Trump says that Ukraine didn't target Putin residence in a drone strike as Kremlin claims

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) — President Donald Trump on Sunday told reporters that U.S. national security officials have determined that Ukraine did not target a residence belonging to Russian PresidentVladimir Putinin a drone attack last week,disputing Kremlin claimsthat Trump had initially greeted with deep concern.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov last week said Ukrainelaunched a wave of dronesat Putin's state residence in the northwestern Novgorod region that the Russian defense systems were able to defeat. Lavrov also criticized Kyiv for launching the attack at a moment of intensive negotiations to end the war.

The allegation came just a day after Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyyhad traveled to Florida for talks with Trump on the U.S. administration's still-evolving20-point plan aimed at ending the war, and had Zelenskyy quickly denied it.

"I don't believe that strike happened," Trump told reporters as he traveled back to Washington on Sunday after spending two weeks at his home in Florida.

Trump addressed the U.S. determination after European officials argued that the Russian claim was nothing more than an effort by Moscow to undermine the peace effort.

But Trump, at least initially, had appeared to take the Russian allegations at face value. He told reporters last Monday that Putin had also raised the matter during a phone he had with the Russian leader earlier that day. And Trump said he was "very angry" about the accusation.

By Wednesday, Trump appeared to be downplaying the Russian claim. He posted a link to a New York Post editorial on his social media platform that raised doubt about the Russian allegation. The editorial lambasted Putin for choosing "lies, hatred, and death" at a moment that Trump has claimed is "closer than ever before" to moving the two sides to a deal to end the war.

The U.S. president has struggled to fulfill a pledgeto quickly end the warin Ukraine and has shown irritation with both Zelenskyy and Putin as he tried to mediate an end to a conflict he boasted on the campaign trail that he could end in one day.

Both Trump and Zelenskyy said last week they madeprogress in their talksat Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort on a 20-point peace plan.

But Putin has shown little interest in ending the war until all of Russia's objectives are met, including winning control of all Ukrainian territory in the key industrial Donbas region and imposing severe restrictions on the size of Ukraine's post-war military and the type of weaponry it can possess.

Madhani reported from Washington.

Trump says that Ukraine didn't target Putin residence in a drone strike as Kremlin claims

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) — President Donald Trump on Sunday told reporters that U.S. national security officials have de...
Benjamin Johnson was hailed a hero by the Swiss Boxing federation

A young boxer died trying to save his friend from the fire that engulfed a Swiss bar on New Year's Eve.

Benjamin Johnson, 18, a member of the Lausanne Boxing Club, was hailed a hero by the Swiss Boxing federation.

"This final act of selflessness perfectly reflects his nature: he was someone who always helped others," said Amir Orfia, the president of Swiss Boxing.

"Having watched him grow up, first when I was in the ring myself, then as a coach, I will remember him as a young man who was always positive, smiling, and respectful. He was always the first to support his teammates, especially his friends."

Swiss police said on Sunday night that they had identified all the victims including that of Charlotte Niddam, who was a pupil at a British private school.

The 15-year-old, who attended Immanuel College near Watford, had not been heard from since the fire broke out.

The victims include 13 Swiss, six Italian and six French nationals as well as a Portuguese and a Belgian woman.

People in the Le Constellation bar hold up Champagne bottles with lit sparklers

The Niddam family said on social media: "It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beautiful daughter and sister, Charlotte."

In anothertale of heroism, Tahirys Dos Santos, a French football player was seriously injured in the fire after he went to rescue his girlfriend, Coline, who was trapped inside the Constellation bar in Crans-Montana.

Originally from Mont-Saint-Martin, the 19-year-old who plays for Metz, suffered severe burns to his body and was transferred from Switzerland to Germany by air ambulance.

His French club said it was saddened to hear the news and was working to have him transferred to a hospital closer to home as soon as possible.

"Deeply affected by this news, the club's management, players, coaches, and employees are in shock and are sending their thoughts to Tahirys as he battles his injuries," the club said in a statement on Facebook.

Christophe Hutteau, Dos Santos's agent, told BFM TV that the footballer had fled the bar but returned when he realised his girlfriend was trapped inside.

"He went back in to rescue her from the flames. He's not only a victim, he's a hero," he said.

Chiara Costanzo, a 16-year-old student from Milan, and 15-year-old Sofia Prosperi, who has Italian and Swiss citizenship were among the victims named on Sunday.

