
Trump gives Russia 50 days to resolve Ukraine war
'We're very, very unhappy' with Russia, Trump told reporters as he met with NATO chief Mark Rutte in the White House.
'We're going to be doing very severe tariffs if we don't have a deal in 50 days, tariffs at about 100 percent,' said Trump, adding that they would be 'secondary tariffs ' that target Russia's remaining trade partners -- thereby seeking to cripple Moscow's ability to survive already sweeping Western sanctions.
Trump and Rutte also unveiled a deal under which the NATO military alliance would buy arms from the United States -- including Patriot anti-missile batteries -- and then distribute them to Ukraine to help it battle Russia's invasion.
'This is billions of dollars worth of military equipment is going to be purchased from the United States, going to NATO... and that's going to be quickly distributed to the battlefield,' Trump said.
Rutte, a former Dutch prime minister, said Ukraine would get 'massive numbers' of weapons under the deal.
Trump launched a bid at rapprochement with Putin shortly after starting his second term in January, as he sought to honor his election campaign promise to end the Ukraine war within 24 hours.
His pivot towards Putin sparked fears in Kyiv that he was about to sell out Ukraine, especially after Trump and his team berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office in February.
'Assassin'
But Trump has shown growing anger and frustration with Putin in recent weeks as the Russian leader, instead of halting his three-year invasion, instead stepped up attacks.
Trump added of Putin on Monday: 'I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy.'
Last week, Trump had teased an announcement on Monday on Russia. He then announced on Sunday that he would send vital Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine to help it fend off escalating barrages of Russian attacks.
Washington has also U-turned from an announcement earlier this month that it would pause some arms deliveries to Kyiv. Rutte's visit to the White House is the first since the former Dutch prime minister described Trump as 'daddy' at a NATO summit in The Hague in June.
Moscow has unleashed record waves of drone and missile strikes over the past few weeks, with the number of Ukrainian civilians killed or wounded in June hitting a three-year high, according to UN figures.
Trump's announcement on Monday came as his special envoy Keith Kellogg arrived in Kyiv to meet Zelensky.
Zelensky hailed the 'productive meeting', saying they had discussed 'strengthening Ukraine's air defense, joint production, and procurement of defense weapons in collaboration with Europe.'
The Ukrainian leader also said he was 'grateful to President Trump for the important signals of support and the positive decisions for both our countries.' 'Better late than never'
One Ukrainian soldier deployed in the war-scarred east of the country, who identified himself by his call sign Grizzly, welcomed Trump's promise of fresh air defense systems.
'Better late than never,' he told AFP. '
Because while we a re here defending the front line, our families are unprotected. Thanks to the Patriots they are giving us, our families will be safer,' the 29-year-old added.
Russian forces meanwhile said on Monday they had captured new territory in eastern Ukraine with the seizure of two villages, one in the Donetsk region and another in the Zaporizhzhia region.
Its forces also killed at least three civilians in the eastern Kharkiv and Sumy regions on Monday, regional Ukrainian officials announced.

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


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
EU unveils blueprint for boosted 2-trillioneuro budget
The EU executive proposed yesterday a long-term budget boosted to two trillion euros ($2.3 trillion) as Europe confronts complex challenges, from overseas competition to Russian aggression at its borders. Presenting the 2028-2034 budget blueprint to reporters in Brussels, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said it 'will be the most ambitious ever proposed. It is more strategic, more flexible, more transparent'. In drawing up the plans, von der Leyen had to balance bolstering the bloc's security, ramping up Europe's competitiveness to keep up with US and Chinese rivals, countering climate change and paying debts due from 2028. And all of this was against a backdrop of soaring trade tensions with the European Union's biggest commercial partner, the United States. The European Commission announced a 451-billion-euro competitiveness fund to support the EU's investment efforts in clean tech, digital, defence and food security and innovation. As Europe pushes to rearm, the amounts dedicated to defence and space will increase five-fold -- to 131 billion euros. And the spending plan proposed earmarking up to 100 billion euros to support war-torn Ukraine over its seven-year period. 'This is a long-term commitment to Ukraine's recovery and reconstruction,' budget chief Piotr Serafin said. Hungary, Russia's closest ally in Europe, slammed the money for Kyiv. 'Ukraine would get a massive funding boost, while European farmers lose out,' Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said before the official announcement by the commission. The large farming subsidies that make up the biggest share of the budget, known as the common agricultural policy (CAP), are a subject of fierce debate. Serafin, however, said that under the commission's plans, 300 billion euros would be ring-fenced to support farmers, who have been worried about potential cuts to their slice of the pie. In the current seven-year budget, the CAP accounted for almost a third of funding -- around 387 billion euros, of which 270 billion euros are directly paid to farmers.


