Targeted Attack On National Guard, Trump Case Dismissed, Russia Awaits Peace Terms

12m

Two national guard members are in critical condition after being shot near the White House. President Trump says the suspect came to the U.S. from Afghanistan. He now calls for a re-examination of all Afghan nationals.

There will also be no legal consequences for Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election results. A federal judge dismissed the last outstanding election interference case against the president in Georgia.

Also, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff is set to arrive in Moscow next week, where do things stand in the ongoing peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine?

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Today’s episode of Up First was edited by Miguel Macias, Ben Swasey, Robbie Griffiths, HJ Mai and Alice Woelfle.

It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas.

We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Carleigh Strange.

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Runtime: 12m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Two National Guard members are in critical condition after being shot near the White House. President Trump says a suspect came to the U.S.
from Afghanistan.

Speaker 2 We must take all necessary measures to ensure the removal of any alien from any country who does not belong here.

Speaker 1 What is Trump calling for? I'm Emma Martinez, and this is up first from NPR News.

Speaker 1 President Trump will face no legal consequences for his attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

Speaker 1 The last outstanding election interference case against the president in Georgia has now been officially dismissed.

Speaker 3 This was really an opportunity for justice and reconciliation, and that has been squandered.

Speaker 1 What's the reason for the decision? And U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkopf is set to arrive in Moscow next week.
Where do things stand in the ongoing peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine?

Speaker 1 Stay with us. We'll give you all the news you need to start your day.

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Speaker 1 Two West Virginia National Guard members are in critical condition after they were shot near the White House in Washington, D.C. Wednesday afternoon.
The city's mayor described the attack as targeted.

Speaker 1 The suspected gunman, who was also shot, is in custody.

Speaker 1 And the attack comes as President Trump has deployed the National Guard to several cities around the country, a pattern that has been controversial and challenged in the courts.

Speaker 1 For more, we're joined by NPR's Kat Lonsdorf. Kat, tell us about what happened with the shooting.

Speaker 7 Yeah, the shooting occurred about 2.15 p.m. yesterday.
At a press conference, the D.C.

Speaker 7 Metropolitan Police said that the gunman came around a corner and opened fire at the guard members while they were on patrol. Nearby guard members quickly intervened and subdued the shooter.

Speaker 7 Police say it's unclear at this time who shot the shooter. The two injured guard members, who, like you said, were from West Virginia, were both rushed to hospitals.

Speaker 7 Earlier yesterday, West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrissey had said the guard members were killed, but walked back less than an hour later.

Speaker 7 Authorities have since said that the two are in critical condition.

Speaker 1 And it sounds like the president is talking about the suspected shooter.

Speaker 7 Yeah, in a video statement yesterday, President Trump said the shooter was someone who came to the U.S. from Afghanistan.

Speaker 7 The Department of Homeland Security later identified the shooter as Rahmanallah Lakhinwalm and said he came to the U.S.

Speaker 7 as part of a Biden administration program called Operation Allies Welcome that allowed thousands of Afghans to enter the country after the Taliban retook power of Afghanistan back in 2021.

Speaker 7 Those people came in on two-year grants of parole, then later had to apply for other ways to stay in the country permanently, like asylum and go through rigorous screening.

Speaker 7 NPR has not yet independently verified when or why Lack and Wall entered the country, and a motive for the shooting is not yet known.

Speaker 7 In that video last night, Trump called the attack an act of terror.

Speaker 2 We must now re-examine every single alien. who has entered our country from Afghanistan under Biden.

Speaker 7 He also repeated anti-immigrant rhetoric. The Trump administration then announced that it had stopped processing immigration applications for Afghan nationals.

Speaker 7 And A, this will likely affect a number of Afghans who worked with the U.S.

Speaker 7 government or NATO forces during the 20-year war in Afghanistan and have largely been left in limbo after the Trump administration curbed immigration.

Speaker 1 The National Guard, back to them for a second, because they've been in D.C. for a few months now.
Why were they sent here in the first place?

Speaker 7 Yeah, there have been more than 2,000 National Guard troops in D.C.

Speaker 7 from several states, including West Virginia, since August when Trump ordered the deployment over concerns about the city's crime rate.

