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Kyiv hails US weapons deal as Moscow dismisses Trump's sanctions threat

Kyiv hails US weapons deal as Moscow dismisses Trump's sanctions threat

The Guardian9 hours ago
Politicians in Kyiv have welcomed Donald Trump's announcement that billions of dollars worth of US military equipment will be sent to Ukraine, while officials in Moscow dismissed his threat of sanctions against Russia as hot air.
In a meeting with the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, at the White House, Trump said the US would send Patriot anti-aircraft batteries and interceptor missiles, paid for by European allies.
He promised that additional Patriot systems would arrive within days, funded by Germany and other Nato partners, which would be a significant step in helping Ukraine to defend itself. Kyiv is believed to have only six functioning Patriot batteries.
The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, expressed gratitude to Trump on Monday evening.
'I am grateful to President Trump for his readiness to support the protection of our people's lives,' Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address.
Zelenskyy also said he had had a 'productive' discussion in Kyiv with Keith Kellogg, Trump's special representative to Ukraine.
He later said he had spoken to Trump and Rutte since the announcement.
Andrii Kovalenko, a member of Ukraine's national security and defence council, earlier summed up the positive response from Zelenskyy's government in a one-word reaction: 'Cool.'
Others acknowledged that Ukraine's relations with Washington had signally improved since Zelenskyy's disastrous meeting with Trump in the Oval Office in February.
But there was also scepticism that the new package – coupled with the threat of sanctions on the Russian economy in 50 days' time – would be enough to persuade Moscow to stop fighting. One former Ukrainian military officer said it was unlikely to make a meaningful impression on the Kremlin, or act as a strong deterrent.
The independent MP Mariana Bezuhla – a prominent critic of Zelenskyy and his top military team – dismissed the announcement as an empty 'game'. 'Trump gave Putin another 50 days to seize Ukraine,' she posted on social media.
Referring to cities in the east of the country, where Russian troops are advancing, she said: 'Well, then, let's see, carte blanche, so to speak. To the Dnipro or Kramatorsk – everything is so appetising.'
Russian officials and pro-war bloggers largely dismissed Trump's threats, portraying them as far less serious than anticipated.
Konstantin Kosachev, a senior Russian lawmaker, wrote on Telegram that the US president's ultimatum amounted to 'hot air', suggesting he could easily walk it back. 'A lot can change in 50 days – on the battlefield and in the mindset of those in power, both in the US and in Nato,' he wrote.
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Yuri Podolyaka, a popular pro-Kremlin military blogger, similarly wrote on Telegram that Trump 'could change his 'opinion' several times in the next 50 days'.
Podolyaka and other commentators pointed to the main Moscow stock index, which gained more than 2.5% after Trump's announcement.
The shift in tone stood in stark contrast to the earlier anxiety in Moscow, where state media had speculated that Trump might announce the delivery of long-range missiles capable of reaching the Russian capital.
Some voices in Moscow, however, lamented that Trump's once-positive relationship with Putin may have fundamentally shifted. 'A new reality on Ukraine began today with Trump's statement,' said Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin commentator.
'As of today, he's pressuring only Russia and supporting Ukraine,' he wrote on Telegram.
In Ukraine, there was frustration that it had taken the Trump administration nearly six months to agree to send substantial military support, at a time when Ukrainian cities were under heavy fire. Russia pounded Kyiv in a seven-hour attack last week, killing two people, and dispatched a record 741 drones and ballistic missiles across the country.
The journalist and blogger Illia Ponomarenko suggested Trump had allowed himself to be deceived in his dealings with Putin.
'How many Ukrainian lives could have been saved if, from the very beginning, Trump had listened to wise and honest people about helping Ukraine, instead of the artful lies of that cannibal Putin on the phone?' he wrote. Rather, Trump had believed he could ''achieve peace' by indulging and encouraging the aggressor's appetite', he said.
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Slovakia blocks EU move to impose new sanctions package on Russia
Slovakia blocks EU move to impose new sanctions package on Russia

The Guardian

time30 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Slovakia blocks EU move to impose new sanctions package on Russia

