‘You’ll find out’: Key takeaways from Trump’s one-year anniversary remarks

It has been one year since Donald Trump took office for a second term as United States president, and he marked the occasion with a marathon news conference in the White House briefing room, where he zig-zagged between topics ranging from immigration to the future of the United Nations.

“ It’s been an amazing period of time,” Trump said as he took the podium on Tuesday, armed with a stack of printouts.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

For more than one hour and 40 minutes, the Republican leader ran through a list of his accomplishments, touting a trend of “reverse migration” away from the US and “high economic growth”.

But the briefing was overshadowed by fraying relations between the US and its allies in Europe, as Trump pressed ahead with his campaign to own the self-governing Danish territory of Greenland.

European leaders had started to gather at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, where Trump’s threats to acquire Greenland “one way or another” cast a pall over the proceedings.

Some leaders, including Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, even suggested it was time for Western allies to imagine a future without US leadership. “We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” Carney told his audience at Davos.

In his news briefing, Trump himself suggested that international institutions like the UN and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) might not last the test of time. Here are some of the key takeaways from his remarks.

Threatening Greenland

Trump had started his day with a fusillade of social media posts on his platform Truth Social, including one that used images generated through artificial intelligence (AI) to show the US laying claim to Canada, Greenland and Venezuela.

A second post, also generated with AI, showed Trump planting a US flag on Greenland’s soil, alongside Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

The images were the latest indication that Trump planned to muscle ahead with his plans to take control of Greenland, as part of his expansionist goals for his second term.

In his news briefing, Trump expressed optimism that his pressure campaign would be successful, as he faced questions from reporters.

“ We have a lot of meetings scheduled on Greenland,” Trump said of his upcoming trip to Davos on Wednesday. “And I think things are going to work out pretty well, actually.”

He also waved aside concerns that his ambitions of territorial expansion might strip Greenlanders of their right to self-determination. “When I speak to them, I’m sure they’ll be thrilled,” he said.

Still, when confronted with questions about how far he was willing to go to acquire the island, Trump struck an ominous note, stating simply, “You’ll find out.”

Trump has previously refused to take military options off the table, and he has threatened several European allies with a tariff hike should they fail to support his claim to the self-governing island.

Weighing the future of NATO and the UN

The sabre-rattling over Greenland led one reporter at the briefing to ask whether Trump was willing to risk the breakup of the NATO alliance to achieve his expansionist agenda.

Trump responded by largely sidestepping the question. He indicated that a mutually agreeable solution could be struck.

“I think something’s going to happen that’s going to be very good for everybody,” he said of Greenland.

“I think that we will work something out where NATO’s going to be very happy and where we’re going to be very happy, but we need it for security purposes. We need a financial security and even world security.”

He also touted his efforts to boost military spending among NATO members. At a NATO summit in June, most member countries agreed to increase their defence spending to 5 percent of their gross domestic products (GDPs), though Spain successfully petitioned for an exemption.

“Nobody’s done more for NATO than I have,” Trump said, revisiting a familiar boast.

Still, he questioned one of NATO’s basic principles. Article Five of the alliance’s treaty requires member states to come to one another’s defence, should any be attacked. But under Trump, allies in Europe and Canada have speculated whether the US would abide by that commitment.

At Tuesday’s briefing, Trump appeared to flip the accusation on its head, casting doubt on whether Europe and Canada would come to the US’s aid.

“The big fear I have with NATO is we spend tremendous amounts of money with NATO, and I know we’ll come to their rescue, but I just really do question whether or not they’ll come to ours,” Trump said. “I’m just asking. Just saying.”

Only once has Article Five ever been invoked, after the attacks in the US on September 11, 2001. The incident prompted NATO allies to deploy their first-ever “anti-terror operation”, providing aircraft to patrol US skies and ensure regional safety.

“Sometimes it’s overrated. Sometimes it’s not,” Trump said of the alliance.

The US president similarly equivocated on the subject of the UN, saying the international body “hasn’t been very helpful”.

“It has never lived up to its potential,” Trump told reporters.

When asked if his “board of peace” — designed to oversee the reconstruction of war-torn Gaza — might one day replace the UN, Trump replied in the affirmative, saying, “Well, it might.”

A role for Machado in Venezuela?

While Greenland was front of mind ahead of Trump’s arrival in Davos, the president was also forced to confront questions about another country where the US has made claims: Venezuela.

On January 3, Trump authorised a military action to abduct his longtime adversary, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who was subsequently transported to the US to face trial on drug-trafficking charges.

