Putin, Trump and Ukraine
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New York Times' White House correspondent Peter Baker on "Washington Week" said Zelensky helped President Donald Trump discover that he can't trust his "friend" Vladimir Putin. ASHLEY PARKER, THE ATLANTIC,
President Donald Trump seems to have learned the lesson painfully gleaned by all his 21st-century predecessors: You can’t reset US relations with Vladimir Putin.
US president softens his rhetoric but it is unclear whether this will result in tangible support in the war against Russia
A new book alleges that President Donald Trump told donors he threatened Russian President Vladimir Putin with bombing Moscow if Russia invaded Ukraine.
It’s never easy to tell which flip or flop the flip-flopper in the White House means.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces launched a massive aerial assault on Ukraine early Thursday for the second time in two days.
President Trump announces arrangement where NATO pays for US weapons sent to Ukraine, as Russian strikes intensify across Ukraine, including an attack on a maternity hospital.
Is there a direct link between what US President Donald Trump says and what Russian President Vladimir Putin does? Certainly, the harsh words and bitter violence of recent days in Ukraine suggest the answer is maybe.
An audio recording from 2024 run by CNN in which Trump said he had threatened Putin with bombing Moscow if he entered Ukraine, plus the U.S. leader's latest criticism, could mean a tougher stance by Washington toward Moscow is on the cards.
Increasingly frustrated by Putin's stalling over a Ukraine peace deal, the US President has accused his counterpart of talking "a lot of bulls***".