Trump orders US nuclear subs repositioned over statements from former Russian leader
Trump posted on his social media site that based on the 'highly provocative statements' from Medvedev he had 'ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.'
The president added, 'Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances.'
It wasn't immediately clear what impact Trump's order would have on US nuclear subs, which are routinely on patrol in the world's hotspots, but it comes at a delicate moment in the Trump administration's relations with Moscow.
Trump has said that special envoy Steve Witkoff is heading to Russia to push Moscow to agree to a ceasefire in its war with Ukraine and has threatened new economic sanctions if progress is not made. He cut his 50-day deadline for action to 10 days, with that window set to expire next week.
The post about the sub repositioning came after Trump had posted that Medvedev was a 'failed former President of Russia' and warned him to 'watch his words.' Medvedev responded hours later by writing, 'Russia is right on everything and will continue to go its own way.'
Medvedev was president from 2008 to 2012 while Putin was barred from seeking a second consecutive term but stepped aside to let him run again. Now deputy chairman of Russia's National Security Council, which Putin chairs, Medvedev has been known for his provocative and inflammatory statements since the start of the war in 2022, a U-turn from his presidency, when he was seen as liberal and progressive.
He has frequently wielded nuclear threats and lobbed insults at Western leaders on social media. Some observers have argued that with his extravagant rhetoric, Medvedev is seeking to score political points with Putin and Russian military hawks.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
28 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Inside Jeffrey Epstein's ‘Dracula' Manhattan lair
The ensuing right-wing outrage has threatened to splinter the 'Make America Great Again' movement – for whom Epstein is a central figure in conspiracy theories – and has put Trump on the defensive like few other issues. Seeking to quell the backlash, the Justice Department dispatched a top official to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's longtime associate who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking. On Friday, Maxwell was moved to a lower-security facility. That fuelled speculation that Trump might commute her sentence or even pardon her in return for her cooperation. For years, Maxwell was a fixture in Epstein's New York townhouse, where she had an office. But she and Epstein had split by the mid-2010s. A framed photo in the townhouse showing Epstein with Trump and his then-girlfriend, Melania Knauss, was cropped to exclude Maxwell. At least one other MAGA luminary also visited the townhouse: Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Trump and an online media personality, who has said he videotaped hours of interviews in the mansion with Epstein in 2019. Framed photos of Bannon – including a mirror selfie snapped by Epstein – were kept in at least two rooms in the mansion. The townhouse was one of five properties around the world owned by Epstein. After his release in 2009 from a Florida jail, where he served 13 months for soliciting prostitution from a teenager, the mansion served as both a personal hideaway and a salon where he could hold court with accomplished intellectuals, scientists and financiers, according to legal records and interviews with people who frequented the home. The visitors considered Epstein fun, smart and curious. Another perk: getting to mingle with the young, attractive women who roamed the property and worked as his assistants. The townhouse, a stone's throw from Central Park, was sold to Epstein in 1998 by Leslie H. Wexner, the billionaire owner of L Brands. Epstein renovated and redecorated the mansion in an eccentric style. Dozens of framed prosthetic eyeballs lined the entryway. A sculpture of a woman wearing a bridal gown and clutching a rope was suspended in a central atrium. In the ground-floor dining room, Epstein entertained a rotating cast of celebrities, academics, politicians and businessmen. The food could be mundane – sometimes nothing more than a buffet of Chinese takeout, Allen's letter noted – but the events were anything but. Photos show that guests sat in leopard-print chairs around a large rectangular table. Occasionally, attendees said in interviews, a magician performed. Sometimes, a chalkboard was wheeled out so a guest could sketch a diagram or write a mathematical formula. Epstein preserved a map of Israel drawn on a chalkboard with Barak's signature, according to a photo reviewed by The New York Times. Up a grand staircase was Epstein's wood-paneled office, featuring a massive desk. Photos show a taxidermied tiger lounging on a lush rug. In the office, according to photos reviewed by the Times, Epstein showcased a green first edition of Lolita – the 1955 novel in which an intellectual develops a sexual obsession with a 12-year-old girl and repeatedly rapes her. Atop a wooden sideboard were more framed photos, including one of Epstein with Saudi Arabia's crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman. Several of Epstein's victims have said the mansion was outfitted with a network of hidden video cameras. In the massage room were paintings of naked women, a large silver ball and chain, and shelves stocked with lubricant, according to photos reviewed by the Times. Loading Epstein regularly directed teenage girls – some recruited from middle schools in Queens – to massage him while he was naked. Sometimes he masturbated in front of them, according to court records and interviews with victims. Sometimes he raped or assaulted them. No surveillance cameras were visible in the photos of the massage room. An earlier collection of letters, presented to Epstein in a leather-bound album for his 50th birthday in 2003, reflected an era of his life before he was first arrested. That book included contributions from Trump and Bill Clinton, among dozens of others, The Wall Street Journal reported. Trump has denied a report in the Journal that he contributed a sexually suggestive note and drawing. He has sued the news organisation for defamation. Clinton's spokesperson has said the former president was unaware of Epstein's crimes. Loading But by 2016, as Epstein's reputation as a sexual predator became increasingly hard to ignore, his social network was shrinking. Three years later, he would die in a Manhattan jail while awaiting prosecution on federal sex-trafficking charges. The Times reviewed seven birthday messages given to Epstein in 2016. In addition to those from Zuckerman, Allen and Barak, there were letters from linguist Noam Chomsky and his wife; Joichi Ito, an entrepreneur who years later would resign from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the board of The New York Times Co. because of his ties to Epstein; and Lawrence M. Krauss, a prominent physicist. Martin Nowak, a Harvard University biologist, contributed a science-themed poem. Zuckerman, Allen, Ito, Nowak and Bannon did not respond to requests for comment. Barak declined to comment. Chomsky's wife responded on his behalf and declined to comment. Krauss said he didn't recall the letter, but attended 'several lunches with very interesting discussions' with scientists, authors and others at Epstein's home. Loading In their typed letter, Barak and his wife, Nili Priel, hailed Epstein as 'A COLLECTOR OF PEOPLE'. The letter concluded, 'May you enjoy long and healthy life and may all of us, your friends, enjoy your table for many more years to come'.

Sydney Morning Herald
28 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Rupert Murdoch shows Trump his own of the ‘Art of the Deal'
According to Thomson, Trump needs to join News' crusade to ensure that a 'deeply derivative and woke AI' does not arise from the digital decay that will come if publishers are not adequately paid for their content. Who would have thought Trump's AI tech bros, who lined up behind him at the inauguration, are channelling a woke agenda rather than what Meta's Mark Zuckerberg refers to as the Trump administration's 'masculine energy'? But there were other, clearer references to how Murdoch and Trump's interests coincide, for now at least. Transplanting the New York Post 's aggressively pro-Trump agenda next year via a sister newspaper in the other deeply Democrat outpost, Los Angeles, may not make much commercial sense. However, it underlines that it is not just Murdoch's Fox Corp that has a reach across the US and deep into Trump's voting heartland. 'Soon, all will not be quiet on the western front,' promised Thomson. Just hours later, Trump was posting about preparations for the 2028 Olympics in LA, which will now have a paper waging war on his behalf. There is a deadly serious side to this AI battle, of course, including for the publisher of this column. Forget about the multibillion-dollar amounts being spent on AI data centres and its vast energy needs, as Thomson puts it: 'In the end, IP (intellectual property) powers AI.' The future of the entire media industry almost certainly relies on it. The threat AI poses makes this an important battle the Murdochs are fighting. Far more important than this legal skirmish with Trump, which appears to have temporarily lost some of its steam. Just this week, both parties agreed to hold off on Murdoch's court deposition until after The Wall Street Journal 's motion to dismiss the case had been heard. The Wall Street Journal was sued by Trump following high-profile reports on his relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, just as MAGA followers grew enraged about attempts by the US president to play down the conspiracies he pandered to before taking office. Loading What news reports have downplayed is the fact that both parties also agreed not to engage in discovery for now, an issue that should trouble Trump far more than Rupert if the president has anything to hide on Epstein. And, no doubt, Rupert would remain ready to pounce. Meanwhile, his two News empires, News Corp and Fox Corp, are as financially healthy as they have ever been – partly due to Trump. And if Trump can be enticed into fighting on their side in the battle to get AI giants to pay for the content they purloin from traditional media, the financial impact could extend way beyond the 94-year-old's lifetime.

The Age
28 minutes ago
- The Age
Inside Jeffrey Epstein's ‘Dracula' Manhattan lair
The ensuing right-wing outrage has threatened to splinter the 'Make America Great Again' movement – for whom Epstein is a central figure in conspiracy theories – and has put Trump on the defensive like few other issues. Seeking to quell the backlash, the Justice Department dispatched a top official to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's longtime associate who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking. On Friday, Maxwell was moved to a lower-security facility. That fuelled speculation that Trump might commute her sentence or even pardon her in return for her cooperation. For years, Maxwell was a fixture in Epstein's New York townhouse, where she had an office. But she and Epstein had split by the mid-2010s. A framed photo in the townhouse showing Epstein with Trump and his then-girlfriend, Melania Knauss, was cropped to exclude Maxwell. At least one other MAGA luminary also visited the townhouse: Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Trump and an online media personality, who has said he videotaped hours of interviews in the mansion with Epstein in 2019. Framed photos of Bannon – including a mirror selfie snapped by Epstein – were kept in at least two rooms in the mansion. The townhouse was one of five properties around the world owned by Epstein. After his release in 2009 from a Florida jail, where he served 13 months for soliciting prostitution from a teenager, the mansion served as both a personal hideaway and a salon where he could hold court with accomplished intellectuals, scientists and financiers, according to legal records and interviews with people who frequented the home. The visitors considered Epstein fun, smart and curious. Another perk: getting to mingle with the young, attractive women who roamed the property and worked as his assistants. The townhouse, a stone's throw from Central Park, was sold to Epstein in 1998 by Leslie H. Wexner, the billionaire owner of L Brands. Epstein renovated and redecorated the mansion in an eccentric style. Dozens of framed prosthetic eyeballs lined the entryway. A sculpture of a woman wearing a bridal gown and clutching a rope was suspended in a central atrium. In the ground-floor dining room, Epstein entertained a rotating cast of celebrities, academics, politicians and businessmen. The food could be mundane – sometimes nothing more than a buffet of Chinese takeout, Allen's letter noted – but the events were anything but. Photos show that guests sat in leopard-print chairs around a large rectangular table. Occasionally, attendees said in interviews, a magician performed. Sometimes, a chalkboard was wheeled out so a guest could sketch a diagram or write a mathematical formula. Epstein preserved a map of Israel drawn on a chalkboard with Barak's signature, according to a photo reviewed by The New York Times. Up a grand staircase was Epstein's wood-paneled office, featuring a massive desk. Photos show a taxidermied tiger lounging on a lush rug. In the office, according to photos reviewed by the Times, Epstein showcased a green first edition of Lolita – the 1955 novel in which an intellectual develops a sexual obsession with a 12-year-old girl and repeatedly rapes her. Atop a wooden sideboard were more framed photos, including one of Epstein with Saudi Arabia's crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman. Several of Epstein's victims have said the mansion was outfitted with a network of hidden video cameras. In the massage room were paintings of naked women, a large silver ball and chain, and shelves stocked with lubricant, according to photos reviewed by the Times. Loading Epstein regularly directed teenage girls – some recruited from middle schools in Queens – to massage him while he was naked. Sometimes he masturbated in front of them, according to court records and interviews with victims. Sometimes he raped or assaulted them. No surveillance cameras were visible in the photos of the massage room. An earlier collection of letters, presented to Epstein in a leather-bound album for his 50th birthday in 2003, reflected an era of his life before he was first arrested. That book included contributions from Trump and Bill Clinton, among dozens of others, The Wall Street Journal reported. Trump has denied a report in the Journal that he contributed a sexually suggestive note and drawing. He has sued the news organisation for defamation. Clinton's spokesperson has said the former president was unaware of Epstein's crimes. Loading But by 2016, as Epstein's reputation as a sexual predator became increasingly hard to ignore, his social network was shrinking. Three years later, he would die in a Manhattan jail while awaiting prosecution on federal sex-trafficking charges. The Times reviewed seven birthday messages given to Epstein in 2016. In addition to those from Zuckerman, Allen and Barak, there were letters from linguist Noam Chomsky and his wife; Joichi Ito, an entrepreneur who years later would resign from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the board of The New York Times Co. because of his ties to Epstein; and Lawrence M. Krauss, a prominent physicist. Martin Nowak, a Harvard University biologist, contributed a science-themed poem. Zuckerman, Allen, Ito, Nowak and Bannon did not respond to requests for comment. Barak declined to comment. Chomsky's wife responded on his behalf and declined to comment. Krauss said he didn't recall the letter, but attended 'several lunches with very interesting discussions' with scientists, authors and others at Epstein's home. Loading In their typed letter, Barak and his wife, Nili Priel, hailed Epstein as 'A COLLECTOR OF PEOPLE'. The letter concluded, 'May you enjoy long and healthy life and may all of us, your friends, enjoy your table for many more years to come'.