Update: Date: 2025-07-15T15:45:07.000Z Title: Kaja Kallas Content: EU foreign policy chief says 'ball is in Slovakia's court' after leader Robert Fico blocked 'imbecile' proposal to ban Russian gas imports from 2028 Tom Ambrose (now) and Jakub Krupa (earlier) Tue 15 Jul 2025 17.45 CEST First published on Tue 15 Jul 2025 09.27 CEST From 4.59pm CEST 16:59 EU foreign policy chief is now briefing the media after today's foreign affairs council in Brussels. She begins by talking about Ukraine and Russia: 'Russia's bombing campaign has reached record levels, and we see increasing use of banned chemical weapons by Russia in Ukraine. All this shows that Russia does not want peace.' She then confirms that Slovakia blocked the adoption of the 18th package of sanctions today as she says: 'I'm really sad that we didn't reach this agreement today. I must say that we were really close to reassuring Slovakia. The commission has delivered what they asked for. Now, the ball is in Slovakia's court, and we must get this deal done. It has been already two months. Sanctions are necessary to starve Russia of the means to wage this war, and the European Union will keep rising the cost, so stopping its aggression becomes the only path forward to Moscow.' She adds that she welcomes Trump's announcements last night, but says the EU 'would like to see the US to share the burden'. 'America and Europe are working together, and if we are working together, this can put the pressure on Putin to negotiate seriously. The only way to get Putin to end this war is to force his hand,' she said. 5.45pm CEST 17:45 EU foreign ministers will discuss Russian frozen assets during an informal meeting at the end of August, EU foreign policy chief said on Tuesday after a meeting with the ministers in Brussels. 'It's important that everybody hears everybody's arguments, and then we can also come up with compromises to address these sensitivities', Kallas said. 5.25pm CEST 17:25 Joseph Gedeon Marjorie Taylor Greene has criticized Donald Trump over his new pledge to send 'billions of dollars' worth of weapons to Ukraine, accusing him of breaking a campaign promise by continuing the very aid that Republicans spent years blocking under Joe Biden. 'MAGA did not vote for more weapons to Ukraine,' the Georgia congresswoman, one of Trump's most staunch allies in Washington, wrote on X on Tuesday, referring to the 'Make America great again' moniker adopted by Trump's base of supporters. 'MAGA voted for no more US involvement in foreign wars.' Trump's Oval Office announcement on Monday with the Nato chief, Mark Rutte, represented a pivot from his longstanding position of wanting to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict quickly, and a U-turn on the administration's rhetoric towards European defence more broadly. The president said the sales would include a 'full complement' of weapons, including Patriot missiles. 'We will have some within days,' Trump said. Under the plan, he said European allies would swap existing Patriots for American-made systems and foot the bill by raising defense spending to 5% of GDP. Updated at 5.40pm CEST 5.12pm CEST 17:12 Jakub Krupa I'm handing the blog over to Tom Ambrose who will guide you through the rest of the afternoon. 5.12pm CEST 17:12 Asked what she meant by saying that the US could share more of the burden on helping Ukraine with the new military deliveries, Kallas says: 'Well, if we pay for these weapons, it's our support. it's European support, and we are doing as much as we can to help Ukraine. And therefore the call is that that everybody would do the same. If you promise to give the weapons, but say that somebody else who is going to pay for it is not really given by you, is it?' 5.07pm CEST 17:07 Separately, Kallas also spoke briefly about Georgia – worrying that 'the assault on democracy by the Georgian Dream is growing more severe' and saying that 'Georgia's democratic backsliding will come at cost' – and Moldova, stressing that the country is 'a prime target of Moscow's hybrid war' and warning that anyone attempting to destabilise the country will face EU sanctions. She later returns to Georgia, saying that suspending EU visa-free regime for Georgia could be on the table as the Georgian government needs to 'ensure and uphold the protection of fundamental rights of all Georgian citizens.' She says: 'They have been given a deadline until the end of August to comply with this. Then the question is, how do we then react if these recommendations have not been fulfilled? And as we hear that, for example, seven opposition leaders out of eight have been put in jail, this is not really in accordance with the you know, the first point that I pointed out.' She adds that the EU does not want to hurt Georgian people and take the visa-free movement away from them, but adds 'it is also an issue of credibility for the EU.' Updated at 5.10pm CEST 5.05pm CEST 17:05 Kallas was also asked about Fico's comments (15:56), addressing them in very general terms saying that 'if you go into negotiations or worries you have, [and] your sensitivities are addressed, then it's … important that you don't present any anything on top of it.' She says that further talks on technical level will continue on Wednesday, and suggests it's important to adopt the package to 'put the pressure on Russia,' but acknowledges that it's difficult to navigate the process with 27 member states. She declines to say if she sees Fico's as reasonable. 