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The Latest: Trump prepares broad tariffs order ahead of meeting with India's Modi

President Donald Trump meets Thursday with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi , who has heaped praise on him and is hoping to avoid tariffs that Trump has ordered for imports from other countries.
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President Donald Trump speaks as Tulsi Gabbard is sworn in as the Director of National Intelligence in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)

President Donald Trump meets Thursday with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has heaped praise on him and is hoping to avoid tariffs that Trump has ordered for imports from other countries. The White House said Trump would sign a new order ahead of their meeting that could impose reciprocal tariffs across the global economy. European anger over changing U.S. policy on the Russia-Ukraine war will be on display at Thursday’s NATO meeting. At the Capital, Robert F. Kennedy's nomination for health secretary reaches a final Senate vote. And shockwaves continue throughout the federal workforce as Elon Musk's DOGE team works to dismantle much of government.

Here's the latest:

NATO is in disarray after the US announces that its security priorities lie elsewhere

In just one speech by the U.S. defense secretary, the most powerful member of NATO has thrown the world’s biggest military alliance into disarray, raising troubling questions about America’s commitment to European security.

Pete Hegseth told almost 50 of Ukraine ’s Western backers that he came “to directly and unambiguously express that stark strategic realities prevent the United States of America from being primarily focused on the security of Europe.”

“The United States faces consequential threats to our homeland. We must — and we are — focusing on security of our own borders,” he said.

NATO’s credibility is underpinned by Article 5, its collective security guarantee to come to the aid of any member whose sovereignty or territory might be under attack. Hegseth has now raised doubts about the U.S. commitment to that pledge, although he did say that his country is not planning to leave the alliance.

▶ Read more about NATO’s reaction to new Trump policy

Elon Musk wants to ‘delete entire agencies’ from the federal government

Elon Musk spoke about his push under President Donald Trump to radically cut spending and restructure its priorities in a wide-ranging videocall Thursday to the World Governments Summit in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

“I think we do need to delete entire agencies as opposed to leave a lot of them behind,” Musk said. “If we don’t remove the roots of the weed, then it’s easy for the weed to grow back.”

Musk has consolidated control over large swaths of the government with Trump’s blessing since assuming leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency, sidelining career officials, gaining access to sensitive databases and inviting a constitutional clash over the limits of presidential authority.

▶ Read more about Musk’s speech to Dubai summit

Russia rejoices at Trump-Putin call

Russian officials and state media are striking a triumphant tone after President Donald Trump jettisoned years of U.S. policy and announced he would likely meet soon with Russian President Vladimir Putin to negotiate an end to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Trump’s change seemed to identify Putin as the only player who matters, sidelining Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as well as European governments in any peace negotiations.

Putin has been ostracized by the West since invading its neighbor and faces an international arrest warrant alleging war crimes.

“I am sure that in Kyiv, Brussels, Paris and London they are now reading Trump’s lengthy statement on his conversation with Putin with horror and cannot believe their eyes,” senior lawmaker Alexei Pushkov wrote on his messaging app.

A headline in the pro-Kremlin Russian tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda: “Trump signed Zelenskyy’s death sentence.”

▶ Read more about reaction in Russia to Trump’s pressure on Ukraine

Turkey’s Erdogan voices rare criticism of Trump

The president of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, says President Donald Trump’s “challenges” to the world — including a proposal to expel Palestinians from Gaza — pose a threat to global peace.

Erdogan and Trump referred to each other as friends during Trump’s first term, despite often-strained ties between the two NATO countries.

“To tell the truth, I do not find Mr. Trump’s behavior in the past period and his current statements and challenges to many countries in the world to be right, and I do not see these as a positive development,” Erdogan said.

The Turkish president’s interview with Indonesian television anchor Najwa Shihab aired on YouTube on Thursday.

▶ Read more about Erdogan

FEMA yanks back $80 million meant for migrant hotel costs from New York City bank account

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has clawed back more than $80 million from New York City, escalating a dispute between the Trump administration and the nation’s largest city over money for sheltering migrants.

The move came as a federal judge said he wouldn’t stop FEMA from reclaiming the funds.

City Comptroller Brad Lander said the money was discovered to be missing Wednesday, and no one in his office had been aware that the federal government had access to the city’s bank account.

New York’s Democratic Mayor Eric Adams said the city is seeking an emergency meeting with FEMA and exploring legal options. Adams also said he would discuss the matter with President Donald Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, when they meet in New York Thursday.

