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Trump’s Syria Reset – The Dispatch

Happy Monday! Almost exactly one year after he was inadvertently arrested trying to enter the tournament, Scottie Scheffler on Sunday won the PGA Championship by five strokes. “Got out of jail, turned his life around, and hasn’t reoffended,” Mike Beauvais joked yesterday. “The system works.”

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Sunday that “all the indications” show Mohammed Sinwar, Hamas’ leader in Gaza, had been killed in Israeli airstrikes last week. Sinwar became the leader of Hamas in Gaza after Israeli soldiers killed his brother, Yahya Sinwar—a key architect of the October 7, 2023, attacks—last fall. Meanwhile, Israeli and Hamas officials resumed ceasefire and hostage talks in Qatar on Saturday, hours after Israel launched a new offensive in the Gaza Strip. A statement from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the country’s negotiating team is exhausting “every possibility for a deal,” including a proposal that would secure the release of all remaining hostages and “the exile of Hamas terrorists, and the disarmament of the Gaza Strip.”
  • Bucharest Mayor Nicușor Dan—who campaigned for president of Romania on a centrist, pro-European Union platform—defeated his nationalist rival George Simion on Sunday by a margin of nearly 8 percentage points with 99 percent of the vote in. Despite initially declaring victory, Simion, who has denied accusations of supporting Russia, later conceded the race in a social media post. On the campaign trail, Dan expressed support for Romania’s continued membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and aid to its neighboring country of Ukraine. “Russia, don’t forget, Romania isn’t yours,” supporters of Dan chanted as they celebrated his victory. 
  • Russia on Sunday launched its biggest drone attack on Ukraine since the war began, Ukrainian officials said. The barrage, which targeted multiple regions, came one day after the two sides concluded their first in-person negotiations in Turkey and agreed to exchange 1,000 prisoners of war. Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky held meetings on Sunday with U.S. officials—including Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio—and European leaders while in Rome to attend Pope Leo XIV’s inaugural Mass. Also on Saturday, Trump shared on social media that he plans to hold separate phone calls on Monday with Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin to push for a ceasefire.
  • Former President Joe Biden was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer on Friday, his office shared in a statement on Sunday. His diagnosis includes “metastasis to the bone,” the statement said, adding that doctors gave it a Gleason score—a grading metric used to evaluate the aggressiveness of prostate cancer—of nine out of 10. Biden and his family are currently reviewing treatment plans, and the office shared that “the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management.” President Donald Trump said that he was “saddened” by Biden’s diagnosis and that he and First Lady Melania Trump wish him a “fast and successful recovery.”
  • Axios on Saturday published audio recordings of former special counsel Robert Hur’s interview with Biden, which was conducted in 2023 as Hur investigated the then-president’s handling of classified documents. During the conversation, the transcript of which was released in March 2024, Biden needed help from his attorneys to recall the years in which his son died and Trump was first elected president. Hur ultimately declined to charge Biden, concluding that a jury would likely view him as a “sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”
  • Moody’s Rating credit agency on Friday downgraded the U.S. government’s credit rating to Aa1—one notch below Aaa—citing in a press release that “government debt and interest payment ratios to levels that are significantly higher than similarly rated sovereigns.” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called Moody’s credit rating a “lagging indicator” on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” on Sunday, claiming that the change was related to Biden administration-era spending. At the same time, Moody’s also changed its economic outlook for the U.S. from “negative” to “stable.”
  • The Supreme Court on Friday once again temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting Venezuelan nationals—currently detained in northern Texas for alleged gang ties—under the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act (AEA). In the 7-2 order, the majority ruled that a federal appeals court must answer “the question of what notice is due” to the detainees before their deportation, and that their removal may not advance until the court rules on that question. In his dissent, which was joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that the Supreme Court has “no authority” to temporarily block the deportations. Importantly, the Supreme Court did not rule on whether Trump could deport detainees under the AEA.
  • The House Judiciary Committee informed the pharmaceutical company Pfizer on Thursday that it is investigating an allegation that the company intentionally delayed sharing the COVID-19 vaccine’s trial testing results until five days after the 2020 election. The British-based drugmaker GSK told U.S. federal prosecutors last year that one of its employees—Philip Dormitzer, a former Pfizer scientific researcher—informed fellow GSK employees that senior Pfizer executives had been “involved in a decision to deliberately slow down clinical testing” of the vaccine until after the election. Dormitzer, who no longer works at GSK, has denied making the alleged comments. Meanwhile, a Pfizer spokeswoman said the vaccine’s development process was “driven by science” and followed FDA protocols, adding, “Theories to the contrary are simply untrue and being manufactured.”
  • A Mexican naval vessel collided with New York City’s Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday night, killing two of the ship’s crew members—a male Marine and a female cadet—and injuring 22 others aboard. The 277-crew ship, the Cuauhtémoc, was on an international goodwill mission and departing New York for Iceland when its masts struck the bridge and snapped. Local officials say the ship’s captain lost control of the vessel and, according to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, the ship lost power. The Brooklyn Bridge sustained no structural damage in the incident, authorities said.
  • A car exploded outside of a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California, on Saturday, injuring four people and killing one—the suspected bomber—in what the FBI has deemed an “intentional act of terrorism.” Law enforcement officials said the 25-year-old suspect, a Southern California native who was in the car at the time of the explosion, had attempted to livestream the bombing and had a history of expressing anti-natalist views online. No clinic employees were injured in the attack, a clinic physician said, and its IVF lab and embryos were unharmed.

‘Their Time to Shine’

U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Bandar Al-Jaloud/Saudi Royal Court/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Bandar Al-Jaloud/Saudi Royal Court/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Syrian security forces ambushed Islamic State sleeper cells in the northwest city of Aleppo over the weekend, killing three terrorists in surprise attacks on multiple safe houses. The raids, the only public operation of its kind since the fall of the Assad regime to rebel forces in December, came as the new government in Damascus seeks to convince the international community—and in particular the United States—that it’s ready and willing to combat jihadist violence in Syria despite its own extremist origins.

Such was the objective of Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump last week—the first direct talks between leaders of the two countries in a quarter-century. Hailing his Syrian counterpart, a former al-Qaeda member, as a “young attractive guy” with a “very strong past,” Trump announced an effective reset with the country after decades of frosty diplomatic relations. But ongoing sectarian violence in Syria—and its leader’s own militant past—threatens to derail the American president’s plans for a country still reeling from 14 years of civil war.

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