Trump Hints He Will Reward Putin’s Invasion By Demanding Ukraine Give Up Land

President Donald Trump hinted he would demand that Ukraine give up territory seized by Russian dictator Vladimir Putin during his three-year invasion and once again blamed Volodymyr Zelenskyy for getting invaded.

“I get along with Zelenskyy, but, you know, I disagree with what he’s done, very, very severely disagree. This is a war that should have never happened,” Trump said at a White House press conference of Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and his recent statement that he cannot legally cede territory.

“I was a little bothered by the fact that Zelenskyy was saying, ‘Well, I have to get constitutional approval,’” Trump said. “I mean, he’s got approval to go into war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap because there will be some land-swapping going on.”

Trump announced last week he would host a meeting with Putin in Alaska to broker a peace agreement, and his comments to reporters Monday are the most detailed about his view of what needs to happen to persuade Putin to end the war.

His insinuation that Zelenskyy was somehow to blame for Putin’s invasion was a repeat of his attacks on the Ukrainian president during his Oval Office visit in February.

“What you’re doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country,” Trump told Zelenskyy then. “You’re not winning this. You have a damn good chance of coming out OK because of us.”

Six weeks later, Trump outright blamed Zelenskyy for starting the war. “You don’t start a war with someone 20 times your size and then hope people give you some missiles,” he said in an Oval Office photo opportunity with Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele.

Trump called the coming summit a “feel-out meeting” and that he would afterward call Zelenskky and America’s NATO allies in Europe, who have since the 2022 invasion been eager to counter Russia and help Ukraine and even more so since Trump returned to office in January.

He added that his discussions with Russia and others led to his belief that Ukraine would have to give away land to end the war. “I know that through Russia and through conversations with everybody,” Trump said.

Trump’s special envoy, his friend from New York real estate days Steve Witkoff, met with Putin last week and apparently misunderstood what Putin was saying. Witkoff reported back that Putin was willing to give up two Ukrainian regions and keep a third, when in fact Putin’s offer was to hang on to all three in return for stopping his attacks.

Trump on Monday also repeated his lie that the US under former President Joe Biden had given far more help to Ukraine than had Western Europe. “Biden approved $350 billion. Europe has spent $100 billion,” he said.

In reality, Europe has provided more assistance to Ukraine from the start, both in weapons and economic help.

Trump is scheduled to go to Alaska on Friday for his meeting with Putin, his first such summit with him since 2018, when in Helsinki he said he took the word of the former KGB agent over his own intelligence agencies about Russia’s work to help Trump win the 2016 election.

On Monday, though, Trump, who is 79, twice conflated Alaska with Russia itself. Alaska has belonged to the United States since 1867, when it was purchased from Russia, then under the rule of Czar Alexander II.

“I’m going to Russia on Friday,” Trump said, explaining his coming trip. An hour later, preparing to leave the podium, he said it again: “We’re going to Russia.”

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Trump Has Already Handed Putin A Win By Hosting Peace Talks In Alaska

Donald Trump has announced that he will be meeting Vladimir Putin in the American state of Alaska on Friday to discuss ending the Ukraine war.

It could be pivotal moment in the conflict, even though no one from Europe – including Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy – is thought to be invited to the talks.

This has sparked major concerns that Trump will prioritise Putin’s demands to end the war over Ukraine’s.

The US president has already said there may be a land swap in exchange for peace, evidently overlooking how Russia started the war and occupies 20% of Ukraine.

While the talks themselves will have given the Kremlin a boost, choosing to hold them in Alaska will have caused further celebration in Russia.

Putin’s aide Yuri Ushakov told Russian state news agency TASS: “Russia and the US are close neighbours, sharing a common border.

“It seems quite logical for our delegation simply to fly across the Bering Strait and for the important and anticipated summit of leaders of these two countries to take place precisely in Alaska.”

They were expected to travel to neutral territory – Putin himself suggested the United Arab Emirates – but Trump has persuaded the Russian leader to come to the States.