Speaker 7 This has been part of a pattern of Trump deploying the the National Guard to Democratic-led cities around the country, often against the wishes of local governors and authorities. And D.C.
is unique.

Speaker 7 Unlike the 50 states, the president has the authority to deploy the National Guard to D.C.

Speaker 7 I live in D.C., and in the past few months, I see members of the National Guard pretty much every day.

Speaker 7 They're out patrolling the streets and groups, and they've been helping with beautification efforts. But these deployments have been very controversial.

Speaker 7 In places like Portland, Oregon, or Chicago, federal judges almost immediately intervened and blocked them. Those are still tied up in legal battles.

Speaker 7 And in D.C., a federal judge just last week ruled that the use of troops in the city was unlawful and ordered an end to the deployment.

Speaker 7 That has yet to take effect to give the administration time to appeal. Meanwhile, after yesterday's attack, Trump doubled down, saying he was ordering an additional 500 troops to the city.

Speaker 1 That's NPR's Kat Lonsdorf. Kat, thank you very much.

Speaker 7 Thank you.

Speaker 1 The last outstanding criminal case against President Trump is now closed. A judge in Georgia dismissed the historic election interference case in its entirety on Wednesday.

Speaker 1 That's after a special prosecutor moved to drop charges against Trump and his remaining co-defendants. NPR Sam Greenglass joins us now.
Tell us more about the decision to drop the charges, Sam.

Speaker 8 This decision was made by a special prosecutor named Pete Scandalakis.

Speaker 8 He took over the case case after a court removed Fulton County District Attorney Foni Willis last year for an alleged conflict of interest stemming from a personal relationship she had with a special prosecutor.

Speaker 8 It then fell to Scandilakis, head of a state prosecutor's counsel, to decide what to do with the case. And after reviewing the evidence and the law, he concluded all charges should be dismissed.

Speaker 1 Okay, what was his rationale?

Speaker 8 Scandalakis questioned the strength of some of the charges, including the racketeering charge at the heart of the indictment.

Speaker 8 And he concluded that the federal justice system would have been a better place for this prosecution.

Speaker 8 Federal prosecutors did bring charges against Trump, but that case was dropped as Trump returned to the White House.

Speaker 8 Skandillakis also noted it would have been illogical and unduly burdensome to sever Trump from the case and continue against the other defendants.

Speaker 1 Now, it's kind of hard to forget about the phone call that started it all, Sam, the find 11,780 votes call.

Speaker 8 Yeah, this investigation began not long after that call when Trump asked Georgia's Secretary of State to find him the votes he needed to win Georgia. D.A.

Speaker 8 Fonnie Willis eventually asked a grand jury for an indictment, which she announced in a dramatic news conference in August, 2023.

Speaker 9 The defendants engaged in a criminal racketeering enterprise to overturn Georgia's presidential election result.

Speaker 8 Trump and his co-defendants co-defendants pleaded not guilty. His mugshot at the Fulton County Jail is one of the enduring images of this time.

Speaker 8 Four defendants later accepted plea deals, and those convictions remain.

Speaker 1 Now that the case is over, Sam, I gotta imagine the president has said at least a few things about it.

Speaker 8 Sure. Trump wrote on social media that law and justice have prevailed in Georgia.

Speaker 8 We have not heard from the Fulton District Attorney's Office, but I did call up Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis, and he told me it would have been important for the public even just to hear the evidence at trial.

Speaker 3 This was really an opportunity for justice and reconciliation and for a kind of truth telling and that has been squandered.

Speaker 1 It has been squandered, he says. So what's the legacy then of this effort, this years-long effort then?

Speaker 8 Trump recently pardoned allies allegedly involved in the effort to overturn the 2020 result.

Speaker 8 The ones named were never charged in a federal case, but they were charged in Georgia, where any convictions would have been immune from the pardon. Now, those charges have been dropped.

Speaker 8 With the end of this case, it's extremely likely Trump will never face trial over his activities after the 2020 election.

Speaker 8 You know, as Christ pointed out to me, the fact that this case fizzled could embolden future candidates to try to overturn an election, and that the criminal justice system has shown it may not be equipped to respond.

Speaker 1 That's NPR's Sam Sam Greenglass. Sam, thanks a lot.