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
Trump announces Indonesia ‘deal' after tariff threats
TDT | Washington US President Donald Trump said yesterday that he had struck a deal with Indonesia -- without providing specifics of the agreement -- a week after threatening steeper tariffs on the Southeast Asian country. 'Great deal, for everybody, just made with Indonesia,' Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform, saying that he worked with the country's president directly. 'DETAILS TO FOLLOW!!!' The Trump administration has been under pressure to finalize trade pacts after promising a flurry of deals, as countries have sought negotiations with Washington to avoid Trump's tariff threats. But the US president has so far only unveiled deals with Britain and Vietnam, alongside an agreement to temporarily lower tit-fortat levies with China. Lastweek, Trum prenewed his threat of a 32 percent levy on Indonesian goods, saying in a letter to the country's leadership that this level would take effect August 1. It remains unclear what Indonesia's new tariff level will be under the latest deal with Washington, Indonesia's former vice minister for foreign affairs Dino Patti Djalal told a Foreign Policy event Tuesday. But he added that insiders from the Indonesian government indicated they were happy with the new deal, adding that he expected further information in the coming hours. Trump in April imposed a 10 percent tariff on almost all trading partners, while announcing plans to eventually hike this level for dozens of economies, including the European Union and Indonesia. But days before the steeper duties were due to take effect, he pushed the dead line back from July 9 to August 1.


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
West Bank seeing largest displacement since 1967: UN
The UN warned yesterday that mass displacement in the West Bank had hit levels not seen since the start of Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territory nearly 60 years ago. The United Nations said an Israeli military operation launched in the north of the occupied territory in January had displaced tens of thousands of people, raising concerns about possible "ethnic cleansing". The military operation "has been the longest since ... the second Intifada", in the early 2000s, said Juliette Touma, spokeswoman for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees. "It is impacting several refugee camps in the area, and it is causing the largest population displacement of the Palestinians in the West Bank since 1967," she told reporters in Geneva via video from Jordan, referring to the sixday Arab-Israeli war that led to Israel's occupation of the West Bank. The UN rights office meanwhile warned that mass forced displacement by an occupation force could amount to "ethnic cleansing". Since Israel's military launched its operation "Iron Wall" in the north of the West Bank in January, rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan said that "about 30,000 Palestinians remain forcibly displaced". Israeli security forces had during the same period issued demolition orders for about 1,400homes in the northern West Bank,he said, describing the figures as"alarming". He pointed out that Israelidemolitions had displaced 2,907Palestinians across the West Banksince October 2023. Another 2,400 Palestinians --nearly half of them children --had been displaced as a result ofIsraeli settler actions, he added,lamenting that the combined result was the "emptying large partsof the West Bank of Palestinians". "Permanently displacing thecivilian population within occupied territory amounts to unlawful transfer," Kheetan said,stressing that depending on thecircumstances this could be "tantamount to ethnic cleansing" andcould "amount to a crime againsthumanity". Kheetan said 757 attacks by Israeli settlers had been recordedin the West Bank during the firsthalf of the year, a 13% increase onthe same period in 2024. The attacks injured 96 Palestinians in the occupied territoryin June alone, he told reporters,stressing that this was the highestmonthly injury toll of Palestiniansfrom settler attacks, "in over twodecades". Violence in the West Bank hassurged since the October 2023attack on Israel by Palestinianmilitant group Hamas triggeredwar in the Gaza Strip. Since then, at least 964 Palestinians have been killed in the occupied West Bank, including EastJerusalem, according to the UN. During that same period, 53Israelis have been killed in reported attacks by Palestinians orin armed clashes -- 35 of them inthe West Bank and 18 in Israel.