricate logistics, timetables and formulas already worked out, for Mr. Trump to simply adopt and push across the finish line.

    Just this month, Keith Kellogg, the new president’s designated special envoy for the Ukraine war, postponed plans to travel to Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, and other European cities to begin exploring the situation until after the inauguration. He told Fox News that he hoped to resolve it within 100 days, which would be 100 times as long as Mr. Trump originally promised even if successful.

    “It was an absurd promise,” said Kathryn Stoner, a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. “The only person who can actually end the war in 24 hours is Vladimir Putin, but he could have done it years ago. Any negotiation is going to take more than 24 hours regardless of when Trump starts the clock.”

    Michael Kimmage, the author of the book “Collisions,” about the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the newly named director of the Wilson Center’s Kennan Institute, said that Mr. Trump’s campaign promises were always delivered “very freely” and perhaps were more about sending signals than being interpreted precisely.

    “His goals with this language may be as follows: to put the government on notice that his approach to Russia and to the war will be different from Biden’s, that his key objective is to end the war and not for Ukraine to win” and “that he will be in charge and not the deep state that entrenches the U.S. in forever wars.”

    Those signals have left murky how Mr. Trump imagines he will get to an agreement, but given his longstanding affinity for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, his hostility toward Ukraine and his resistance to U.S. military aid to Kyiv, analysts expect any settlement he seeks to be favorable to Moscow. Vice President-elect JD Vance has suggested letting Russia keep the 20 percent of Ukraine it has illegally seized through aggression and forcing Ukraine to accept neutrality rather than alignment with the West, a framework echoing Russian priorities.

    Asked by email why Mr. Trump had not fulfilled his campaign promise to end the war before his inauguration, Karoline Leavitt, Mr. Trump’s incoming White House press secretary, did not respond directly, but instead repeated that he will make it “a top priority in his second term.”

    Since his November election, Mr. Trump met with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine and has spoken about meeting with Mr. Putin after his inauguration.

    Representative Michael Waltz, Republican of Florida, who is set to become Mr. Trump’s national security adviser, stressed on Sunday that ending the Ukraine conflict remained a top priority for the new president, calling the war “literally a meat grinder of people” akin to World War I trench warfare “with World War III escalation consequences.”

    But the thinking Mr. Waltz described during an appearance on “Face the Nation” on CBS sounded like the formula for a process that could take a while: “The key pieces of it: Number one, who do we get to the table? Number two, how do we drive them to the table? And then three, what are the frameworks of a deal?”

    “President Trump is clear: This war has to stop,” Mr. Waltz added. “Everyone, I think, should be on board with that.”

    Even if everyone is on board with that goal — and there is room for doubt — the possible terms remain thorny. Even assuming NATO membership is not in the cards, Ukraine wants serious security guarantees from the United States and Europe, especially if it is forced to give up its territory, something that Russia would object to.

    Then there are questions of reparations and consequences. Who would pay to rebuild Ukraine’s devastated cities and countryside? What would happen to the International Criminal Court’s arrest warrants for Mr. Putin and other Russian figures for alleged war crimes? Would the United States and Europe ease sanctions imposed after the 2022 full-scale invasion, and if so on what conditions? Who would police a line of de-confliction and what would happen if any cease-fire is violated?

    Mr. Trump has not publicly addressed such questions in any depth, leaving many to guess. He has, however, expressed distress at the continuing casualties in Ukraine and an urgency to find the answers, whatever they may be.

    “Part of the point — and this may shed a bit of light on his administration’s eventual course of action — may be not to have a script and therefore to speak in ways that obscure rather than reveal what the actual script is,” Mr. Kimmage said. “The less we know what he is up to, the more he can improvise.”



    Despite promising to end the conflict in Ukraine before taking office, President Trump has yet to fulfill this pledge as the war continues to rage on. The ongoing conflict between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed separatists in the eastern regions of Ukraine has resulted in thousands of deaths and a humanitarian crisis that shows no signs of abating.

    Critics argue that the Trump administration’s approach to the Ukraine conflict has been inconsistent and ineffective, with the president’s controversial phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in 2019 further complicating the situation. Despite providing military aid to Ukraine, Trump’s cozy relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin has raised concerns about his commitment to supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression.

    As the war in Ukraine enters its eighth year, it is clear that Trump’s promise to end the conflict before taking office was nothing more than empty rhetoric. The people of Ukraine continue to suffer as the international community grapples with how best to address this ongoing crisis.

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  • About 270,000 migrants waiting to enter U.S. through app Trump has vowed to end, estimates show


    Washington — Approximately 270,000 migrants are estimated to be waiting on the Mexican side of the U.S.-Mexico border, hoping to get an appointment to enter the U.S. through a system that President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to end, according to government figures obtained by CBS News.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection estimates that around 270,000 migrants in Mexico are trying to get an appointment distributed by a government app known as CBP One, which the Biden administration has converted into the main gateway to the American asylum system.

    Now, those migrants, many of whom are from countries outside of Mexico like crisis-stricken Haiti and Venezuela, are at risk of abruptly losing their ability to enter the U.S. Both Trump and South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, his nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security, have vowed to shut down CBP One.

    The app allows migrants in certain parts of Mexico to request a time to be processed by American immigration officials at legal border entry points, also known as ports of entry. The Biden administration set up the process as part of a broader effort to discourage illegal immigration by offering migrants legal channels to come to the U.S. Those admitted into the U.S. under the system are allowed to apply for work permits, as well as asylum in immigration courts near their respective destinations.