5.02pm CEST 17:02 On the Middle East, Kallas says there are 'positive signs' in the aftermath of last week's humanitarian deal between the EU and Israel when it comes to Gaza, but 'Israel needs to take more concrete steps to improve the humanitarian situation on the ground.' She added: 'I also presented ministers an inventory of different measures that could be taken in relation to the review done in June. So we had a discussion on this, and these are choices that the member states have to make. We will keep these options on the table and stand ready to act if Israel does not live up to its pledges. The aim is not to punish Israel. The aim is to really improve the situation in Gaza.' 4.59pm CEST 16:59 EU foreign policy chief is now briefing the media after today's foreign affairs council in Brussels. She begins by talking about Ukraine and Russia: 'Russia's bombing campaign has reached record levels, and we see increasing use of banned chemical weapons by Russia in Ukraine. All this shows that Russia does not want peace.' She then confirms that Slovakia blocked the adoption of the 18th package of sanctions today as she says: 'I'm really sad that we didn't reach this agreement today. I must say that we were really close to reassuring Slovakia. The commission has delivered what they asked for. Now, the ball is in Slovakia's court, and we must get this deal done. It has been already two months. Sanctions are necessary to starve Russia of the means to wage this war, and the European Union will keep rising the cost, so stopping its aggression becomes the only path forward to Moscow.' She adds that she welcomes Trump's announcements last night, but says the EU 'would like to see the US to share the burden'. 'America and Europe are working together, and if we are working together, this can put the pressure on Putin to negotiate seriously. The only way to get Putin to end this war is to force his hand,' she said. 3.56pm CEST 15:56 Slovak prime minister Robert Fico has just publicly responded to the earlier Reuters report on the European Commission's reassurances for the country as officials seek to break the deadlock on the 18th package of sanctions against Russia. Making the letter public on Facebook, Fico said the proposal was shared with leaders of other parties and rejected as insufficient, so the country will continue to delay the adoption of the latest round of sanctions on Russia. In the letter, first reported by Reuters (14:08), European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said officials worked on 'an ambitious and comprehensive work plan with Slovakia in recognition of the particular challenges stemming from national circumstances' and commited to 'addressing the specific challenges for Slovakia.' But Fico reiterated his opposition to 'imbecile' proposal to ban Russian gas imports from 2028, but said he was ready to negotiate on further guarantees that would make the proposal work for Slovakia, saying 'the best solution' would be to grant an exception to continue the existing gas delivery contract until its scheduled end in 2034. While the gas proposal is unrelated to the sanctions package, Fico said he was linking the two to leverage Slovakia's position in the talks, as sanctions required unanimity among the member states. In the meantime, the Slovak representative at today's foreign affairs council was told to request that the vote on the sanction package be delayed, he said. Updated at 4.04pm CEST 3.40pm CEST 15:40 Sam Levin In other news, we reported earlier today on a disturbing story of an Irish tourist jailed by the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement for months after overstaying US visit by three days. From there, what should have been a minor incident became a nightmarish ordeal: he was detained by Ice in three different facilities, ultimately spending roughly 100 days behind bars with little understanding of why he was being held – or when he'd get out. 'Nobody is safe from the system if they get pulled into it,' said Thomas, in a recent interview from his home in Ireland, a few months after his release. Thomas asked to be identified by a nickname out of fear of facing further consequences with US immigration authorities. Despite immediately agreeing to deportation when he was first arrested, Thomas remained in Ice detention after Donald Trump took office and dramatically ramped up immigration arrests. Amid increased overcrowding in detention, Thomas was forced to spend part of his time in custody in a federal prison for criminal defendants, even though he was being held on an immigration violation. Thomas was sent back to Ireland in March and was told he was banned from entering the US for 10 years. Thomas's ordeal follows a rise in reports of tourists and visitors with valid visas being detained by Ice, including from Australia, Germany, Canada and the UK. In April, an Irish woman who is a US green card holder was also detained by Ice for 17 days due to a nearly two-decade-old criminal record. The arrests appear to be part of a broader crackdown by the Trump administration, which has pushed to deport students with alleged ties to pro-Palestinian protests; sent detainees to Guantánamo Bay and an El Salvador prison without presenting evidence of criminality; deported people to South Sudan, a war-torn country where the deportees had no ties; and escalated large-scale, militarized raids across the US. Read Thomas's story here: 2.49pm CEST 14:49 Meanwhile, Swedish defence minister Pal Jonson confirmed to Reuters that the country will contribute to efforts to boost arms supplies to Ukraine following US president Donald Trump's decision to supply billions of dollars of weapons. 'We welcome the American decision to make possible increased sanctions against Russia and to pave the way for the delivery of Patriots and other weapon systems to Ukraine,' Jonson said in an emailed comment to Reuters. 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The Daily T: Why has Trump changed his mind on Russia?
The Daily T: Why has Trump changed his mind on Russia?