Camilla Costanzo, Chiara's elder sister, said her family was overwhelmed when they received the news.

"I have no words to describe it," Ms Costanzo, 29, told The Telegraph. "We are just devastated."

Ms Costanzo, a consultant based in Zurich, said she had contacted the emergency hotline and had called seven different Swiss hospitals in search of her sister in the days after the fire. Her father, Andrea, previously shared his anguish with the media saying his daughter had ended up at the bar by chance.

Fighting back tears, Ms Costanzo questioned how it could have happened inSwitzerland, which has a reputation for strictly enforcing regulations.

"This type of stuff never happens in Switzerland, everybody follows the rules," she said. "It should never have happened."

Giovanni Tamburi, Emanuele Galeppini and Achille Barosi

Three of the Italian victims have since been named as Achille Barosi, 16, from Milan, Giovanni Tamburi, 16, from Bologna, and Emanuele Galeppini, a17-year-old golferfrom Genoa who had dual citizenship and lived in Dubai.

Hundreds of people gathered in Crans-Montana on Sunday morning for a memorial Mass and silent march to honour the dead and injured.

Mourners pay their respects by laying flowers, candles and messages at a makeshift memorial near Le Constellation bar

At the Vatican, Pope Leo XIV expressed his sympathy for the victims after his weekly Angelus blessing in St. Peter's Square.

"I wish to express once again my closeness to all those who are suffering as a result of the tragedy in Switzerland," he said. "I assure you of my prayers for the young people who have died, for the injured, and for their families."

Laetitia Brodard-Sitre, remembered her 16-year old son, Arthur Brodard, who died in the flames with a Facebook tribute on Saturday. After a days of searching for her son, she posted a photo of him saying, "Our Arthur has now left to party in heaven."

None of the victims have been officially named by Swiss police who are working to identify "all victims, both deceased and injured".

Bishop Monseigneur Jean-Marie Lovey holds Sunday mass at a chapel in Crans-Montana that has been dedicated to the victims of the fire People march in honour of the victims in the ski resort of Crans-Montana

Swiss authorities have openedan investigation into the managersof Le Constellation bar, French couple Jacques and Jessica Moretti, where the tragedy unfolded.

Le Parisien, the French newspaper, reported that Mr Moretti had a criminal record and had served a jail term in Savoie in 2005.

The newspaper claimed he was linked to prostitution cases dating back 20 years, but had also been associated with a kidnapping and false imprisonment case about 30 years ago.

He was sentenced to two years in prison for fraud, according to the daily.

Mr Moretti and his wife are suspected of negligent homicide, negligent bodily harm and causing fire by negligence, police said on Saturday.

As Swiss prosecutors continue to investigate the New Year's Eve fire that killed 40 and injured 119 others, police said there was no need to detain the two bar managers accused of manslaughter, negligent bodily harm and negligent arson.

"There is no suspicion that the defendants wish to evade criminal proceedings or the foreseeable penalty by fleeing," police from Valais canton said late Sunday.

The probable cause of the fire during the New Year's celebrations wassparklers on bottlesbeing carried too close to the ceiling, a preliminary investigation found.

Images and videos have been circulated widely on social media showing people inside the club carrying sparklers inside champagne bottles.

Witnesses have told police the fire ignited and spread very quickly, and that the sparklers may have been responsible.

"They are designed to be placed on the ground, fixed in the ground or on a support, or held in the hand," police said.

Investigators also plan to look into whether the bar complied with local construction laws, provided adequate emergency routes and complied with fire safety standards.

They said that theinvestigationwas opened on Friday night, but did not give further details.

They will examine whether sound-dampening material on the ceiling conformed with regulations and if the candles were permitted for use in the bar.

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Boxer, 18, died saving friend in Swiss bar fire

A young boxer died trying to save his friend from the fire that engulfed a Swiss bar on New Year's Eve. Benjamin Johnson, 18, a member...
Rain continues in parts of California reeling from flooding and high tides

CORTE MADERA, Calif. (AP) — Crews cleared mud from key California highways as forecasters warned Sunday that more thunderstorms were on the way after downpours andhigh tidescaused flooding, road closuresand rescuesof people trapped in cars.

Five northern counties remained under a flood watch, with up to three inches (7.6 cm) of rain possible through Monday night in areas that have been drenched off and on since around Christmas, said the National Weather Service office in Eureka. At least a foot (.3 meters) of snow was likely in the mountains.