That means the US president is allowing Putin to circumvent the arrest warrant the International Criminal Court has out for him, as he does not have to fly over hostile countries who could try and apprehend him, for the talks.

The US does not recognise the jurisdiction of the ICC so he will not risk arrest in the States.

It will be the first time he has visited the US in a decade, having last travelled to the States during Barack Obama’s second term.

It’s a small victory for Trump too, because it seems like he has the upper hand by forcing Putin to come to him on his territory.

But there’s also a historical element to the meeting place, because Alaska used to Russian territory before it was sold to the US in the 19th Century.

A Russian negotiator, Kirill Dmitriev, who attended US envoy Steve Witkoff’s recent meeting with Putin, even called Alaska “a Russian-born American” which reflects the ties between their countries.

Russian nationalists have also repeatedly called for the land to be returned to Russia over the years.

Former Russian president and Putin ally, Dmitry Medvedev – who is now a senior security official – claimed in January 2024 that the US should return Alaska to Russia.

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Trump Rips ‘Disgusting Degenerate’ Nancy Pelosi In Saturday Night Stock Rant

US President Donald Trump furiously accused former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (Democrat, California) of shady stock market dealings this weekend.

Shooting off an angry Truth Social post on Saturday night, the president wrote, “Crooked Nancy Pelosi, and her very ‘interesting’ husband, beat every Hedge Fund in 2024. In other words, these two very average ‘minds’ beat ALL of the Super Geniuses on Wall Street, thousands of them.”

“It’s all INSIDE iNFORMATION! Is anybody looking into this???” he then asked.

Hiding no hints of bitterness, Trump added, “She is a disgusting degenerate, who Impeached me twice, on NO GROUNDS, and LOST! How are you feeling now, Nancy???”

Her husband Paul Pelosi’s seemingly knack for trading has long been a topic of conversation.

For years, Paul Pelosi’s portfolio has regularly outperformed top hedge funds, raising questions about if his wife’s role in Washington, DC, has helped give him an unfair edge on the market.

Estimates from stock research platform Quiver Quantitative peg the Pelosis’ holdings to be worth around $164 million.

Pelosi has claimed she has no say in her husband’s trading decisions and defended his stock dealings as his right to participate in the free market.

Though she previously balked at the idea of enacting trade restrictions on politicians, Pelosi seems to have shifted her position in recent days.

Last month, she endorsed Senator Josh Hawley’s (Republican, Missouri) bipartisan backed HONEST Act (Halting Ownership and Non-Ethical Stock Transactions, which would ban federal legislators, the president and the vice president from trading stocks.

“The American people deserve confidence that their elected leaders are serving the public interest, not their personal portfolios,” she told The Associated Press in July.

In 2023 when the legislation was originally introduced, it was dubbed the PELOSI Act, short for Preventing Elected Leaders from Owning Securities and Investments.

According to Bloomberg, the president’s net worth has more than doubled since he launched his last campaign for office.

Trump and his family’s cryptocurrency coins have banked them hundreds of millions of dollars.

Tech mogul Jeff Bezo’s Amazon Studios purchased rights for a Melania Trump documentary for $40 million in January, nearly three-times more than the next closest offer, according to the Wall Street Journal.

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Did Donald Trump’s New Nuclear Threats Alarm Vladimir Putin?

Donald Trump suddenly announced he was moving two of America’s nuclear submarines closer to Russia after “highly provocative statements” from a senior Kremlin official last week.

The declaration was quite a surprise, especially considering the US president has previously spoken of his fond friendship for Vladimir Putin and even expressed sympathy for his invasion of Ukraine.

As Kyiv’s most powerful ally – and the only major Western figure to show leniency towards Putin – Trump’s words matter.

So how did we get here? And just how concerned is the Kremlin about what might happen next?

Why did US nuclear rhetoric suddenly ramp up?

The US president has been trying to pressure Putin to end his war in Ukraine for months, even offering to oversee a peace deal which would reward the Russian president for his brutal invasion with Ukrainian territory.

