logo
US will send Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine: Donald Trump

US will send Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine: Donald Trump

"We will send them Patriots, which they desperately need," Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews on July 13. "Putin really surprised a lot of people. He talks nice and then he bombs everybody in the evening... there's a little bit of a problem there. I don't like it."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has asked for more defensive capabilities to fend off a daily barrage of missile and drone attacks from Russia. Trump announced the plan while speaking to reporters after returning from the FIFA Club World Cup match in New Jersey and ahead of an expected meeting at the White House with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.
He said in an interview with NBC News last week that the United States would be sending weapons to NATO that the military alliance would fund. "We are not paying for any more weapons," Trump told NBC at the time.
FIFA Club World Cup: Trump awards trophy amid boos, that one awkward moment
Contributing: Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dan Bongino's relationship with the White House is ‘basically untenable' as rumors of his departure mount
Dan Bongino's relationship with the White House is ‘basically untenable' as rumors of his departure mount

The Independent

time37 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Dan Bongino's relationship with the White House is ‘basically untenable' as rumors of his departure mount

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino's relationship with the White House is reportedly in ruins as rumors of his departure from the agency mount. Last week, reports emerged that Bongino did not go to work on Friday after a blow-out argument with Attorney General Pam Bondi over her handling of the Epstein files. Now, CNN reports that Justice Department leaders haven't spoken to Bongino since Wednesday, and Vice President JD Vance is attempting to mediate the conflict. Bongino has told others he is considering resigning, and sources familiar with the situation say his relationship with the White House is basically untenable, according to CNN. 'The whole thing has been a complete mess and no one is happy,' one source told CNN on Friday. However, Trump confirmed he spoke with Bongino over the weekend, and backed the FBI leader to remain in his role. 'I spoke to him today,' Trump told reporters Sunday after stepping off Air Force One. 'Dan Bongino. Very good guy. I've known him for a long time. I've done his show many, many times. He sounded terrific, actually. No, I think he's in good shape.' Elon Musk entered the fray on Saturday, responding to an X user who screenshotted a particularly oddly-worded Truth Social post from Trump, in which the president urged his followers to drop the matter. 'This is in the running for worst post ever made,' wrote the X user. 'Seriously,' Musk responded. 'He said 'Epstein' half a dozen times while telling everyone to stop talking about Epstein.' In the post, Trump defended his attorney general: 'What's going on with my 'boys' and, in some cases, 'gals?' They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB!' 'We have a PERFECT Administration, THE TALK OF THE WORLD, and 'selfish people' are trying to hurt it, all over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein,' he added. Bongino clashed with Bondi at the White House on Wednesday over the recent memo from the FBI and Justice Department revealing that Jeffrey Epstein did not keep a 'client list,' Axios reported. The memo also confirmed that Epstein died by suicide in a New York City jail cell on August 10, 2019, following years of conspiracy theories surrounding the disgraced financier's death. Bondi confronted Bongino over a NewsNation article that stated he and FBI Director Patel said they wanted more information about the Epstein files released earlier, but were held back from doing so, Axios reported. Bongino reportedly told Bondi he didn't leak that information. The White House maintains that Bongino, Bondi and others are working 'in lockstep and with unprecedented success.' 'President Trump has assembled an incredible team of Law and Order patriots who are committed to Making America Safe Again and restoring the integrity of our criminal justice system,' spokesperson Harrison Fields said in a statement to The Independent. 'Attorney General Bondi, Director Patel, Deputy Director Bongino, and the countless other heroes of our law enforcement community are dedicated to executing President Trump's agenda of protecting civil rights, safeguarding communities, holding criminals accountable, and defending victims.' The Justice Department's memo also included a ten-hour video from outside Epstein's cell, arguing that it shows no one entered the room before the financier died by suicide. But many conspiracy theorists online claim the video has a 'missing minute' and is part of a wider cover-up effort surrounding Epstein's death. Bongino and Patel were previously some of the most . A senior administration official told Axios that Bongino was in favor of releasing this video until it stirred up controversy.

Trump weapons pledge marks major step forward for Ukraine
Trump weapons pledge marks major step forward for Ukraine

BBC News

time44 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Trump weapons pledge marks major step forward for Ukraine