▶ Read more about federal funding for New York’s migrant hotels

Trump’s education nominee seeks approval to lead an agency he wants her to destroy

Linda McMahon faces an unusual test at her confirmation hearing Thursday as she seeks Senate approval to lead the Education Department.

A plan being considered by the White House would direct her to dismantle as much as legally possible while asking Congress to abolish it completely.

Democrats plan to grill McMahon on her willingness to execute Trump’s plan, which they say would undermine public education.

Trump hasn’t said whether he would preserve the core work of the agency, which sends billions of dollars a year to schools, manages a $1.6 trillion student loan portfolio and enforces civil rights in education.

The Education Department has fired at least 39 employees including civil rights workers, special education specialists and student aid officials who were in a one-year probation period, according to a union that represents agency workers. Termination letters sent Wednesday said their further employment would not be in the public interest. A department spokesperson said the agency “does not comment on personnel matters.”

▶ Read more on McMahon’s confirmation hearing

Shonda Rhimes, Renee Fleming, part ways with Kennedy Center

Television writer and producer Shonda Rhimes, who was appointed to the Kennedy Center board by former President Barack Obama, announced she's leaving now that a new Trump-appointed board ousted the Kennedy Center's chairman and president and installed Trump as chairman.

Opera icon Renee Fleming also announced her resignation as artistic advisor at-large and praised the leadership of former Chairman David Rubenstein and former President Deborah Rutter.

“They have both been an inspiration to me; and out of respect, I think it right to depart as well,” Fleming said in a statement.

Rubenstein, who served as chairman for 14 years, didn't mention Trump in a post on X Thursday morning that thanked the center's staff.

“President Kennedy would be proud of your selfless work, your long hours, your commitment to excellence, and your dedication to the performing arts,” Rubenstein wrote.

Protesters interrupt House hearing to defend popular AIDS program known as PEPFAR

Demonstrators interrupted a Republican-led hearing in the House on Thursday to protest the Trump administration’s shutdown of U.S. foreign aid programs — a widely praised HIV/AIDS program in particular.

Protesters in the audience blew whistles at the start of the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing that Chairman Brian Mast called to look at allegations of waste by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

“Restore foreign aid! PEPFAR saves lives,” they chanted. The Presidents’ Emergency Plan for Aids Relief is credited with saving more than 20 million lives in Africa and elsewhere over the last two decades.

Mast responded that the administration had exempted PEPFAR. USAID officials and aid groups dispute that, saying no USAID funding is reaching the PEPFAR programs despite the waivers.

▶ Read more about how volunteers are documenting the impact of the aid freeze

JD Vance is visiting the Dachau concentration camp memorial before meeting with Zelenskyy

The U.S. vice president will visit the Dachau concentration camp memorial ahead of talks with Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are due to sit down Friday with the Ukrainian president at the Munich Security Conference to discuss Trump’s intensifying push for Ukraine and Russia to negotiate an end to Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II.

But first Vance is stopping at the memorial, a powerful reminder of the Nazis’ World War II-era atrocities and the U.S. and Western allies’ slowness to take decisive action to confront Adolf Hitler and the rise of his violent nationalist ideology.

Dachau was established the year Hitler took power. More than 200,000 people from across Europe were held there in horrendous conditions; more than 40,000 of them died.

▶ Read more about Vice President JD Vance in Europe

US wholesale prices up a hotter-than-expected 0.4% as progress against inflation stalls

U.S. wholesale prices came in hotter than expected last month at a time when progress against inflation appears to have stalled, undercutting expectations for lower interest rates this year.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that its producer price index — which tracks inflation before it reaches consumers — rose 0.4% from December and 3.5% from January 2024. Forecasters had expected a 0.2% change month over month and 3.2% year over year.

Inflation flared in 2021 as economies rebounded from the COVID-19 pandemic, then began tumbling — from a four-decade high 9.1% in June 2022 to a low of 2.4% in September. The Fed was satisfied enough to repeatedly cut interest rates. Then, the improvement stopped: Year-over-year consumer prices have risen for four straight months.

▶ Read more about U.S. inflation

EU foreign policy chief: Appeasement has never worked

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, expressed surprise that U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and U.S. President Donald Trump had listed what appeared to be concessions to Russia even before talks have begun in earnest.

“We shouldn’t take anything off the table before the negotiations have even started, because it plays to Russia’s court,” she said.

“Why are we giving them everything that they want even before the negotiations have been started? It’s appeasement. It has never worked.”

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said it is crucial that the “peace deal is enduring, that Putin knows that this is the end, that he can never again try to capture a piece of Ukraine.”

