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Trump ousts Waltz as national security adviser and nominates him for UN post
US President Donald Trump has removed Mike Waltz from his post as national security adviser, and will nominate him as ambassador to the United Nations.
In a post on social media, Trump thanked Waltz for his work and said he would be temporarily replaced by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who will continue as America’s top diplomat.
Waltz had faced criticism for mistakenly adding a journalist to a chat group where sensitive military plans were discussed – a political embarrassment likely to feature during confirmation hearings for the UN post.
The former Florida congressman is the first senior member of the administration to leave the White House in Trump’s second term.
“From his time in uniform on the battlefield, in Congress and, as my National Security Advisor, Mike Waltz has worked hard to put our Nation’s Interests first,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. “I know he will do the same in his new role.”
Waltz posted a short statement on X, alongside a screenshot of the announcement by the president.
“I’m deeply honoured to continue my service to President Trump and our great nation,” he wrote.
According to the BBC’s US partner CBS News, Trump decided to nominate Waltz as UN ambassador just hours before the announcement on Thursday.
Multiple sources told the network he was ousted because of the Signal situation and a perception in the White House that he did not properly vet National Security Council staff, among other reasons. But the sources said Trump respects Waltz so he was given a soft landing and a high-profile new post.
However, the BBC spoke to several US officials – who wished to remain anonymous – and they suggested the Trump administration believed Waltz might struggle to be confirmed by the Senate, allowing the president to get rid of him completely without having to fire him.
Waltz has been under scrutiny since he acknowledged in March mistakenly adding the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic magazine, Jeffrey Goldberg, to a group chat on Signal with top US security officials.
Confidential plans for a military strike on Yemen’s Houthis were discussed on the message chain, whose members included Waltz, Rubio and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth.
There was uncertainty on Thursday over the fate of Waltz’s deputy, Alex Wong, a seasoned foreign policy hand from Trump’s first term who was also on the Signal chat.
Wong was asked about the leak during an interview with the BBC’s Newsnight programme on Wednesday. He said the administration had been “very successful” in taking on Yemen’s Houthis and “the president led on that”.
In March, lawmakers questioned some of the other Signal chat participants at hearings, including the director of national intelligence and the director of the CIA.
The UN ambassador position remains unfilled. Trump withdrew the nomination of his first pick, New York congresswoman Elise Stefanik, amid Republican concerns about preserving their slender majority in the House of Representatives.
Minnesota Governor and former Democratic vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz made light of the national security adviser’s exit on Thursday.
He posted on X: “Mike Waltz has left the chat.”
Waltz has continued to use Signal, according to an image captured by a Reuters photographer at a White House cabinet meeting on Wednesday.
The zoomed-in picture showed Waltz checking his phone and a chat ongoing with a contact saved under the name of JD Vance, who is US vice-president.
The message from the Vance contact read in part: “I have confirmation from my counterpart it’s turned off. He is going to be here.”
In an interview with Fox News aired on Thursday evening, Vance rejected any suggestion that Waltz had been fired, saying he was actually being promoted.
“I like Mike,” said Vance. “I think he’s a great guy. He’s got the trust of both me and the president.
“But we also thought that he’d make a better UN ambassador as we get beyond this stage.”
Trump’s announcement, meanwhile, of the latest role for Rubio appeared to catch state department officials off guard.
Rubio will now be the first official to serve both as secretary of state and national security adviser since Henry Kissinger half a century ago.
Rubio is also acting head of both the gutted United States Agency for International Development and the National Archives.
Some reports suggest Steve Witkoff, a real estate developer and personal friend of Trump who is currently a US Special Envoy to the Middle East, could ultimately replace Waltz.
Another name being touted as a potential candidate by some in Washington is also one of Trump’s special envoys, Ric Grenell, who has a longer diplomatic track record.
Trump went through four national security advisers in his first term. The first, Michael Flynn, served for just three weeks.
Another, John Bolton, later wrote an unflattering book about Trump.
Bolton told the BBC on Thursday that Waltz’s removal was reminiscent of the “chaos” from Trump’s first term.
[BBC]
Business
Asia’s richest man Ambani announces what could be India’s biggest share sale
Jio Platforms, the telecom unit of billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries, has announced what analysts say could be one of India’s biggest share sales.
The company’s board has approved a draft prospectus for the initial public offering (IPO), Ambani said at Reliance’s annual shareholder meeting on Friday.
India’s largest telecom operator, which has more than 500 million subscribers, is expected to raise around $4bn (£3.02bn), according to media reports.
Investors will be watching the listing closely as a test of appetite for new offerings after months of volatility in the country’s stock markets.
“The proposed listing of Jio will demonstrate to the world that India can build technology companies of global scale, global capability, and global value,” Ambani, one of the world’s richest men, said.