To the south near the San Francisco Bay Area, waters were slowly receding after roadways from Sausalito to San Rafael were flooded during heavy rain that coincided with record-breaking "King Tides." Such tides occur when the moon is in its closest position to the Earth, creating a stronger gravitational pull.

Some people kayaked along swamped streets, while others waded through water above their knees. Authorities were called to assist when cars got stuck in water as high as 3 and 4 feet (1.1 and 1.2 meters), Marin County Sheriff's Sgt. Michael Dobbins said Saturday.

"I've been around here for the King Tides and I've never seen it this high. Never," Jeremy Hager of San Rafael told KTVU-TV.

Flooding was reported across Marin, Sonoma, Alameda, San Mateo and San Francisco counties.

While the tides were waning, lingering thunderstorms on Sunday could cause additional problems throughout low-lying areas, forecasters said. "For anyone driving, slow down and allow extra time to reach your destination," the Bay Area office of the weather service warned on social media.

Farther south in Santa Barbara County, a key highway was reopened Sunday after it was blocked for most of the weekend near Goleta due to a series of mudslides. A man died after he was swept into a creek during the storm, the sheriff's office said Saturday.

Parts of Santa Barbara County received more than four inches (10 cm) of rain over two days, the weather service said Sunday.

After a mostly dry autumn, California has been hit by a series of powerfulwinter stormsthat brought the wettest holiday season to the state in years.

Rain continues in parts of California reeling from flooding and high tides

CORTE MADERA, Calif. (AP) — Crews cleared mud from key California highways as forecasters warned Sunday that more thunder...
Cowboys DE Donovan Ezeiruaku ejected from loss to Giants early after ripping Greg Van Roten's helmet off

Dallas defensive end Donovan Ezeiruaku was ejected from the Cowboys' 34-17 loss to the New York Giants on Sunday afternoon after he got into an altercation in the second half and ripped a Giants player's helmet off his head.

Things erupted early in the third quarter after Jaxson Dart hit Tyrone Tracy in the back of the end zone at MetLife Stadium for a 13-yard touchdown, which extended the Giants' lead in the regular-season finale.

[Get more Cowboys news: Dallas team feed]

It's unclear exactly what started the altercation, but Ezeiruaku and Giants guard Greg Van Roten were at the center of it. Ezeiruaku held onto Van Roten's facemask as others ran into the pile and eventually ripped it off his head, which led to more flags being thrown.

Week 18 fight! Helmets coming off between Cowboys and Giants, you love to see itpic.twitter.com/HlIoOvmddK

— Rate the Refs (@Rate_the_Refs)January 4, 2026

Ezeiruaku was ejected from the contest after that, and Cowboys defensive tackle Quinnen Williams was hit with an unnecessary roughness penalty for his role. It looked like Van Roten was grabbing Sam Williams' facemask early on, too, but he was not penalized.

Once things settled down, the Giants went for a 2-point conversion and succeeded after running back Devin Singletary found Darius Slayton for a short completion. That put the Giants up 24-10.

Jan 4, 2026; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Dallas Cowboys defensive end Donovan Ezeiruaku (41) celebrates after a play during the first quarter against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Ezeiruaku had one tackle in Sunday's game before he was ejected. He finished his rookie season with 40 total tackles and two sacks. The Cowboys selected the 22-year-old in the second round of the draft last spring out of Boston College.

Both the Cowboys and the Giants entered Sunday's game, the final one of the regular season, having already been eliminated from playoff contention. The Giants had an outside shot at securing the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL Draft but their 17-point win over the Cowboyshanded that to the Las Vegas Raidersinstead.

The Giants ended the season 4-13 and the Cowboys fell to 7-9-1, which marked their fourth defeat in their final five games of the season.

Cowboys DE Donovan Ezeiruaku ejected from loss to Giants early after ripping Greg Van Roten's helmet off

Dallas defensive end Donovan Ezeiruaku was ejected from the Cowboys' 34-17 loss to the New York Giants on Sunday afte...
Players lift up Myles Garrett on the field (Justin Casterline / Getty Images)

Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett broke the NFL's single-season sacks record on Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals with his 23rd on the season.

After being held without a sack last week, Garrett entered the 18th and final week of the regular season with 22, a half-sack away from the record shared by T.J. Watt (2021) and Michael Strahan (2001).