But the Russian president has consistently dragged his feet.

So Trump has gradually amped up his rhetoric.

Last week, while in Scotland, he said he was going to reduce his previous 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war down to 10 or 12 days – or the US would hit Russia with more sanctions.

Former Russian president, close Putin ally and the deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, Dmitry Medvedev, lashed out at the news on social media.

He claimed Trump was “playing the ultimatum game with Russia” and said “each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war”.

The president responded: “Tell Medvedev, the failed former Russian president who thinks he is still in power, to be careful what he says. He is entering very dangerous territory.”

Hours later, he posted: “Based on the highly provocative statements of the Former President of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev … I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.

“Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances.”

He did not mention if the submarines were nuclear armed or nuclear powered, or where the “appropriate regions” are.

How did Russia respond?

After a weekend of silence, the Kremlin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov finally addressed Trump’s shifting stance on Monday, telling reporters: “In this case, it is obvious that American submarines are already on combat duty. This is an ongoing process, that’s the first thing.

“But in general, of course, we would not want to get involved in such a controversy and would not want to comment on it in any way.

“Of course, we believe that everyone should be very, very careful with nuclear rhetoric.”

He also claimed Moscow did not see Trump’s remarks as an escalation in nuclear tension, adding: “We do not believe that we are talking about any escalation now. It is clear that very complex, very sensitive issues are being discussed which, of course, are perceived very emotionally by many people.”

So, what does all this mean? HuffPost UK spoke to several experts to find out.

Not so chummy now: Trump, left, and Putin in 2018.
Not so chummy now: Trump, left, and Putin in 2018.

via Associated Press

‘Russia understands this is a serious step’

“In a way, Trump is trying to play a game,” the director of International Security at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) Dr Neil Melvin said.

Melvin suggested Trump was trying to call out Moscow for rattling the nuclear saber over the last three years.

“He tried to put a kind of baseline underneath the escalation conversation with Russia around nuclear weapons,” the expert told HuffPost UK. “This is why the Russians haven’t responded because they’ve actually understood that this is quite a serious step.”

“Trump is the first US president I think to openly challenge this new position of Russia,” he said, explaining that the he two countries are now looking to re-establish a conversation about just what escalation looks like.

Melvin said this was a very different place to where the world was during the Cold War, when the US and the USSR were also in a standoff over nuclear weapons – and everyone used “careful language”.

He pointed out that Trump’s post on TruthSocial was without its usual capital letters or exclamation marks, perhaps indicating it was a more serious and a “calculated response by the United States”.

The specialist said Moscow’s delay in reply probably stemmed from Russia being unable to decide whether to escalate or just make a rhetorical statement.

“Russia has been anxious to avoid direct confrontation with the US, even though they basically talk about being in a war with the States,” he said.

Melvin claimed other western leaders will “will broadly support” Trump’s latest comments, because “there has been some concern that Russia has been blurring the line between conventional wars and nuclear”.

“This is actually a step towards re-imposing a stronger distinction,” he noted.

This is not a ‘sensible or coherent’ strategy

Meanwhile, Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow from Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia programme, suggested these were mainly empty words from the US president – and so Moscow will not be intimidated at all.

He said: “With the submarine comment, Trump has discovered another means of appearing ‘tough on Russia’ without actually doing anything that would be of concern to Moscow – and there are plenty of other reasons why he might be seeking headlines that suggest he is taking a firmer line with Putin.”

The specialist said: “Trump has taken every possible step to pressure Russia, short of actually doing something.”

He concluded: “Whatever Trump’s latest verbal salvo at Moscow may be, there’s one thing it isn’t: a strategy for dealing with Russia, let alone a sensible or coherent one.”

Giles claimed the Kremlin will be watching Trump closely, but “perhaps as much out of curiosity as of concern as to what he will do next.”

