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Tuesday, February 11, 2025

'Zelensky floats giving up Ukraine-held Kursk in territory swap with Putin during peace negotiations'

 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has publicly suggested for the first time that Kyiv will give up its battlefield gains in Russia’s Kursk region in exchange for concessions from the Kremlin.

“We will swap one territory for another,” the 47-year-old told the Guardian in an interview published Tuesday.

“I don’t know, we will see. But all our territories are important, there is no priority.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky suggested that he would be interested in a territory swap with Russia.AFP via Getty Images

The Ukrainian president has previously suggested that the “hot stage” of the almost three-year-old war could end if Ukraine becomes a NATO member or regains nuclear arms — even if Kyiv doesn’t regain all of its territories.

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Ukraine caught Russia off-guard this past August when it mounted an offensive into the southern Russian region, at one point controlling as much as 386 square miles of land once held by Moscow.

Ukrainian forces are believed to have made incremental gains in Kursk over recent days through a series of military operations. Control of the region has been seen by military experts as important leverage and a means of forcing the Russians to divert military materiel away from Ukrainian territory.

President Trump is hoping to get US access to Ukraine’s vast mineral resources.REUTERS

President Trump has made clear that he is keen on ending the bloody war, which will mark its third anniversary Feb. 22.

The president revealed plans Tuesday to dispatch Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to Ukraine later this week and said that he will soon send special envoy Keith Kellogg over there as well.

The White House also announced it had secured the release of Pennsylvanian Marc Fogel, who had been held in a Russian prison since 2021.

It is not immediately clear what concessions Trump made to win Fogel’s freedom.

Trump has also been eyeing Ukraine’s rich mineral resources to help foot the bill for US military aid, while Zelensky has said he is open to making a deal along those lines.

Russian forces have bombarded Ukraine, but the two sides appear to largely be locked in a stalemate.REUTERS
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that details are still being worked out on the security guarantees he is hoping to get from the US and Europe.AFP via Getty Images

“We are talking not only about security but also about money,” Zelensky told the Guardian. “Valuable natural resources where we can offer our partners possibilities that didn’t exist before to invest in them.”

“For us, it will create jobs, for American companies it will create profits.”

Zelensky, who is trying to impress upon his American counterpart that protecting Ukraine is within US interests, claimed that his country has the largest titanium and uranium reserves in Europe and it is “not in the interests of the United States” to see those resources fall into the hands of Russia or other adversaries.

“We are going to have all this money in there, and I say I want it back. And I told them that I want the equivalent, like $500bn worth of rare earth,” Trump told Fox News’ Bret Baier during a weekend interview that aired Monday. “And they have essentially agreed to do that, so at least we don’t feel stupid.”

Russian leader Vladimir Putin started the unprovoked war in February of 2022.POOL/AFP via Getty Images

“They may make a deal, they may not make a deal,” the president added of Ukraine. “They may be Russian someday, or they may not be Russian someday.”

Zelensky has made clear that he wants to see robust security guarantees if representatives from Ukraine sit down with their counterparts from Russia to hash out a deal.

Trump told The Post Friday that he has spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin recently, but did not disclose any further details.

https://nypost.com/2025/02/11/us-news/zelensky-floats-giving-up-ukraine-held-kursk-in-territory-swap-with-putin-during-peace-negotiations/

DOGE ends nearly $1B in federal education contracts to nix waste — and DEI

 Nearly $1 billion in contracts with the federal Department of Education have been terminated, including one for $1.5 million to “observe mailing and clerical operations” at a mail facility — and scores involving DEI.

Eighty-nine contracts worth more than $881 million have been ended, the Department of Government Efficiency boasted Monday without providing specifics about the cuts — although critics said they target programs designed to track student progress.

DOGE said it also took the fiscal chainsaw to 29 diversity, equity and inclusion programs costing a total of around $101 million.

Outside education groups claimed that the main target of the latest rounds of cuts was the Education Department’s Institute of Education Sciences, which conducts evaluations and research to help produce statistics on students’ academic standings.

DOGE boss Elon Musk has been working with President Trump to try to rein in spending by the federal government.AFP via Getty Images
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IES also helps oversee the National Assessment of Educational Progress exam and coordinate US participation in the Programme for International Student Assessment assessment, which is used to compare students’ academic standing in countries across the world.

Last month, data from the NAEP that was used for the nation’s report card revealed that at least a third of students in the country fail to show “basic” abilities that are expected for their age bracket. The test assesses fourth and eighth graders.

IES was given roughly $800 million in the past fiscal year as part of the DOE’s total $241.66 billion budget, according to data from USASpending.gov.

The DOE did not respond to a Post request for more details about the recent batch of cost-cutting measures.

Education Secretary nominee Linda McMahon’s main goal should be to help “put herself out of a job,” President Trump has said.Getty Images

Two prominent research groups — the American Educational Research Association and the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics — claim that at least 169 contracts were canned and argued that the cuts will hinder student progress.

The critics specifically harped on cuts to the National Center for Education Statistics, which is housed under IES.

“Without such research, student learning and development will be harmed,” the two groups argued. “The capacity to collect and report on these indicators is essential to assuring that education works for all Americans.”

President Trump has long called for the elimination of the DOE altogether to relinquish its power back to the states. His administration is currently mulling its options with executive action to abolish the department.

Conservatives have wanted to eliminate the federal Department of Education since it was established in the late 1970s.REUTERS

Trump has said he instructed DOGE boss Elon Musk to give the department a thorough review.

“I’m going to tell him very soon, like maybe in 24 hours, to go check the Department of Education; he’s going to find the same thing,” Trump told Fox News’ Bret Baier in an interview that aired Sunday, referring to financial waste.

Democrats have railed against DOGE’s efforts to pare back federal spending without going through Congress first.

“An unelected billionaire is now bulldozing the research arm of the Department of Education — taking a wrecking ball to high-quality research and basic data we need to improve our public schools,” Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said in a statement.

DOGE has taken aim at other federal entities such as the US Agency for International Development.Getty Images

“Cutting off these investments after the contract has already been inked is the definition of wasteful,” said the Democrat, who sits on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

The Senate has not yet confirmed Education Secretary nominee Linda McMahon to helm the department.

Trump has maintained that her goal should be to “put herself out of a job.”

DOGE and the Trump administration have faced a number of legal challenges in the courts that have yet to be resolved.

https://nypost.com/2025/02/11/us-news/doge-ends-nearly-1b-in-federal-education-contracts-to-nix-waste-and-dei/