On Thursday, President Trump unusually sharply appealed to President Vladimir V. Putin from Russia, urging him to stop his bombing in Ukraine and agreed to a peace treaty after the most deadly attack On Kiev for almost a year.
“Not necessary, and very bad weather. Vladimir, stop! 5000 soldiers die a week. Let’s go to a peaceful job!” Mr Trump wrote on social networks.
The Russian attack of the rocket was followed by the day after Trump’s administration threatened to leave peacekeeping negotiations if Ukraine did not accept the US peace proposal, which was very beneficial to Russia.
Mr. Trump’s comments were striking because he mostly avoided even the slight criticism of Mr. Putin at so far. Instead, he directed most of his anger toward President Volodymyr Zelensky from Ukraine, calling him a “dictator” and describing him as a main obstacle to the peace agreement.
While Mr. Trump made it clear that he had ranked the patience that the two sides were arranging a peace agreement, he also tried to prevent the guilt from dismissing if the negotiations were falling apart, a sign that he might be more pessimistic than he was when he transferred the Presidency to confidence in his talent as a negotiator.
The Russian-Ukrainian War, which Mr. Trump had said earlier that he could get rid of “24 hours”, now, he suggested, a matter of great difficulty and complexity.
“This is not my war,” Mr. Trump said during a meeting of an oval office on Thursday with the Norway Prime Minister. “It’s Biden’s war.”
Mr. Trump refused to withdraw the moral difference between Russia and Ukraine or to blame Mr. Putin for his invasion – something he repeatedly refused to do in his second term.
Still he reiterated that he was “Not satisfied” by a deadly Russian attack On Kiev overnight, which came that Trump’s administration demanded that Mr. Zelensky accepted a peaceful settlement that would basically provide Russia with the entire territory he had acquired in the war and offering the Europeans offering Ukrainian security.
The plan, which would also block Ukraine to ever join NATO, was rejected by Mr. Zelensky, who was bothering Mr. Trump.
Pressing about which concessions were offered by Russia, Mr. Trump said he agreed to stop “taking the whole country.” Mr. Putin’s army has not been able to achieve significant territorial gains lately.
Mr. Trump added that Ukraine would be difficult to get a territory he lost during the Russian invasions that occurred during the time of President Barack Obama and Joseph R. Biden Jr. Ukraine returning to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, “a very difficult thing,” he said. But Mr. Trump claimed to “use a lot of pressure” behind the scenes and to Russia and Ukraine.
Senior administration officials, including Secretary of State Marc Rubio, announced that Mr. Trump became impatient and could move away from negotiations if Russia and Ukraine soon reached an agreement. If the United States withdraws from the conversation and cut off their supply of weapons by the Ukrainian army, Mr. Putin would have a greater chance of capturing more land.
When asked by a journalist on Thursday, Mr. Trump asked if he would impose new sanctions on Russia after a bombing of Kiev, Mr. Trump refused to say, adding that he should be asked again in a week. He said he wanted to see what his team could achieve negotiations.
Mark Rutte, Secretary General NATO, also met at the White House on Thursday with Mr. Trump to talk about the war in Ukraine and the upcoming NATO summit. Mr Rutte said after a “very good meeting” with Mr. Trump and did not think that the United States would move away from the conversation of Russia-Ukrain.
While Mr. Trump said that he believed Mr. Putin wanted to make peace, Mr. Rutte said on Thursday that he was “Not to know“Whether this is the case.
“I think something on the table is now where Ukrainians really play the ball, and I think the ball is obviously in the Russian court,” Mr. Rutte added.
On Thursday, Mr. Trump also caused expectations for another serious diplomatic effort, his administration takes this weekend with a hostile foreign government, when the US negotiating team begins with technical conversations with Iranians in Oman.
“I think we are doing very well, an agreement with Iran,” Mr. Trump said.
Israeli government was pushing Mr. Trump support a military campaign that would destroy Iran’s nuclear plants. So far, the President has retained his support to the Israeli mission, rather given the opportunity to diplomacy. But he also insisted that he would never allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon.







