
Donald Trump warns Russia of Ukraine sanctions in August
The US leader spoke on Monday in Scotland where he indicated his new deadline for Vladimir Putin to come to the negotiating table over the Ukraine invasion would be between 10 and 12 days. Asked by reporters how long he would set for the new deadline, Mr Trump said he had been let down by Mr Putin after direct talks.
'I am going to make a new deadline of about 10 or 12 days from today," he 'aid. 'There is no reason in waiting.'
On July 14 Mr Trump initially announced a 50-day deadline for Russia, which would have expired on September 2. Now he is threatening to impose stiff economic penalties on Mr Putin if there is no end to the war with Ukraine. Not only has there not been an end to the fighting, but Russian forces have stepped up missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities.
'So what I'm doing is we're going to do secondary sanctions, unless we make a deal, and we might make a deal, I don't know,' Trump added.
Announcing the offer to Russia, Mr Trump had warned he would impose 100 per cent tariffs and other punitive economic measures on Russia if they did not stop the fighting. Officials have cast secondary levies that would fall on countries who buy Russian goods such as oil. Washington and other capitals allied with Kyiv view such oil purchases as a form of tacit support for Russia, helping to bolster its economy and undercut sanctions.
Following through on his secondary sanctions threat would hit India and China, two major trading partners, while Mr Trump is seeking to negotiate a trade deal to lower tariffs and other barriers with New Delhi, and with negotiators in Stockholm to extend a truce with Beijing.
Mr Trump's latest threat – and shortened timeline for Putin to comply – highlight his growing frustration with the Russian leader. 'I'm not so interested in talking any more,' Mr Trump said on Monday. 'He talks. We have such nice conversations, such respectful and nice conversations, and then people die the following night in a – with a missile going into a town.
'I really felt it was going to end. But every time I think it's going to end he kills people. I'm not so interested in talking (to him) any more,' he added. Ukraine swiftly praised the US President's stand and thanked Mr Trump for 'standing firm and delivering a clear message of peace through strength'.
'When America leads with strength, others think twice,' Ukraine's presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak said on social media.
The comments came during a trip to Scotland by Mr Trump, who met with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who focused on ending the suffering in Gaza and reviving stalled ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas.
During his presidential campaign, Mr Trump promised to use his relationship with Mr Putin to end the three-year war in a single day, but that has not happened. Moscow has responded to his efforts with maximalist demands for Ukrainian territory, and by declining calls for face-to-face talks between Mr Putin and the Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
The Kremlin on Monday said it was not ruling out a meeting between Mr Putin and Mr Trump in September in China. Mr Putin is due to visit China in early September for celebrations to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.
'If it so happens that in the end the US President decides to visit China during those days, then of course such a meeting cannot in theory be excluded,' the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
2 hours ago
- The National
AI chip smuggling 'gets more airtime than it should', White House official says
The idea of high-performance AI chips being smuggled into potentially nefarious hands gets more attention than it should, a White House official has said. Michael Kratsios, who serves as director for the Trump administration's Office of Science and Technology Policy, said on Wednesday that there are a lot of misconceptions and misguided fears about the 'physical diffusion' of artificial intelligence technology developed by the US. 'We're not talking about like a bag of diamonds or something,' he said during a discussion at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think tank about Mr Trump's recently announced AI Action Plan. Some politicians have expressed concerns about the potential for recently announced US AI partnerships overseas to be exploited by countries like China to try to acquire powerful American-made technology. 'These are like massive racks that are tonnes in weight and you're not going to put it on a forklift or back it into a truck, or something," he explained, adding that the idea of chip smuggling "probably gets more airtime than it should." Mr Kratsios also said the hypothetical scenario of the US partnerships with other countries leading to the misuse of data centres by countries like China for 'training runs' to access the centres was overblown. 'What you're most worried about is large-scale runs that are for training sophisticated models and those are actually pretty easy to flag,' he said, adding that the US will make sure to implement what's known in IT circles as Know Your Customer policies to prevent bad actors from gaining access to data centres powered by US technology. Mr Kratsios said that Mr Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, put too many chip export restrictions on allies, and that the export of US technology to countries with peaceful AI aspirations was critical to an overall AI strategy. During Mr Trump's visit to the Gulf in May, he announced the US-UAE AI Acceleration Partnership framework that will eventually lead to the construction of a 5GW UAE-US AI Campus in Abu Dhabi. 'The [Biden administration] limits made no sense at all,' he said, referring to President Biden's policies aimed at limiting the powerful CPUs and GPUs available to certain countries. Those policies were largely aimed at preventing the diffusion of US technology to China. It proved controversial, with companies like Microsoft and Nvidia claiming the policies hurt US efforts more than helping. Some US AI companies like Anthropic, however, have sought to keep the export controls. 'In some cases, smugglers have employed creative methods to circumvent export controls, including hiding processors in prosthetic baby bumps and packing GPUs [graphics processing units] alongside live lobsters,' read an April policy letter from Anthropic. That letter later came under criticism over what some called the oversimplification of how AI data centres work. Regardless, in keeping with that theme of reversing the Biden export policy, the Trump White House recently announced plans that would allow for Nvidia to resume sales of its H20 graphics processing unit to China. That decision, however, has come under criticism from several technology analysts and politicians. A group of Democratic senators this week sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick urging him to reverse course. At the CSIS event, Mr Kratsios said the concerns from Democratic senators were oversimplified, adding that the H20 was designed to comply with US concerns about giving China too much computing power, among other things. 'It's not a free-for-all sale,' he said, referring to White House's H20 announcement. 'Any sale that Nvidia wants to make to China is one that's going to require an export licence.' Mr Kratsios added that the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security would be evaluating each of those licence applications and 'weight the costs' before giving Nvidia approval.


Al Etihad
2 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Trump orders nuclear submarines moved near Russia
1 Aug 2025 22:41 (REUTERS) US President Donald Trump on Friday said he had ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in regions near Russia in response to threats from former Russian President 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," Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

Zawya
2 hours ago
- Zawya
Eritrea: President Donald Trump sends message to President Isaias Afwerki
President Donald Trump has sent a letter to President Isaias Afwerki, on 30 July this week, underlining that he is 'reversing the negative, harmful damage of the Biden Administration around the globe'. In his message that also expressed appreciation for President Isaias' letter of congratulations of November last year for his election as the 47th President of the United States. President Trump referred to his Administration's readiness to re-establish a respectful and productive national relationship between the US and Eritrea 'based on honesty, respect, and opportunities to improve peace and prosperity across the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea'. As it will be recalled, President Isaias Afwerki had sent a warm message of congratulations to President Donal Trump in November last year on his 'historic comeback and election as the 47th President of the United States at very crucial time when global peace is of paramount importance more than ever before'. President Isaias had at the time expressed his hopes that President Trump's 'election will open a new chapter of fruitful and constructive ties of cooperation between Eritrea and the United States'. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Information, Eritrea.