Launched in 2016, Jio shook up India’s telecom sector with low-cost mobile data plans, soon racking up millions of users. The company has since expanded into areas including cloud computing, enterprise services and artificial intelligence.
Last year, Jio and rival Bharti Airtel signed separate deals with Elon Musk’s SpaceX to bring the Starlink internet service to India.
The IPO comes after a year-long wait for Jio to go public. Last year, Ambani had said the company would be listed in the first half of 2026.
Unlike the secondary markets, where investors buy and sell existing stocks of companies, IPOs are used by privately held firms to sell their shares to investors for the first time, and debut on the public markets.
The Jio IPO was announced a day after the National Stock Exchange (NSE) filed papers for its long-awaited market debut, adding momentum to India’s capital markets.
While details of the offer price and valuation have not yet been disclosed, media reports have estimated that the NSE IPO could raise around more than $3bn.
Together, the Jio and NSE listings would be among India’s largest IPOs in recent years, rivalling Hyundai Motor India’s $3.3bn blockbuster share sale two years ago.
Jio’s listing is especially a close watch for investors and analysts who say a successful offering could boost sentiments in India’s IPO market after a recent slowdown in new listings.

In recent years, Jio has expanded its ambitions beyond telecommunications into artificial intelligence and digital infrastructure.
Earlier this month, Meta announced it would lease capacity at an AI enabled data center being built by Reliance in the western state of Gujarat. The facility is expected to have a capacity of 168 megawatts.
The agreement builds on a partnership that began in 2020, when Meta invested $5.7bn in Jio.
Since then, the companies have broadened their collaboration, including initiatives aimed at making Meta’s open-source AI models more accessible to Indian businesses and developers.
Investment bank Jefferies estimated in November that Jio was worth around $180bn, potentially making it one of the world’s most valuable telecoms companies.
The listing would also be a landmark moment for the Reliance group, marking the first major public offering by one of its businesses since Reliance Petroleum was listed in 2006.
[BBC]
Latest News
Fears for US-Iran deal as talks delayed by Israeli strikes on Lebanon
Planned talks in Switzerland between the United States and Iran to discuss the technical terms of their ceasefire deal have been postponed.
The Swiss Foreign Ministry confirmed early on Friday that the talks, which were scheduled to take place in Burgenstock, would not go ahead. The postponement has raised fears that the ceasefire deal signed by the US and Iran earlier this week could already unwind.
Reports suggest that Iran has delayed sending its delegation to discuss the technical issues linked to the memorandum of understanding (MoU) on a ceasefire – digitally signed by the two countries on Wednesday – due to Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Lebanon.
Israeli attacks overnight and into Friday have reportedly killed at least 18 people in southern Lebanon, with Iran-linked Hezbollah reporting intense fighting.
Iran, which has recently sensed Trump’s enthusiasm to agree an end to a war increasingly unpopular in the US, has responded bullishly, declaring that Tehran had reservations even while nodding to the plan.
Its chief negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said on Friday that any talks would remain bound by Tehran’s “red lines”. A halt to Israel’s attacks on Lebanon was one of Tehran’s key demands in negotiations.
“If the enemy seeks to be excessive, we have proven that our fingers are on the trigger and we have no hesitation in giving a crushing response to the enemy,” Ghalibaf said, according to the official IRNA news agency.
Concern over the stability of the deal saw mediators, including Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkiye, agree to gather for talks in the Egyptian city of Alamein on Sunday, Cairo and Islamabad said.
Latest News
Stafanie Taylor, spinners help West Indies overcome Scotland threat
Stafanie Taylor navigated a huge scare at the hands of Scotland as West Indies scrapped their way to a second win of the Women’s T20 World Cup.
Taylor, playing her first match of the tournament, injected much-needed impetus to the West Indies’ innings with a boundary-laden 47 not out off just 19 deliveries striking at 247.36 after West Indies had slumped to 85 for 5 in the 15th over of the match.
A spirited half-century by just-turned 21-year-old opener Darcey Carter while battling a leg injury took Scotland close to victory in the face of a nervy performance with the ball and in the field from West Indies. She shared half-century partnerships with Latherine Fraser and Ailsa Lister, but Hayley Matthews’ 3 for 19 in four overs, which included 13 dot balls, gave her side just enough hope to hold onto and Aaliyah Alleyne’s three wickets in the 19th over stifled Scotland just as they threatened to take the match away once more.
Fraser had been outstanding for Scotland with 2 for 34, a spectacular catch on the boundary’s edge to remove opener Qiana Joseph and the sharp run-out of Shemaine Campbelle, West Indies’ star in their nail-biting victory over New Zealand on Saturday.