Garrett beat the Bengals' left tackle on a rush upfield with 5:16 to play in the fourth quarter and smothered quarterback Joe Burrow as he fell to the turf in Cincinnati.

Teammates surrounded Garrett for a brief celebration on the sideline before he returned to the field just one play later.

Though the NFL first recognized sacks officially in 1982, some accounting suggests Garrett is not the first player to reach 23 sacks in a season. Researchers who have studied past game logs and footage have said that Al "Bubba" Baker also recorded 23 sacks in 1978 with the Detroit Lions. That total is not recognized by the league, however, as it came before 1982.

While the season is lost — the Browns will miss the playoffs for the eighth time in Garrett's 10 seasons in Cleveland — this has been a career-best year for Garrett. The gulf between Garrett and the rest of the league's defenders is so wide that the 5.5-sack difference between his league-best sack total and the No. 2-ranked player — Brian Burns of the Giants, with 16.5 — is the same as the gap between Burns and the ninth-ranked player.

Garrett's previous season high in sacks was 16, and in tackles for loss was 22; this season, in addition to entering Week 18 with 22 sacks, he had a league-best 32 tackles for loss.

Myles Garrett breaks NFL single-season sacks record

Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett broke the NFL's single-season sacks record on Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals with h...
Raiders secure No. 1 overall pick in NFL draft after Giants' win over Cowboys

The Las Vegas Raiders will pick first in this year's NFL draft after the New York Giants defeated the Dallas Cowboys 34-17 on Sunday.

The Giants' victory assured that the Raiders, who were 2-14 entering their Sunday home game against theKansas City Chiefs, would have the worst record.

If the Giants (4-13) had lost to Dallas, Las Vegas only would have secured the top pick with a loss to the Chiefs. New York's victory made that outcome irrelevant for the Raiders as it relates to the draft.

This is just the second time the Raiders have had the top pick. The then-Oakland Raiders selected quarterback JaMarcus Russell out of LSU with the No. 1 choice in 2007. He became one of the franchise's top draft busts.

The Raiders could take a chance on another quarterback this year by draftingHeisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendozaof Indiana orOregon's Dante Moore.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Raiders secure No. 1 overall pick in NFL draft after Giants' win over Cowboys

The Las Vegas Raiders will pick first in this year's NFL draft after the New York Giants defeated the Dallas Cowbo...

Shared by Donald Trump's Truth Social Account—Anadolu via Getty Images Credit - President Donald Trump watches Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's capture unfold in Washington, United States on January 3, 2026.

Speaking just hours after thesuccessful operationto depose Nicolás Maduro, President Donald Trump issued a stark warning: "American dominance in the western hemisphere will never be questioned again."

But the swift removal of Venezuela's president, and Trump's promise to "run" the country while extracting its oil wealth for the benefit of American companies, are likely to have ramifications farbeyond the Americas.

Venezuela's importance lies not just in its proximity to the United States, but also in its role as a geopolitical centre of great power competition. It is an energy superpower, a symbol of ideological opposition to the U.S., and it has forged close relations with its enemies. It has also witnessed one of the largest refugee crises in modern history—one that could worsen.

Read more:How the World Is Reacting to the U.S. Capture of Nicolas Maduro

Trump's Venezuela gambit has the potential to impact global oil markets, reshape great-power alliances, and undermine norms around sovereignty and intervention. Leaders of other South American countries, such as Colombia, Mexico, and Cuba, are waking up to a world in which their countries' sovereignty is not guaranteed.

Here are the ways Trump's Venezuela takeover could change the world.

Oil and energy dominance

The United States taking control of Venezuela's oil industry would, in theory, seem to be an economic boon for Washington. The country has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, and control of those vast resources should deliver both a significant financial benefit to the U.S.

But the reality is far more complex. Venezuela currently produces less than 1 million barrels of oil per day, or about 0.5% of global oil production, according toRasmussen.Of those 1 million barrels, the South American country only exports about half.

Its energy infrastructure has been hampered by years of sanctions, mismanagement, and a lack of investment after Venezuela nationalized its oil industry in the 2000s.

Trump promised in his speech on Saturday that American energy companies stand ready to invest "billions and billions of dollars" to rebuild Venezuela's oil infrastructure, butexperts warnit could take years, if not decades, for them to see returns.

One more immediate effect, however, is that the U.S. would seem to be on the verge of taking control of a major energy supplier to China. Beijing has pouredtens of billionsof dollars into oil-for-loans deals to secure a supply that is not located in an area controlled by the U.S. In that sense, Venezuela was an insurance policy for China's energy security.