NATO allies insist Ukraine and Europe must be in peace talks as Trump touts Putin meeting

Several NATO allies are stressing that Ukraine and Europe must not be cut out of any peace negotiations. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy said after Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin's lengthy phone call that his country cannot accept ‘any agreements without us.’ U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, meanwhile, denied that the United States is betraying the war-ravaged country.

European governments are reeling after the Trump administration signaled that it is planning face-to-face talks with Russia on ending the Ukraine war without involving them, insisted that Kyiv should not join NATO, and said it’s up to Europe to protect itself and Ukraine from whatever Russia might do next.

“There can be no negotiation about Ukraine without Ukraine. And Ukraine’s voice must be at the heart of any talks,” U.K. Defence Secretary John Healey told reporters at NATO headquarters as the organization’s 32 defense ministers met for talks on Ukraine.

▶ Read more on NATO’s view of Trump’s moves on Russia-Ukraine war

Trump says he’s signing an order for sweeping tariffs today

The president posted on social media that his executive order increases U.S. tariffs to the rates other countries charge on imports.

“TODAY IS THE BIG ONE: RECIPROCAL TARIFFS!!!” Trump said on his social media site Truth Social. “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!”

A dramatic hike on tariffs could send shockwaves through the world economy, possibly depressing growth while causing inflation to intensify. Trump has maintained that such tariffs will help to create domestic factory jobs, but most economists say they would effectively be a tax increase on U.S. consumers that would add to inflationary pressures.

Trump has not specified yet how he defines the term “reciprocal” and whether his order would apply only to matching tariffs or to address other foreign taxes he views as barriers to American exports.

▶ Read more on Trump and tariffs

Senate to vote on vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s bid to become nation’s health secretary

The Senate is expected to vote Thursday on the confirmation of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a prominent lawyer and vocal vaccine critic, as the nation’s health secretary, controlling $1.7 trillion in spending for vaccines, food safety and health insurance programs for roughly half the country.

Despite several Republicans expressing deep skepticism about his views on vaccines, Kennedy is expected to win confirmation, absent any last-minute changes.

But with the backing of Republican President Trump, Kennedy believes he is “uniquely positioned” to revive trust in those public health agencies, which include the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes for Health.

Republican senators have largely embraced Kennedy’s vision, reciting his newly hatched slogan to “Make America Healthy Again” in speeches.

▶ Read more about RFK Jr.’s expected confirmation

Trump’s third-term musings seem more a tease than a pledge

Trump has just started his second term, his last one permitted under the U.S. Constitution. But he’s already started making quips about serving a third one.

Over the years, Trump and his supporters have often joked about him serving more than his two constitutionally permitted terms. But his musings often spark alarm among his critics, given that he unsuccessfully tried to overturn his 2020 election loss and has since pardoned supporters who violently attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

But Trump, who will be 82 when his term ends, has repeatedly said that this will be his last term. Trying for another also would flatly violate the Constitution.

▶Read more about Trump’s occasional comments about a third term

What to know about the federal workforce under Trump

Carrie Muniak joins a rally in front of the Office of Personnel Management, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Since Trump began his second term last month, he has focused on dramatically reducing the federal workforce at a breakneck pace.

From dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development to offering a mass deferred resignation plan, Trump’s Republican administration has released executive orders and memos aimed at substantially reshaping the size of government and where its employees work.

A federal judge on Wednesday removed a key legal hurdle stalling President Donald Trump ’s plan to downsize the federal workforce with a deferred resignation program.

The Boston-based judge’s order in the challenge filed by a group of labor unions was a significant legal victory for the Republican president after a string of courtroom setbacks.

▶ Read more about the federal workforce, its job protections and the process of cutting back on its ranks

What to expect during Modi’s visit to Washington

T rump is expected to meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has heaped praise on him and is hoping to avoid tariffs that the new administration has slapped on other countries in its opening weeks.

Modi is a nationalist and has talked up his warm relationship with Trump during his first term while cheering his winning back the White House. The Indian leader is looking to improve relations with Washington and the West overall, which have been frosty lately after Modi refused to condemn Russia for its war on Ukraine.

The White House visit isn’t likely to be all smiles, though.

Trump has already imposed tariffs on China and says more are coming against the European Union, while threatening similar against Canada and Mexico and expanding tariffs on steel and aluminum he initially imposed during his first term.

Trump has repeatedly dubbed India a “tariff king.” In response, New Delhi has shown a willingness to buy more American oil while lowering its own tariffs on U.S. goods, including on some Harley-Davidson motorcycles, from 50% to 40%.

▶ Read more about what to expect in Trump and Modi’s meeting

The Associated Press