Kyiv can earn all of Ukraine from Russia, says Trump

Ruth Comerford And
Anthony ZurcherCorresponding to North America

US President Donald Trump said kyiv can “win all of Ukraine in his original form”, marking a major change in his position on war with Russia.
In an article on his Truth social platform, he said that Ukraine could recover “the original borders from which this war began” with the support of Europe and NATO, due to pressures on the economy of Russia.
His comments occurred after the interviews with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was held after Trump addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday.
Trump has repeatedly expressed his desire to end the war, but previously warned that the process would probably imply that Ukraine abandons a territory, a result that Zelensky has Rejected constantly.
In his article, Trump added that Ukraine could “perhaps even go further than that”, but did not specify what it was referring to.
He also made no reference to Crimea, which was invaded and annexed by Russia in 2014. Russia launched its large -scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Trump said his position had changed “after getting to know and understand the military and economic situation of Ukraine / Russia”.
“Putin and Russia are in great economic difficulty, and it’s time for Ukraine to act,” he added, labeling Russia as a “paper tiger”.
Zelensky praised the “big quarter of work” in Trump’s position, and talking to journalists from the United Nations Building, said he understood that the United States was ready to give Ukrainian security guarantees “once the war ended”.
Pressed to what it would look like, he added “I don’t want to lie, we have no specific details”, but addressed the possibility of more weapons, aerial defenses and drones.
Earlier Tuesday, following his speech to the UN, Trump also said that NATO nations should shoot down Russian planes that crossed their airspace, following a series of recent incursions by Russian fighter planes and drones.
Last week, Estonia and Poland asked for a consultation with other NATO members after Russia violated its airspace in distinct incidents. Romania, another member of NATO, also said that Russian drones had violated its airspace.
Russia has denied having violated the airspace in Estonia, while it insisted that the Polish foray was not deliberate and did not comment on the incident of Romania.
When asked if the United States would support its NATO allies if it had shot down Russian planes, Trump said it “depended on the circumstances” and praised the military alliance to increase defense expenses.
“NATO has intensified,” he said, referring to an agreement of managers to accelerate defense spending at 5% of their country’s economic production by 2035.
In his speech a few hours earlier, Trump criticized certain NATO members for not stopping the purchase of Russian energy, saying that they “financed a war against themselves”.

The Tuesday truth social post represents a subject after Trump spent most of the year insist that the situation of Ukraine was disastrous.
In February, Trump told Zelensky during their fiery oval office exchange that he had “had no cards at the moment” to prevail against a larger nation more populated in a war of attrition.
Before discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska in August, Trump said he would try to recover a territory for Ukraine, but warned that there would be “exchanges, field changes”.
It was reported that he planned to press Zelensky to abandon all of the East Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk in exchange for Russia freezing the rest of the front line – a proposal presented by Putin in Alaska.
Trump has also threatened several times to impose more strict measures on Russia, but has so far not taken action when the Kremlin has ignored its deadlines and his threats of sanctions.
The unpredictability has long been one of the brands of policy of foreign policy of the American president, and perhaps the latter decision is an attempt to shake up the peace negotiations which stagnant for more than a month after Trump welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin at a summit in Alaska.
The most notable part of Trump’s position can be the way it ends – with insurance, the United States would continue to sell weapons to NATO so that it could then transmit to Ukraine.
It is not the apparently almost open commitment to the war effort that the Biden administration provided, but it is more that Trump seemed interested in the offer sometimes this year.
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