Venezuela's oil shipments to China, its main buyer, averaged over 600,000 barrels per day in December 2025, constituting about4% of China's total oil imports, according to Reuters. Just hours before his capture, Maduro met with Qiu Xiaoqi, the Chinese government's special representative for Latin American affairs, at the Miraflores Presidential Palace.

The loss of such a crucial strategic energy partnership, one that was growing all the time, will be a strategic defeat for China and could provide the U.S. with leverage going forward.

In the short term, however, Trump appears to be trying to ease China's fears. In response to a question about Maduro's meeting with Chinese officials before his capture, Trump told Fox & Friends on Saturday: "I have a very good relationship with [China's President] Xi, and there's not going to be a problem. They're going to get oil."

Iran weakened

Maduro's fall will have a significant impact on Iran, a place where the U.S. has long sought to change leadership.

Iran has been a close ally of Venezuela since the early 2000s, when the countries were led by Hugo Chávez and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, two leaders who defined themselves on the world stage by their opposition to U.S. hegemony.

Caracas was Iran's strategic foothold in the Western Hemisphere, and a key partner in helping it evade sanctions. Iran has for years sent refined fuel, parts and expertise to bolster Venezuela's oil industry in return for much-needed financial support. Their partnership extended intomilitary cooperation, with Venezuela purchasingIranian drones and other weaponry.

That partnership could now be severed, further weakening a wobbling Iranian leadership that is under pressure since a joint Israeli-U.S. attack this summer, and ongoing protests.

Might is right

By any measure, the capture and detention of a sitting president is a norm-shattering event. Just as the Iraq War is often viewed as acatalyst for the collapseof the post-WWII rulers-based order, Trump's brazen capture of Maduro and his stated intention to control the country and its resources could spur another shift in how powerful countries operate.

Both Russia and China could take Trump's flouting of international norms as an invitation to do the same, or to continue doing so, in Russia's case.

While Moscow has already made its move in Ukraine, China has been threatening for years to regain control of Taiwan. The U.S. has repeatedly invoked arguments about sovereignty to dissuade China from doing so, but those arguments will now hold less weight.

American hemisphere

The capture of Maduro marked the Trump Administration's most forceful move yet in its pivot to projecting influence in the Western Hemisphere.

In the hours after the operation, Trump also gave leaders of other South American countries cause for concern.

During a phone interview with Fox News, Trump warned that "something will have to be done about Mexico," adding that he had asked the country's President, Claudia Sheinbaum, if she wanted help tackling drug cartels in the country.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro, whom Trump has also accused of being involved indrug production, also received a pointed warning from Trump.

"He's making cocaine and they're sending it into the United States, so he does have to watch his ass," Trump said.

For the Communist leaders in Cuba, the small island nation that has thwarted America's ill intentions towards it since the 1950s, the capture of Maduro is a threat to survival.

Cuba has long relied on Venezuela for most of its energy supply, and receives tens of thousands of barrels of oil at subsidised rates. Between January and November last year, Venezuela sent 27,000 barrels of crude oil and fuel per day to Cuba, Reuters reported, citing shipping data and internal documents from state oil company PDVSA.

U.S. sanctions against Venezuela led to a decline in that flow in recent months, but the partnership is credited with keeping the Cuban economy afloat.

Trump also warned its leaders in his Saturday press conference, describing it as "a failing nation."

"The people there have suffered for many, many years, and I think Cuba is going to be something we'll end up talking about," he said.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is seen as a key player in Trump's Venezuela move, has spoken for years of his desire for the current Cuban political system to be overturned. On the morning after the raid, he had a pointed message for its leaders.

"In some cases, one of the biggest problems Venezuelans have is they have to declare independence from Cuba," Rubio said. "They tried to basically colonize it from a security standpoint. So, yeah, look, if I lived in Havana and I was in the government, I'd be concerned at least a little bit."

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, was more direct: "Hopefully the end of Mr. Maduro's reign of terror in Venezuela is near, and then we can focus on Cuba, one of his greatest allies and one of the most oppressive regimes in our backyard."

Contact usatletters@time.com.

How Trump’s Venezuela Takeover Could Change the World

Shared by Donald Trump's Truth Social Account—Anadolu via Getty Images Credit - President Donald Trump watches Venezuelan President Nic...

 

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