    As of Jan. 16, nearly 919,000 migrants had been allowed into the U.S. through the CBP One app process, which was established in January 2023, according to an internal government report obtained by CBS News. It’s unclear what the incoming administration’s plans are for those already admitted through the app, though those with pending asylum requests won’t be deportable unless they lose their cases.

    Migrants head toward U.S. after permit denial in Mexico
    Migrants walk along a highway on their way to the United States, days before Donald Trump takes office, in Escuintla, Mexico. Jan. 17, 2025.

    Jose Eduardo Torres Cancino/Anadolu via Getty Images


    Demand for CBP One appointments has been extraordinarily high, far exceeding the daily cap of 1,450 the Biden administration placed on appointments. Over the past two years, migrants have attempted to secure an appointment over 166 million times, logging into the app again and again to try their luck, the internal report shows.  Wait times typically extend for months due to the high demand.

    Because appointments are distributed 21 days in advance of entry dates, roughly 30,000 migrants are currently scheduled to enter the U.S. under the CBP One system in the next three weeks. Appointments have been scheduled through early February, well into the incoming administration.

    It’s unclear if the Trump administration will honor those appointments. Even if CBP One is terminated, any effort to stop processing migrants at ports of entry would face legal challenges as federal courts have ruled that U.S. refugee law requires officials to process some asylum claimants at these entry points.

    Outgoing Biden administration officials warned that terminating CBP One could prompt some of those waiting for an appointment to cross into the U.S. illegally, potentially upending the current four-year-low in illegal border crossings.

    During its first three years, the Biden administration struggled to contain an unprecedented wave of illegal immigration, with CBP processing record numbers of migrants. But unlawful border entries plunged in 2024, mainly due to enhanced efforts by Mexico to prevent migrants from reaching the U.S. and a move by President Biden in June to severely restrict asylum.

    A spike in illegal crossings that some experts predicted before Trump’s inauguration never materialized. In fact, Border Patrol is on track to record fewer than 35,000 apprehensions of migrants in January, the lowest level since June 2020, when the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic led to a dramatic drop in migration. 

    Internal Border Patrol figures show the agency has averaged just over 1,000 daily apprehensions in January, a nearly 90% drop from the record-setting month of December 2023, when an average of more than 8,000 migrants crossed in the U.S. illegally each day.

    Illegal border crossings have decreased so sharply that the deactivation trigger for Mr. Biden’s asylum restrictions is set to be reached next week, two U.S. officials told CBS News. By its own terms, the policy would be gradually deactivated when the average of daily illegal crossings stays below 1,500 for 28 days. The rule, however, could be scrapped or modified by Trump’s administration.

    Andrea Flores, who worked on immigration policy at the White House during Mr. Biden’s first year in office, said migrants “will likely have no choice but to make an unauthorized crossing” if the CBP One process is halted.

    “Numbers may be low at the border, but it is a completely unsustainable situation that remains completely reliant on Mexico to maintain,” said Flores, who is now vice president for policy at FWD.US, a bipartisan group that supports some liberal immigration policies, including a pathway to U.S. citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

    Trump’s transition team did not respond to questions about CBP One, including whether officials are concerned that ending the system could fuel an increase in unlawful border crossings.

    Trump has vowed to move quickly and aggressively on reshaping federal immigration policy once he’s sworn in on Monday, pledging to launch mass deportations and undo Biden administration policies. 

    Other Biden-era immigration programs in Trump’s crosshairs include an initiative that allows citizens of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to fly to the U.S. if they have American sponsors. The policy, known as CHNV, was also designed to reduce illegal immigration from these countries. 

    Officials have admitted roughly 532,000 migrants under the CHNV program, but their fate is unclear as the Biden administration declined to extend their two-year permits to be in the U.S., and Trump officials have talked about ending the policy.

    Mexico’s government agreed to accept some non-Mexican deportees, including Venezuelans, from American authorities on the condition that the U.S. would accept migrants under the CHNV initiative. Mexico has not yet said how the program’s potential end would affect that arrangement. 

    The incoming administration will also need Mexico’s cooperation to fulfill one of its campaign promises: reinstating the so-called Remain-in-Mexico policy that required migrants to await their asylum cases outside of the U.S.

    Matthew Hudak, a longtime senior Border Patrol official who retired last year, said he was not “necessarily a fan” of CBP One when it was created, but noted the policy has had some “value” in the form of dissuading people from entering the U.S. illegally through the Rio Grande or other parts of the border.

    But Hudak said the incoming administration should make the criteria for being allowed into the country through CBP One “more stringent.” He said Trump officials should assemble their own policy scheme at the border before the spring, when migration has historically increased.

    “Now is the window of time,” Hudak said, ” in which (the Trump) administration has the opportunity to establish consequences, to put things into place that can send the message that then, ultimately, becomes a deterrent factor in people deciding to make that illegal entry.”



    According to recent estimates, there are about 270,000 migrants currently waiting to enter the United States through the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) app, a program that former President Donald Trump vowed to end. The MPP app, also known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, requires asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases are processed in the U.S.

    The Trump administration implemented the MPP app in 2019 as part of its efforts to deter migrants from entering the country. However, critics argue that the policy puts vulnerable asylum seekers at risk and violates international law.

    President Joe Biden has promised to end the MPP app and implement a more humane immigration policy. However, the process of winding down the program has been slow, leading to a backlog of migrants waiting to enter the U.S.

    The situation highlights the challenges facing the Biden administration as it seeks to address the humanitarian crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border and reform the country’s immigration system. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.

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