Telegraph

time41 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The Daily T: Why has Trump changed his mind on Russia?

He was elected in 2024 promising to end the war between Russia and Ukraine within 24 hours, and less than six months ago he halted the flow of military aid to Kyiv after giving President Zelensky a dressing down in the Oval Office. But Donald Trump now seems to have changed his tune on Ukraine. The President has announced that the US will resume the supply of weapons, via Nato, and also threatened 100pc tariffs on Russia if a deal isn't done. He also later told the BBC that he was 'disappointed' in Putin. Camilla and Tim speak to former economic advisor to Donald Trump, Carla Sands, who blames 'weak and flabby militaries throughout Europe' and a 'feckless' Joe Biden for the current situation in Ukraine, and believes Trump will get a deal despite Putin not being an 'honest broker'. Elsewhere, Camilla and Tim speak to Conservative MP James Cleverly, who was making a speech in Central London about countering the rise of Reform, and ask him if he's on manoeuvres for a leadership run.

Trump fumed when Dan Bongino threatened to resign amid Epstein clash: report
Trump fumed when Dan Bongino threatened to resign amid Epstein clash: report

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Trump fumed when Dan Bongino threatened to resign amid Epstein clash: report

President Donald Trump was reportedly furious with Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino after he threatened to resign unless Attorney General Pam Bondi was fired due to the fallout over the Epstein Files release. The drama between senior Trump officials unfolded days after the Justice Department and FBI released a memo that put to rest theories that child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein had kept a 'client list' of high-profile individuals, and speculation over his death in federal prison six years ago. The FBI/DOJ memo has sparked a mini revolt among MAGA supporters who had trusted the administration would deliver new and potentially explosive, secret information in the Epstein investigation, after several officials hinted there was more to the story. Following the memo release, White House officials reportedly confronted Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel over a story leaked to NewsNation that claimed the Justice Department had stopped the FBI from unsealing further evidence related to Epstein. Patel and Bongino denied that they were behind the leak. However, Bongino was so frustrated he offered an ultimatum to the president: either fire Bondi or he would resign. Bongino reportedly did not show up to work Friday as a result of the incident, sources told CNN Monday. The situation 'infuriated' the president, who spent the weekend angry with Bongino, CNN reported. The Independent has asked the White House for comment. After reports of the spat, Trump publicly backed Bondi, and Patel announced he would not step down as FBI director. By Sunday, the president's anger appeared to have dissipated as he told reporters that he had spoken with Bongino, who remains his deputy FBI director. According to CNN, Bongino was back in his office Monday. Many of those expressing disappointment with the Trump administration's handling of the Epstein Files are notable conservative influencers or Republican lawmakers. 'America deserves the truth about Jeffrey Epstein and the rich powerful elites in his circle,' Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene wrote on X Monday. 'If Jeffrey Epstein had over 1,000 victims, there could be thousands of people who could name at least *some* of his accomplices I don't understand why more info isn't being released and am trying to get answers,' Utah Senator Mike Lee wrote on X. Laura Loomer, a close ally to Trump, accused Bondi of 'blowing up' the administration 'by concealing information, spending time on Fox News lying to MAGA base and by releasing contradictory statements.' 'Blondi has been very DAMAGING to the admin and she has damaged public trust in the DOJ. She is hurting President Trump and his staff/advisors,' Loomer said, calling for Trump to fire her. Trump, who was once friendly with Epstein, has tried to tamp down public scrutiny of the Justice Department's memo and speculation around any MAGA infighting. The president expressed momentary outrage that people were still digging into the Epstein story after the memo was released. 'Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?' Trump asked a reporter who questioned him about Epstein during a cabinet meeting last week. 'This guy's been talked about for years. Are people still talking about this guy? This creep? That is unbelievable.' Over the weekend, Trump encouraged people to 'not waste time and energy' on Epstein while trying to portray his administration as a united front. '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,' the president wrote on Truth Social. