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Opinion The Editorial Board ThePresident’sArsenalIn the United States, only the president can decide whether to use nuclear weapons. On the campaign trail, Mr. Trump commented on the peril posed by the rest of the world’s growing nuclear arsenals. This article is part of the Opinion series At the Brink,about the threat of nuclear weapons in an unstable world. Now it will be the job of President Trump to pull the world back from the brink. Referring to Mr. Putin, Mr. Trump said in 2023, “He goes, ‘You know, we’re a great nuclear power.’ He says that publicly now.” Mr. Trump added, falsely: “He never said that when I was here.
Persons: Donald Trump, It’s, Trump’s, Trump, ” Mr, , , Vladimir Putin of, isn’t, Yoon Suk, Volodymyr Zelensky, Barack Obama, Kim Jong, Masoud Pezeshkian, Putin, Mr, we’re, Xi Jinping, hasn’t, James Martin, Robert O’Brien, , O’Brien’s, O’Brien, benignly, they’ve, Ronald Reagan’s, Christopher Miller, Edward Markey of, Ted Lieu, He’d, Dwight Eisenhower, Nikita Khrushchev, John F, Kennedy, swaggering, Ronald Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev Organizations: . Air Force, Arsenal, White House, U.S . Air Force, Service, . Service, Vandenberg Space Force Base, Vandenberg Space Force, United, Biden administration’s, South, NATO, America, Soviet Union, Cuban Missile Crisis, International Physicians, Prevention, Hiroshima, Air Force, Nuclear Weapons, Nuclear Forces Treaty, Politico, Planet Labs PBC, James, James Martin Center, Nonproliferation Studies, Middlebury Institute of International Studies, Heritage Foundation, Vandenberg, Foreign Affairs, Russian, Air, can’t, Pentagon, U.S . Army Special Forces, Trump White House, Edward Markey of Massachusetts, Republican, Congress, Minuteman, ., Marshall, Nazis Locations: California, United States, America, China, Russia, Great, Vladimir Putin of Russia, Ukraine, India, Pakistan, Korea, Gaza, Israel, Iran, Japan, Germany, Poland, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, New York, North Korea, Nevada, Washington, States, U.S, Ted Lieu of California
Two Senate Democrats on Tuesday reintroduced legislation to strengthen airline passenger protections following a year of travel disruptions that was capped by chaos that stranded thousands of people over the December holidays. The Airline Passengers' Bill of Rights, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., is planning to hold a hearing on the latest airline disruptions in the coming weeks. The bills also follow a push by the Biden administration for stricter airline passenger rules, including for traveler refunds. Airlines for America, said its members, the largest U.S. carriers, "abide by — and frequently exceed – all DOT regulations regarding consumer protections."
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