Elizabeth Shackelford: Russia racks up the wins thanks to the United States

To share the story of your loved one, you can submit an obituary using any of the following methods: Need assistance? Our obituary desk is here to help. Please call us at 651-228-5263 with any questions regarding the process or deadlines. In order to publish obituaries a name and phone number of funeral home/cremation society is required.
We must contact the funeral home/cremation society handling the arrangements during their business hours to verify the death. If the body of the deceased has been donated to the University of Minnesota Anatomy Bequest Program, or a similar program, their phone number is required for verification.
Please allow enough time to contact them especially during their limited weekend hours. A death certificate is also acceptable for this purpose but only one of these two options are necessary. We are not allowed to reference other media sources with a guestbook or an obituary placed elsewhere when placing an obituary in print and online.
We may place a website for a funeral home or a family email for contact instead; contact us with any questions regarding this matter. Once your submission is completed, we will fax or email a proof for review prior to publication in the newspaper. This proof includes price and days the notice is scheduled to appear.
Please review the proof carefully. We must be notified of errors or changes before the notice appears in the Pioneer Press based on each day’s deadlines. After publication, we will not be responsible for errors that may occur after final proofing. Changes to an online obituary can be handled through the obituary desk.
Call us with further questions. Pre-payment is required for all obituary notices prior to publication by the deadline specified below in our deadline schedule. Please call 651-228-5263 with your payment information after you have received the proof and approved its contents.
Credit Card: Payment accepted by phone only due to PCI (Payment Card Industry) regulations EFT: Check by phone. Please provide your routing number and account number. Please follow deadline times to ensure your obituary is published on the day requested.
Must receive obituary content and payment same day by 3:45PM Must receive obituary content and payment same day by 1:30PM Unlike an obituary, Memoriam submissions are remembrances of a loved one who has passed. The rates for a memoriam differ from obituaries. Please call or email us for more memoriam information Please call 651-228-5280 for more information.
HOURS: Monday – Friday 8:00AM – 5:00PM (CLOSED WEEKENDS and HOLIDAYS) Please submit your memoriam ad to [email protected] or call 651-228-5280. President Donald Trump said last week that he is strongly considering pulling the United States out of NATO.
This isn’t the first time he has lambasted the defensive alliance. For what it’s worth, Congress passed a law in 2023 explicitly preventing a president from unilaterally withdrawing from the bloc. But whether or not the United States formally leaves NATO might be a matter of semantics at this point, since Trump has raised sufficient doubt about America’s commitment that NATO’s deterrent power may be irreparably harmed anyway.
Powerful alliances have always been a source of the United States’ strength. It is a gut punch to our European allies that have, at America’s urging, closely integrated their defenses with our own. But it is a triumph for Russian President Vladimir Putin, for whom the demise of NATO has been a strategic priority for decades.
Some think Trump just wants to punish Europe for not supporting his war of choice with Iran or volunteering to fix the Strait of Hormuz crisis that he created, even though nothing in the NATO alliance commits our allies to such folly. But this move follows a disturbing pattern we’ve seen throughout his presidency.
Trump keeps making foreign policy proclamations and decisions that serve Putin’s interests rather than our own. This should be a fiv…