Legal experts have largely condemned the operation as a violation of Venezuelan sovereignty.

While Trump initially said the US would “run” Venezuela in the aftermath of the attack, he has since signalled his willingness to cooperate with interim President Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro’s former second-in-command.

Given that Maduro’s last two elections had faced widespread accusations of fraud, many political observers expected a new vote to be called in the wake of his removal. But the Trump administration has declined to set a timeline for new elections.

Previously, Trump also dismissed the prospect of opposition leader Maria Corina Machado taking power in Maduro’s absence.

“I think it would be very tough for her to be the leader. She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country,” Trump said within hours of the January 3 operation.

Still, on Tuesday, Trump appeared to shift his tone. He signalled that there could be a role for Machado in Venezuela’s leadership, following their meeting last week at the White House.

During her visit, Machado presented Trump with the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded in October. Trump has long lobbied for the prize himself.

“An unbelievably nice  woman also did a very incredible thing, as you know, a few days ago,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday. “We’re talking to her, and maybe we can get her involved in some way. I’d love to be able to do that.”

Trump added that the Rodriguez government had  been receptive to his administration’s demands and that he expected US oil companies to make “massive investments” in Venezuela.

“We’ve taken 50 million barrels of oil out of Venezuela in the first four days,” Trump said. “We’ve got millions of barrels of oil left. We’re selling it on the open market.”

The proceeds have gone into a US-controlled account, and on Tuesday, the Rodriguez administration said it received $300m as part of the arrangement.

Addressing tensions in Minnesota

On the domestic front, Trump used his first-anniversary appearance to defend his controversial immigration operations in Minnesota, where nearly 2,000 federal agents have been deployed.

The large-scale immigration crackdown began in December, after Trump blamed Minnesota’s large Somali American community for a fraud scandal that rocked the midwestern state.

At the time, he deployed racist insults to disparage Somali Americans, including by calling them “garbage”.

Trump returned to that theme at Tuesday’s news conference, where he belittled the diaspora’s intelligence by saying they were “a lot of very low IQ people”.

He then framed the fraud scheme as a criminal enterprise masterminded outside the Somali American community.

“Other people work it out, and they get them money, and they go out and buy Mercedes Benzes,” Trump said.

“They have no money. They never had money. They never had a life. They never had a government. They never had a country, because there’s basically no country. Somalia’s not even a country. They don’t have anything that resembles a country, and if it is a country, it’s considered just about the worst in the world.”

Trump also used his podium to address the January 7 killing of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old US citizen and mother of three.

Good’s death was caught on video amid tensions in Minneapolis, Minnesota, over the presence of agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Footage appeared to show Good parked in her car when ICE agents approached her, and when she started to move her vehicle away, an officer fired three shots into her window.

Her death provoked nationwide outrage and protests, as critics questioned the use of force as excessive.

Trump, however, approached the controversy with a “both sides” argument, similar to how he framed the 2017 killing of Heather Heyer at a counterprotest denouncing white supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia.

“The woman was shot. And I felt terribly about that, and I understand both sides of it,” Trump said of Good’s shooting on Tuesday.

He then blamed “agitators” and “insurrectionists” among the anti-ICE protesters for creating a hostile environment.

“Sometimes ICE is going to be too rough with somebody,” Trump said. “They deal with rough people. They’re going to make a mistake. Sometimes it can happen.”

Still, he expressed sympathy for Good’s family, explaining that he had recently learned her father was one of his supporters.

“He was all for Trump, loved Trump, and it’s terrible. I was told that a lot of people, they said, ‘Oh, he loves you,’” Trump said.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,427

On Wednesday, January 21, 2018, this is the current status:

Fighting

  • Governor Ivan Fedorov announced on the Telegram messaging app that at least three people had been reported killed when Russian forces attacked Zaporizhzhia, a city in southeast Ukraine. Nearly 1,500 homes without electricity were also left by Russian strikes, including several private residences and cars, according to the governor.
  • In earlier Russian drone and missile strikes in the Kyiv-arean region and the surrounding capital city, one person was killed.
  • In his weekly video address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed that more than one million Kyiv residents are without power and more than 4, 000 apartment buildings are without heating as a result of Russian air attacks.
  • According to Vitali Klitschko, mayor of Kyiv, about 600,000 people have effected the Ukrainian capital since he urged residents to temporarily relocate following the Russian attacks on crucial energy facilities.
  • In response to the recent Russian attacks, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba reported that 68 repair units have been stationed in Kyiv and that more than 1,400 emergency stations have provided the capital’s residents with warm and charged electronic devices during power outages.
  • No one was hurt when a Russian attack targeted a crucial infrastructure facility in the Vinnytsia region of central Ukraine, whose capital is the Ukrainian Air Force’s headquarters, according to governor Natalia Zabolotna on Telegram.
  • According to Governor Oleh Kiper, another Russian attack in the southern Odesa region of Ukraine, an energy infrastructure facility was damaged.
  • A Russian drone also struck a multistory residential building in Chornomorsk, according to Kiper, adding that no details have been released about the injuries.
  • Zelenskyy has demanded tougher sanctions against Moscow in order to stop its military arsenal, claiming some of the weapons used in the deadly drone and missile attacks on Kyiv and Zaporizhia from Tuesday.