West Indies became bogged down by a disciplined Scotland bowling attack complemented by excellent fielding all round. But, led by Taylor, they scored 69 runs in the last six overs to set Scotland a sizeable target – one the qualifiers came far closer to reaching than their opponents would have liked.
Taylor came in with her side floundering and in desperate need of someone to give their innings a belated jump start. Jahzara Claxon struck West Indies’ first six on the last ball of the 17th over, heaving a short one down the leg side from Kathryn Bryce over cow corner as she and Taylor looked to accelerate. But Bryce, stationed in the same spot in the field four balls later, claimed a straightforward catch to remove Claxton and give Fraser her second wicket.
Taylor picked off boundaries down the ground and over the covers then launched twin sixes back over the bowler’s head and over deep extra cover before a third, 83m maximum over deep midwicket to give West Indies’ bowlers plenty to defend.
Scotland were sharp in the field from the outset and their bowlers kept a lid on West Indies’ openers Matthews and Joseph, who managed just 13 runs in the first three overs. Rachel Slater was particularly frugal, conceding only a wide from her opening over. An out-of-sorts Matthews produced a premeditated release shot over midwicket for four off Gabriella Fontenla, who was making the ball swing nicely. But it was Joseph’s attempt to properly break the shackles which proved her undoing and demonstrated just how up for the contest Scotland were.
Fraser offered a contender for catch of the tournament so far when Joseph muscled a Slater delivery to deep midwicket. Fraser leapt to pluck the ball from the air just inside the boundary then showed wonderful spatial awareness to avoid touching the sponge with her elbow by mere centimetres as she landed. By the end of the powerplay, West Indies were 33 for 1 and Matthews had scored 12 off 17. She managed just two more before backing away to a quicker delivery from Fraser and losing her middle stump as Scotland celebrated a spectacular start.
Sarah Bryce dropped a tough chance behind the stumps off Campbelle, on 28 when she walked past a Fraser delivery which deflected off the keeper’s gloves and ran through fine leg to the boundary. She made no mistake as sister Kathryn, who had frustrated West Indies with her superb lengths, lobbed one up outside off as Deandra Dottin advanced and turned to see her bails whipped off.
West Indies had only found the boundary seven times up to that point, at the end of the 13th over, so they were scampering singles wherever they could get them. There was to be no reprise of Campelle’s previous innings when she was run-out by Fraser on the next ball and then Kirstie Gordon pinned Chinelle Henry lbw to plunge West Indies further into danger.
Scotland began the run chase at a far more impressive clip than their opponents, Carter reeling off four boundaries in the first three overs and Fraser again in the action with 13 runs off six deliveries. Carter appeared to hurt her leg while trying to work a Matthews delivery down the leg side and she received a life on 19 when Joseph dropped what should have been a sitter for Campbelle high behind the stumps. Running between the wickets became increasingly laboured for Carter but she refused to give up and she raised her ninth half-century in T20Is off 53 balls.
After five overs, Scotland were 51 without loss, but then Matthews made the crucial strike, beating Fraser on the sweep with a faster ball that kept low. That sparked a collapse of four wickets for seven runs in the space of two overs. Matthews removed Kathryn for a second-ball duck, miscuing to mid-off and claimed her third when she trapped Megan McColl lbw attempting a reverse sweep.
Three balls earlier, McColl had been dropped by Campbelle, running from behind the stumps almost to midwicket and, shortly after McColl was dismissed, Campbelle left the field, apparently feeling unwell, to be replaced by substitute wicketkeeper Mandy Mangru. Carter and Lister stuck at their task, however, in the face of some wayward bowling and clumsy fielding as the tension started to show on West Indies. Dottin, playing her 150th T20I, sent down three wides in a row to start the 18th over then, after two fours in three balls to Carter, she broke down in tears. Her team-mates rallied round her and she managed to concede just one more run.
With Scotland needing 22 runs off the last two overs, Alleyne finally ended Carter’s knock with a return catch off a top edge then removed Lister and Gordon with consecutive balls. While West Indies continued to struggle with their ground fielding, they scraped home as Joseph removed Slater and Fontenla in the space of three balls right at the end.
SCORES:
West Indies Women 153 for 6 in 20 overs (Qiana Joseph 13, Hayley Matthews 14, Shermaine Campbelle 36, Deandra Dottin 14, Jahzara Claxton 16, Stafanie Taylor 47*; Kathryn Bryce 1-30, Rachel Slater 1-23, Katherine Fraser 2-34, Kirstie Gordon 1-36) beat Scotland Women 146 in 20 overs (Darcey Carter 59, Katheryne Fraser 20, Ailsa Lister 33; Aaliah Alleyne 3-11, Hayley Matthews 3-19, Afy Fletcher 2-16, Qiana Joseph 1-29) by seven runs
[Cricinfo]
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