‘The Kremlin was unprepared’

Russia analyst from the Institute for the Study of War, Christina Harward, told HuffPost UK that Russia’s response has been “incredibly limited thus far”.

She pointed out that there’s been no response from the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the Russian Ministry of Defence.

“High-ranking Russian officials very often parrot the same phrases as each other, telling us that Russian officials’ public rhetoric is highly coordinated within the Kremlin itself,” she said.

“The Kremlin is also known to disseminate manuals to Russian state media with clear instructions about how to cover certain current events.

“The fact that we didn’t see a coordinated response over the weekend to Trump’s announcement indicates that the Kremlin was unprepared for this move and is likely still working on how to publicly react. We may start to see a more unified official reaction in the coming days.”

What now?

While the specialists seem split over just how much impact Trump’s comments will have on the Kremlin, only one thing seems certain right now: Putin still has no plans to withdraw from Ukraine any time soon.

US special presidential envoy Steve Witkoff is set to visit Moscow this week to discuss peace talks, days before Trump’s new tariffs against Russia are set to kick in (August 9).

But Russia continues to target Ukraine almost every single night with drone and missile attacks, while Putin is still pushing to gain control over four Ukrainian regions to which Moscow currently occupies, and a promise from Kyiv will never join Nato.

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‘TACO’ No More? Trump Signals No Extension To Tariff Deadline

President Donald Trump is holding firm on his Friday deadline to slap tariffs on countries without a trade agreement with the US.

Trump looked to defy his “TACO” – “Trump Always Chickens Out” – nickname by saying that his cut-off point will not be extended beyond August 1.

“THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE IS THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE — IT STANDS STRONG, AND WILL NOT BE EXTENDED. A BIG DAY FOR AMERICA!!!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social social media platform on Wednesday.

Trump earned the sobriquet from the financial press for repeatedly delaying new taxes on goods sent to the US.

The president has spoken about agreements on trade deals with the European Union and nations including the UK and Japan, though many of the details have yet to be formalised.

It means a slew of countries will face higher tariffs under Trump’s “Liberation Day” trade policy, a plan most economists say will lead to higher prices for American consumers.

The list looks likely to include India, which has the world’s fifth-largest economy, after Trump said on Wednesday the country faces a 25% tariff from Friday, plus an additional import tax because of India’s purchasing of Russian oil.

Trump said on Truth Social that India “is our friend,” but its “Tariffs are far too high” on US goods.

The president has used tariffs as a battering ram to reshape global trade in America’s favour, though the move has created economic uncertainty amid fears the policy will cause a US slowdown and stoke inflation.

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Trump Has Not Stopped Making News Since Getting To Scotland. Here’s 9 Things We’ve Learned So Far

Donald Trump is on day three of his four day visit to Scotland – and clearly in the mood to make some waves.

Although it would seem he’s primarily here for a golfing holiday at his two Scottish resorts in South Ayrshire and Aberdeenshire, Trump has also squeezed in several visits with international leaders.

He has already sat down with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and UK prime minister Keir Starmer. A separate chat with Scotland’s first minister John Swinney is scheduled for this evening.

While Stop Trump Coalition protesters have been campaigned against his arrival outside the US consulate in Edinburgh, the president has been making major statements on both domestic and international politics from his Turnberry gold course.

Here’s everything that has happened through his visit so far:

1. He changed the 50-day deadline for Putin

Trump declared he was “disappointed” with Vladimir Putin’s ongoing aggression against Ukraine, especially after giving him 50 days to end the war – or face secondary sanctions.

So Trump said he was to cut that time down to 10 or 12 days, adding: “There’s no reason in waiting. I want to be generous but we just don’t see any progress being made.”

2. He disagreed with Israel over Gaza

Trump distanced himself from his ally Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claim that there is “no starvation in Gaza”.

He said the situation in the Palestinian territory is “terrible” and that “we have to get the kids fed”.

He also suggested setting up food centre in Gaza with “no boundaries”.

Trump said Gaza is one of the main reasons for their meeting and that a ceasefire is very much possible.