energy-related infrastructure attacks

  • Oleksii Sobolev, the head of Ukraine’s economy and World Economic Forum (WEF), claimed that since October, Russian attacks have affected about 8.5 gigawatts of Ukraine’s power generation capacity.
  • According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), several substations critical to nuclear safety have been impacted by the attacks, as have power lines to a number of other nuclear power plants. The IAEA reported that after a Russian attack, the Chornobyl plant, which was the site of the worst civil nuclear accident in history, lost all off-site power. The plant was later reconnected, according to Kyiv.
  • Andrii Sybiha, the foreign minister of Ukraine, claimed that Russia acted as a coercive force by using the threat of a nuclear disaster.
  • Volker Turk, the UN’s human rights representative, claimed that civilians are “bearing the brunt” of the “cruel” Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.

talks on a ceasefire

  • On the WEF’s sidelines, US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin hold special envoy meetings in Davos. They described their discussion of a potential peace deal with Ukraine as “very constructive” and “very positive.”
  • According to Rustem Umerov, the national security and defense council secretary, Ukrainian peace negotiators met with national security advisers from France, Germany, and the United Kingdom in Davos. On Telegram, Umerov stated that there are going to be more meetings.
  • Zelenskyy urged the United States to increase its influence on Moscow, telling reporters that he thought it was possible to do more to persuade Russia to reach a ceasefire agreement.
  • Zelenskyy added that he was concerned that Trump’s attempt to overthrow Russia’s planned full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which is about to end in four years.
  • If Washington was ready to sign documents requiring Ukraine’s security guarantees and a post-war prosperity plan, Zelenskyy said he was.
  • Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, stated that he does not think that the leaders of Europe are interested in bringing an end to the 2022 conflict.

Military

  • As Moscow plans to increase its armed forces to 2.5 million by 2030, Zelenskyy has urged Ukraine and Europe to form a joint defense force of up to three million people.
  • Mykhailo Fedorov, the country’s new defense minister, has promised a comprehensive, data-driven overhaul of the Ukrainian army, giving Ukrainian forces the advantage over Russia’s larger and better-equipped army.
  • Fedorov added that Ukraine would test its own-made drone, the DJI Mavic drone, this month, despite the fact that both sides are frequently using it for aerial reconnaissance on the front lines. The manufacturer was not disclosed by him.
  • The minister also made the announcement that Ukraine would set up a system that would enable its allies to use Kyiv’s valuable combat data, which had been gathered over the course of the nearly four-year conflict, to train their AI models.

US seizes a seventh Venezuela-linked oil tanker

The United States military announced that it has seized a seventh Venezuela-linked oil tanker, as the US tightens its control over the production and sale of the country’s considerable oil resources.

US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), which oversees military operations in Latin America, said on Tuesday that it captured the Motor Vessel Sagitta as part of its blockade on oil vessels leaving and entering the country.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

“The apprehension of another tanker operating in defiance of President Trump’s established quarantine of sanctioned vessels in the Caribbean demonstrates our resolve to ensure that the only oil leaving Venezuela will be oil that is coordinated properly and lawfully”, SOUTHCOM said in a statement.

It added that Tuesday’s tanker seizure occurred “without incident”, sharing a video appearing to show US forces flying towards the vessel and landing on its deck.

The US began seizing sanctioned tankers on December 10, as part of a campaign of increasing pressure on Venezuela.

Tensions between the US and Venezuela came to a peak on January 3, when US President Donald Trump authorised a predawn military operation to abduct his Venezuelan counterpart, Nicolas Maduro.

In the lead-up to that operation, Trump and allies like Stephen Miller had been increasingly vocal about laying claim to Venezuelan oil, given the US’s history of prospecting for petroleum there in the early 20th century.

