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Trump son hypes bitcoin on Hong Kong leg of Asia trip
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Paetongtarn Shinawatra: glamorous Thai PM felled by Cambodia row
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Park Chan-wook, master of black comedy, returns to Venice
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Mourinho sacked by Fenerbahce after Champions League exit
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German unemployment tops 3 million, highest for a decade
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Thai court sacks PM over Cambodia phone call row
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Turkey says Russia scales back Ukraine territorial demands
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South Korea's ex-first lady indicted for bribery
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Lay off our eggs market, French producers tell Ukraine
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Modi says India, Japan to 'shape the Asian century'
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Hope and hate: how migrant influx has changed Germany
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Outdoor athletics season should be longer, says Coe
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Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin dies aged 92: Bolshoi
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Thai court to rule on PM's fate after Cambodia phone call row
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Last French survivor of key WWII desert battle dies aged 103
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NZ police say CCTV shows father on the run for four years
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Vandalism hobbles Nigeria's mobile telephone services
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Indonesia leader orders investigation into driver's protest death
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At 81, DJ Gloria fills Sweden's dancefloors
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Japan seeks record defence budget, to triple drone spending
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Late-night Paul battles through at US Open in 1:46 am finish
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Jury finds Australian croc wrangler lied about air crash
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Mistrust undermines Ivory Coast's universal healthcare dream
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Sinner on the march as Swiatek, tearful Gauff toil at US Open
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Australian police urge gunman to surrender after officers killed
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Nanjing massacre film set becomes China school holiday hotspot
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Celtic and Rangers seek Old Firm tonic for Champions League trauma
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Aussie Rules player latest found with concussion-linked brain disease
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Zelensky urges more Western pressure on Putin after deadly Russian attack
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US ends tariff exemption for small packages shipped globally
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Asia stocks mixed after Wall St hits new highs
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Cash-strapped Taliban look to airspace for windfall
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Biles' presence helps Gauff win US Open crying game
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'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit
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Olympic marathon champion Hassan opts for Sydney ahead of worlds
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Atletico already playing catch-up after poor La Liga start
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Lyon find cause for optimism after turbulent summer
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Sinner on the march as tearful Gauff, Swiatek toil at US Open
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Julia Roberts to make Venice debut in cancel culture drama
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Big numbers set to remain a feature of Women's Rugby World Cup
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Families lose hope for Salvadorans held in gang crackdown
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Trump thumbs nose at decades of India courtship
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Gauff wins crying game to reach US Open third round
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Arsenal seek statement win at Liverpool, Amorim faces Burnley must-win
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Cowboys trade Parsons to Packers in blockbuster NFL deal
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Russian attack killing 23 in Kyiv unleashes international fury
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Venezuela revives heroes with AI to spur reservists on US 'threat'
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Solskjaer sacked by Besiktas after European flop
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Froome to undergo surgery after breaking back in training crash
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Trump moves to end US tariff exemption for small packages

The Ambush Office: Trump's Oval becomes test of nerve for world leaders
For world leaders an invitation to the Oval Office used to be a coveted prize. Under Donald Trump it's become a ticket to a brutal political ambush.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa became the latest victim in a long line that started with Trump's notorious row with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky in February.
Trump has turned what were staid diplomatic "photo sprays" under his predecessor Joe Biden into punishing, hour-long tests of nerve in the heart of the US presidency, played out on live television.
The sight has become all too familiar -- a world leader perched nervously on the edge of their gold-upholstered chair in front of the famed fireplace, waiting to see what happens.
Will the 78-year-old Republican lay on the charm? Will he show off the new gold-plated decor he has been proudly installing in the Oval? Will he challenge his guest on tariffs or trade or US military assistance?
Or will he simply tear into them?
Nobody knows before they get there. All they know is that when the cameras are allowed into the most exclusive room in the White House, they will be treading the most perilous of political tightropes.
And the hot, confined space of the Oval Office adds to the pressure-cooker environment as the unpredictable billionaire seeks to wrongfoot his guests and gain the upper hand.
- 'Turn the lights down' -
Trump set the benchmark when he hosted Zelensky on February 28.
Tensions over Trump's sudden pivot towards Russia spilled into the open as a red-faced US president berated the Ukrainian leader and accused him of being ungrateful for US military aid against Russia.
Many wondered if it was a deliberate ambush -- especially as Vice President JD Vance appeared to step in to trigger the row.
Whether or not it was on purpose, the goal in foreign capitals ever since has been to "avoid a Zelensky."
But Ramaphosa's visit to the Oval on Wednesday was the closest yet to a repeat -- and this time it was clearly planned.
Ramaphosa arrived with top South African golfers Ernie Els and Retief Goosen in tow, hoping to take the edge off the golf-mad Trump's unfounded claims of a "genocide" against white South African farmers.
But his face was a picture of bemusement when after a question on the issue, Trump suddenly said to aides and said: "Turn the lights down, and just put this on."
A video of South African politicians chanting "kill the farmer" began to play on a screen set up at the side of the room. A stunned Ramaphosa looked at the screen, then at Trump, and then back at the screen.
Yet unlike Zelensky, who argued back with an increasingly enraged Trump, the South African president largely stayed calm as he argued his case.
Nor was he asked to leave the White House as Zelensky was, causing the Ukrainian to miss lunch.
- 'Ratings GOLD!' -
Other leaders have also done their homework. Some have emerged mostly unscathed, or even with some credit.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, despite some nervous body language, stood his ground against Trump's calls for his country to become the 51st US state and insisted that his country was "never for sale."
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer won over Trump with a letter from King Charles III, while French President Emmanuel Macron kept up his touch-feely bromance with the US president.
Trump's ideological allies have often fared even better. El Salvador's Nayib Bukele had a major Oval Office love-fest after agreeing to take migrants at a mega-prison in the Central American country.
But even some close allies have been wrongfooted.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu received a warm welcome as the first foreign guest of Trump's second term, but it was a different story when he returned in April.
Cameras in the Oval Office caught his stunned face when Trump announced that Washington was starting direct talks with Iran.
For Trump, though, it's all part of a presidency that he increasingly treats like a reality show.
Trump himself quipped after the Zelensky meeting that it was "going to be great television", and one of his advisers was just as explicit after the Ramaphosa meeting.
"This is literally being watched globally right now," Jason Miller said on X, along with a picture of the encounter on multiple screens. "Ratings GOLD!"
Y.AlMasri--SF-PST