Speaker 8 Thanks, A.

Speaker 1 President Trump says his envoy Steve Witkoff will soon head back to Moscow for another round of talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Speaker 1 The meeting comes as Trump says he's closing in on a negotiated deal to end the war in Ukraine, yet questions hover over Witkoff's role as a mediator following leaked transcripts of his interactions with key Kremlin officials.

Speaker 1 Now, to dive into this a little bit more, we're joined by NPR's Charles Mainz from Moscow. So, Charles, let's start off with this latest U.S.

Speaker 5 peace plan. Yeah, sure.
You know, Witkoff will come to Moscow sometime next week to meet with Putin to talk about the plan.

Speaker 5 And he's really seeking Putin's approval or at least reaction to this draft U.S.

Speaker 5 proposal that initially offered terms favorable to Moscow, but has since been fine-tuned, that according to the White House, with input from Europe and Ukraine.

Speaker 5 And what that means is that probably a lot of the things that Moscow liked about the plan, such as that Ukraine giving up territory to Russia that Moscow's forces don't currently control, are probably gone.

Speaker 5 But the truth is we don't know the final details, and neither do the Russians.

Speaker 5 Top people at the foreign ministry, however, have made clear that any significant changes in Ukraine's interests would make the revised plan a non-starter.

Speaker 5 So Witkoff really has his work cut out for him.

Speaker 1 Well, especially given that Bloomberg report about that initial U.S. plan that Witkoff promoted, that, you know, it was heavily influenced by Moscow.

Speaker 5 Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 5 And that Bloomberg report really appeared to show what many already suspected, that Russia had a significant role in shaping this initial Trump peace plan, and that Witkoff was working closely, critics would say too closely, with his Kremlin counterparts, special envoy Kirill Dmitriev and a presidential aide Yuri Ushakov.

Speaker 5 The calls show Witkov in particular giving advice on how and when Putin should engage with Trump for maximum effect,

Speaker 5 including to apparently undermine Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky ahead of a key trip he was making to the White House last month. And yet Trump seemed to play this down.

Speaker 5 Here he is on Air Force One yesterday.

Speaker 5 Now, A, I should add that the Russians involved here have also commented. Dmitriev called the transcript a fake.

Speaker 5 Ushakov, however, acknowledged that he regularly holds talks with Utkov, including, he added, on WhatsApp. The implication here that some of those conversations might have been intercepted.

Speaker 1 Okay, and assuming the conversations are real, do we have any idea who would be behind the leak?

Speaker 5 Well, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that whether or not these leaks are genuine, that the list of those against U.S.-Russian cooperation is long. Let's listen.

Speaker 5 So here, Peskov says that this peace process by the U.S. is underway, and it's a serious one involving President Trump and Putin and others.

Speaker 5 And as a result, there are people who will stop at nothing to undermine it. Now, as to who that might be, it's really an equal opportunity speculation situation.

Speaker 5 I mean, Europeans, Ukrainians, of course, some Americans, and even hardline Russians have been unhappy about Trump's attempts to détente with Moscow.

Speaker 1 Trevor Burrus, Jr.: I guess if undermining the peace plan was indeed the goal, I mean, is it working or has it worked?

Speaker 5 Aaron Powell, well, I mean, some Republicans are already calling for Witkoff's resignation, and that's, again, Republicans.

Speaker 5 And we'll have to see if his portfolio as a mediator is somehow reduced going forward.

Speaker 5 But in a way, you know, it may not matter, just in the sense that this document that Witkoff is accused of helping promote, really that was tilted in Russia's favor, it's already undergoing significant revisions.

Speaker 5 It's no longer the one that everyone's focused on.

Speaker 1 That's Charles Mainz in Moscow. Thanks a lot, Charles.

Speaker 8 Thank you.

Speaker 1 And that's Up First for Thursday, November 27th. I'm E.
Martinez. The NPR app keeps public radio in your pocket.

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Speaker 1 Today's episode of Up First was edited by Miguel Masilla, Spenswayze, Robbie Griffiths, HJ Mai, and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by Ziad Buch, Ia Dumas, and Christopher Thomas.

Speaker 1 We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. Our technical director is Carly Strange, and our deputy executive producer is Kelly Dickens.
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