But by 1971, Venezuela had nationalised its oil industry. Efforts to expropriate assets from foreign oil companies in 2007 have further fuelled criticism from the Trump administration, which considers Venezuelan oil “stolen” from US owners.

Legal experts, however, largely consider such arguments a violation of Venezuelan sovereignty.

Trump has nevertheless said the US will control Venezuela’s oil and has used the threat of further military attacks to pressure Venezuela’s government into compliance.

The Trump administration has also placed steep sanctions on Venezuela’s economy, as part of a trend stretching back to the Republican leader’s first term as president.

The US has framed the tanker seizures as a way of enforcing those sanctions, although the legality of using military force to enforce economic penalties is disputed.

Trump and his officials have said that the sale of Venezuelan oil on the world market will be dictated by the US and that the proceeds from those sales will be placed in a US-controlled bank account.

Trump has also used control over Venezuela’s oil to ratchet up pressure on Cuba, for which access to Venezuelan oil is an important economic lifeline.

The US president told reporters on Tuesday at a White House briefing that he has taken 50 million barrels of oil from Venezuela.

At the White House, he said, “We still have millions of barrels of oil left.” On the open market, we’re selling it, they say. We are incredibly lowering oil prices.

Vinicius defies boos with star turn in Real Madrid’s 6-1 UCL rout of Monaco

Vinicius Junior calmed the fans who had booed him once more at the start of Real Madrid’s 6-1 victory over Monaco in the Champions League, with three assists and a goal.

In the opening game of the league-phase match against Spain on Tuesday, a portion of the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium crowd nearly always jeered the Brazilian forward. However, as the game progressed, the boos vanished and Vinicius almost certainly had scored his first Champions League goal of the season in the 63rd minute.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

In Madrid’s 2-0 victory over Levante in the Spanish league, the early boos were not nearly as loud as they were on Saturday. Both times when Vinicius’ name appeared in the starting lineup, fans were offended, but this time the match ended with Vinicius’s supporters choosing him as the winner.

Vinicius hasn’t had a stellar season, and some fans attributed him to the removal of coach Xabi Alonso last week.

Alonso, a former player from Spain and a top player, was fired as coach after an arduous eight-month absence. Vinicius had a verbal spat with him. In the locker room, Visicius reportedly criticized as the main player for not backing Alonso.

He passed a number of defenders before striking the upper corner on Tuesday, and he was on his way to scoring. Instead of celebrating, he hugged his teammates near the midfield. Then he rushed to Alvaro Arbeloa, the new Madrid coach, to give him a hug and salute.

Kylian Mbappe and Franco Mastantuono scored for Vinicius in the 26th and 51st, respectively. Thilo Kehrer, a Monaco defender, scored an own-goal from the Brazilian’s cross in the 55th minute.

A fan at the Bernabeu held a banner that read, “Vini, we are behind you.”

In the fifth minute, Mbappe scored to give the hosts a lead. After scoring again in the second half and again after the final whistle, he gave Vinicius a hug.

Recently, Mbappe and Arbeloa had publicly defended Vinicius, with Mbappe claiming that the audience should not focus solely on Vinicius.

Vinicius made a seventh-minute attempt that was applauded by many fans who had just missed the target from inside the area. Some fans booed once more after he improvised a ball in the 40th, but many more applauded in response.

Similar incidents against Levante and club President Florentino Pérez did not cause any immediate resentment.

After scoring, Mbappe apologized to Monaco fans. Former Monaco player, he was. In his first 20 games with Madrid, Mbappe has scored 18 Champions League goals, surpassing Cristiano Ronaldo’s 14th.

In the 80th minute, Jude Bellingham scored Madrid’s sixth goal, which some fans also made fun of on Saturday.

In second-half stoppage time, Vinicius almost broke the dead on a breakaway.

Alonso’s exit came as a result of a two-game losing streak that saw Madrid play Levante, which included a humiliating elimination from Albacete in the Copa del Rey round of 16 and a loss to Barcelona in the final of the Spanish Super Cup in Saudi Arabia.

Jesus brace helps Arsenal down Inter to seal Champions League qualification

Just one month after recovering from a lengthy injury layoff, Gabriel Jesus is already back in top form.

The Arsenal forward scored twice in a dynamic opening period to help his side defeat Inter Milan 3-1 on Tuesday in the Champions League. This was his third start of the season.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

After torn his ACL in January of last year, Jesus was out for almost a year.

It’s a “dream night.” Jesus told Amazon Prime, “I had a football dream. Being in this stadium and watching this score is tears in my eyes because I’ve always wanted to be here. I watched a lot of Serie A when I was a kid.