3. Trump insisted he did not visit Epstein’s island

Trump claimed he “never went” to the island owned by the late convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, also known as Little Saint James, where many of the alleged offences took place.

The US president has been facing major backlash in the States, particularly with his MAGA base, recently.

It comes his administration announced it would not be releasing any further files on the former financier, who was friends with Trump for over a decade.

But Trump told reporters today: “I did turn it down but a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. In one of my very good moments, I turned it down. I didn’t want to go to his island.”

He also claimed: “For years I wouldn’t talk to Jeffery Epstein. I wouldn’t talk because he did something that was inappropriate.

“He hired help and I said don’t ever do that again. He’s stolen people that work for me, I said don’t ever do that again. He did it again and I threw him out of the place. I threw him out and that was it.”

4. He weighed in on the small boats crisis

When asked how the UK should deal with the migrants who arrive on British shores illegally, he spoke about the US immigration policy and said no one had come into the country illegally in the last month.

“If you’re stopping immigration and stopping the wrong people, my hats are off to you,” Trump said.

He added that he knows “nothing about the boats” but he welcomed Starmer’s strong opposition to it.

“Anyone here illegally should not be allowed in,” he said.

5. The president casually claimed he’s stopped six wars

The US president alleged to have stopped six wars since he was sworn into the Oval Office in January, adding: “I’m averaging around a war a month.”

He referred to India and Pakistan, and Congo and Rwanda. It’s not clear which other conflicts he is referring to, especially as the Ukraine war and the Israel-Gaza crisis are both ongoing.

6. Trump attacked Sadiq Khan

“I am not a fan of the London mayor [Sadiq Khan]. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person,” Trump said.

Starmer tried to defuse the tension, cutting in: “He’s a friend of mine actually!”

But Trump continued: “No I think he’s done a terrible job.”

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‘I am not a fan of the London mayor. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person.’

US President Donald Trump launches into attack on Sadiq Khan during his UK visit

Follow our live blog for more🔗https://t.co/jKjPXP82S4

📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/JdlXtcrwSL

— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 28, 2025

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‘I am not a fan of the London mayor. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person.’

US President Donald Trump launches into attack on Sadiq Khan during his UK visit

Follow our live blog for more🔗https://t.co/jKjPXP82S4

📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/JdlXtcrwSL

— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 28, 2025

7. Trump said he liked Nigel Farage

Asked for his response on the UK’s “divided” world and Reform UK Nigel Farage, Trump said: “I like this man [Starmer] a lot and I like Nigel.

He said one is “slightly liberal” and the other “slightly conservative”, but they are both “good men”.

“Nigel is a friend of mine and Keir is a friend of mine,” he said.

Trump was clearly overlooking the major tensions between the two political figures who tend to disagree on almost all subjects.

8. Trump resumed his usual attacks on wind power

The US president tore into Scotland’s offshore wind turbines, calling the “ugly” – while also praising the UK government’s plans to build three nuclear reactors, calling nuclear power “safe”.

But he claimed the UK could get oil and gas out of the North Sea instead, which he claimed would be cheaper – and less ugly.

“Wind is the the most expensive form of energy and it destroys the beauty of your fields and your plains,” Trump claimed.

9. The US has struck a deal with EU

Oh and, before meeting Starmer, Trump also struck a major trade agreement.

On Sunday, Trump and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen announced a trade deal with 15% tariffs – half of what he initially threatened – on most goods going into the States from the trade bloc.

In exchange, the EU will have to invest in US energy products – which will prevent a potential trade war between the two allies.

The UK’s trade deal secured a 10% tariff in May, but many European allies suggested it was a bad agreement so are unlikely to be happy with this one.

There’s already been some backlash from France, Germany and Ireland over the deal.

Asked by reporters why the US gave a better deal to the UK than the EU, he said: “We have a very special relationship with this country.”

He said his mother was born there and that it “always has an impact” and says he “wants to see this part of the world to do well”.

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