For the first time since returning to the White House, Donald Trump has pledged to make new weapons available to a new deal, the US will sell weapons to Nato members who will then supply them to Kyiv as it battles Russia's president didn't give too many specifics about what he said was "billions of dollars' worth of military equipment". But when asked if the deal included Patriot air defence batteries and interceptor missiles, he replied "it's everything".One European country has 17 Patriot systems and "a big portion" would soon be on the way to Ukraine, Trump Ukraine, a huge country that currently operates handful of batteries - perhaps as few as eight - this is a major step forward, giving Kyiv a chance to expand protection against Russian ballistic and cruise beside the president, the Nato Secretary General, Mark Rutte, hinted at a bigger package."It's broader than Patriots," he said."It will mean that Ukraine can get its hands on really massive numbers of military equipment, both for air defence, but also missiles, ammunition..." This is a significant than two weeks ago, there was horror in Kyiv at news that the Pentagon had suspended military shipments to Ukraine, including decision-making surrounding that announcement remains unclear, but on Monday, Trump once again tried to make light if it, saying it had been made in the knowledge that this deal would be struck."We were pretty sure this was going to happen, so we did a little bit of a pause," the president thanks to some tortuous negotiations, many of them involving Rutte, the weapons can continue to flow without Washington picking up the tab."We're in for a lot of money," the president said, "and we just don't want to do it any more."The deal is a personal triumph for Rutte, the "Trump whisperer", who has flattered and encouraged the president, in part by helping to secure a member-wide Nato commitment to spend 5% of GDP on they sat side by side in the Oval Office, Rutte continued to flatter Trump, calling the latest deal "really big" and saying it was "totally logical" that European members of Nato pay for it. A number of countries, he said, were lining up to participate, including the UK, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Norway and the Netherlands."And this is only the first wave," he said. "There will be more."In a separate and rather characteristic development, Trump threatened Moscow with a new deadline: if Vladimir Putin doesn't agree to a ceasefire deal in the next 50 days, Russia and its trading partners will be hit with 100% secondary threatens Russia with tariffs while unveiling new Ukraine weapons planIt's a novel approach, which Kyiv and members of the US congress have been urging for some time: pressure Russia by targeting countries that continue to buy Russian oil and gas, like China and move comes as the US Senate continues to work on a bill that would impose much stiffer president said the Senate bill, which envisages 500% secondary tariffs, could be "very good" but added that it was "sort of meaningless after a while because at a certain point it doesn't matter".As always, the precise details of the president's threat remain somewhat whatever happens in the coming weeks and months, Monday felt like something of a turning point. A US president finally moving away from his perplexing faith in Vladimir Putin, while still giving the Russian leader time to come to the negotiating definitely not a return to Joe Biden's pledges to support Ukraine "for as long as it takes," but nor is it quite the neutral stance that has infuriated Ukraine and its western appears to have guaranteed that the all-important US weapons pipeline to Ukraine will remain open for now – provided others pay for 50 days will feel like a very long time to Ukrainians, who are on the receiving end of near-nightly drone and missile Trump has done seems likely to put an immediate stop to this.

Starmer to meet Trump during Scotland trip ahead of state visit
Starmer to meet Trump during Scotland trip ahead of state visit

Leader Live

timean hour ago

  • Leader Live

Starmer to meet Trump during Scotland trip ahead of state visit

Mr Trump is expected to travel to Scotland in July before the state visit in September. A Downing Street spokesman said: 'The White House has confirmed that President Trump will be making a private visit to Scotland later this month. 'Given he is visiting a private capacity, there will not be a formal bilateral but the Prime Minister is pleased to take up the president's invite to meet during his stay.' Police Scotland have said they will seek Government help with the 'considerable' costs of the Trump visit, after it emerged last week that the force was in the early stages of planning for a visit. The US president's state visit will follow from September 17 to 19, Buckingham Palace has confirmed. He will be hosted by the King and Queen at Windsor Castle and accompanied by his wife, Melania Trump. There had been speculation about whether Mr Trump would be able to address Parliament, as French President Emmanuel Macron did during his state visit last week. MPs will not be around during the confirmed dates, which fall just after they start a break for party conference season. Nigel Farage called for Parliament to be recalled so Mr Trump can speak before MPs and peers. The Reform UK leader posted on X: 'Why does Keir Starmer think that the French president is a better friend to this country than the American president? Parliament must be recalled for Donald Trump's state visit to the UK. Why does @Keir_Starmer think Macron is a better friend of Britain than Trump? — Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) July 14, 2025 'He's got it completely wrong. I believe Parliament should be recalled and Trump should be given the opportunity to address both houses.' The Liberal Democrats meanwhile did not urge for MPs to be called back, but said Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney should be invited for a state visit and to address Parliament. 'The Prime Minister should invite Mark Carney for an official visit to the UK just ahead of Trump's visit, including the opportunity to address Parliament. 'This would send an important signal that Britain stands shoulder to shoulder with Canada against Trump's chaotic trade war,' Sir Ed Davey said. Asked for Sir Keir's view on the president addressing Parliament, the Prime Minister's official spokesman said: 'The Prime Minister is focused on welcoming President Trump to the UK for an historic second state visit and building on the excellent relationship they've had that's been delivering for working people. 'The dates of the visit are for President Trump and the Palace (…) details around the programme will be announced in due course.' Stephen Gethins MP, the SNP's foreign affairs spokesman, said that Sir Keir should not be 'rewarding Trump's bad behaviour' and instead focus on rebuilding ties with European partners. 'While there is an obvious need to engage, rolling out the red carpet of a state visit is the wrong approach when dealing with Trump,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store