Whatever the reason is for something to happen, whether it’s good or bad, there is always a reason. During my 11 months of field absence, I discovered that.

Jesus made only his first appearances before Tuesday in domestic cup competitions, and he only made one appearance since then when he made a few substitute starts.

Viktor Gyokeres, who has struggled to adapt since moving to Sporting Lisbon for a big sum of money, was replaced by Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta at San Siro.

“Jesus said, “Everyone wants to start.” I have a lot of respect for people. I’m now 28 and not a child, so I can understand football.

“I’m delighted Vik scored a goal,” I said. I’m so happy that Vik and I both scored.

In the tenth minute, Jesus instinctively extended his leg to the end of a scuffed Jurrien Timber shot before firing Arsenal in front.

Since scoring in a group game against Lens in November 2023, it was his first Champions League goal in more than two years.

Petar Sucic gave Arsenal the lead eight minutes later, but Jesus was again in the right place at the right moment in the 31st minute.

Leandro Trossard nodded it back across the field as Bukayo Saka curled in a corner to the far post before heading home.

In the 75th minute, Gyokeres scored Arsenal’s second goal after scoring for Jesus.

Arsenal, which had already won seven European games in a row for the first time in its history, was assured of a spot in the top four of the Champions League as a result.

Arsenal reached the Champions League final in 2006 before losing to Barcelona, but they have never won.

Trump made many statements on US economy. Most are untrue

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, has made a number of claims about the state of the US economy.

Trump made a protracted and meandering statement to the media on Tuesday, the first anniversary of his second term in office, claiming everything from drug prices being slashed to “no inflation” in the US. The majority of the claims were erroneous in fact.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Some of his economic statements were reviewed by Al Jazeera:

There is “no inflation,” and the core inflation rate has been at 1.6 percent for the past three months.

Both of these claims are false. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), core inflation in November and December increased by 2.6 percent year over year.

Due to the longest government shutdown in US history, the month before, a core consumer price index (CPI) report was not made available.

In general, inflation increased by 2.7% over the previous year’s same period.

Drug prices under Trump’s “most favored nation” programme are down by “300, 400, 500, 600 percent”.

This is incorrect. Although the goal of the program is to lower drug prices, mathematically impossible reductions are achieved.

A product would be free if the price was 100 percent lower. Anything else would require that pharmaceutical companies would pay customers to purchase their goods.

In attente of the Supreme Court’s tariff decision:

Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs will be decided by a Supreme Court case that is pending. If the court rules against his administration, he claimed, the US would have to pay back the money.

This is unclear, but partially accurate. The US would need to refund some of the importers’ money in tariffs if the court decides against the administration. The government could be required to pay roughly half of the tariffs it collected, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in September.

Kevin Hassett, the administration’s economic adviser, has stated that if the court rejects the current plan, the administration will look into other legal options.

Joe Biden, the former president, “did not do tariffs.”

This is untrue. During the course of his administration, Bin Laden imposed numerous tariffs. He imposed 35 percent tariffs on Russian imports as part of sanctions in 2022 as a result of Moscow’s extensive invasion of Ukraine.

Biden’s policy, which was implemented during the Trump era, was increased to 14.5 percent from 8.5 percent in 2024.

He also imposed tariffs on China that year, including 50 percent on semiconductor chips, 25 percent on steel and aluminum, and 100 percent on electric cars.

More than 270, 000 bureaucrats were removed from the federal government by the Trump administration, but they are now moving to the private sector. &nbsp,

According to the BLS, the federal government has lost 277, 000 jobs since January 2025. However, data shows that the private sector, particularly those with tariff-exposed sectors, is only growing slowly.

The US economy added 50, 000 jobs in the most recent employment report. The most significant gains were made by healthcare, which added 34, 000 jobs, and food service, which added 27 000.

The US economy added 584, 000 jobs in 2025. This is significantly less than the two million created under Biden in the prior year.

In some states, gas prices start at $ 1.99 per gallon.

This is incorrect. The average price for a gallon of gas is $2.82, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA), which tracks gas prices. Oklahoma’s gas prices start at $ 2.31, which is the lowest.

More auto factories are being constructed in the US today than ever.

Oxford Economics tracks private construction expenditures for factories making transportation equipment. Nominal spending on building components for transportation equipment was down from its all-time high in 2024, according to the report.

Trump has been making these kinds of claims for almost a year. Experts in the auto industry have long claimed that these claims are exaggerated because, unlike Hyundai and Stellantis, these companies add to already-existing plants.