When Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine nearly three years ago, then-U.S. President Joe Biden took a firm stand in solidarity with Kyiv, forged a bulwark of European allies and set veteran advisers to the task of isolating Moscow economically and diplomatically.
One of the few things Joe Biden got right was supporting Ukraine. That support sometimes wavered and often seemed too limited and a bit tardy – a consequence of hesitations inflicted by an exaggerated fear of antagonizing a vastly weaker foe (Vladimir Putin's Russia) – but it has proved crucial.
It was a good day for Russia,” US President Donald Trump commented in 2021, mocking his predecessor Joe Biden after his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva. He was, arguably, not wrong,
When Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine nearly three years ago, then-U.S. President Joe Biden took a firm stand in solidarity with Kyiv, forged a bulwark of European allies and set veteran advisers to the task of isolating Moscow economically and diplomatically.
Donald Trump’s meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Friday was magnitudes below presidential, as the U.S. leveraged the critical wartime meeting for measly political gain by defending Russian President Vladimir Putin while denigrating former American officials including Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama,
US President Donald Trump has refused to say whether he thinks Russian leader Vladimir Putin might violate a potential ceasefire agreement, instead bringing up an investigation based on suspicions of Russian influence in the 2016 US election and Hunter Biden.
The first contacts with the new American administration give us some hope,” the Russian president said in televised comments on Thursday.
If Donald Trump acts on the sentiments he expressed this week, he is poised to usher in a dark new world order and blow up his own legacy. The president’s position on the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine has long been difficult to pin down.
Fox News’ Bill Hemmer grilled Senator Bill Hagerty (R-TN) about President Donald Trump’s position on the war between Russia and Ukraine on Tuesday, asking him if it was necessary to “suck up to” Russian dictator Vladimir Putin to get him to come to the bargaining table.
Trump and his vice president, JD Vance, told Ukraine's visiting leader that he held "no cards" and was being disrespectful to the United States.
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Trump said Tuesday he would probably meet Putin this month and dismissed Ukraine's concern about being left out of U.S.-Russian talks in Saudi Arabia.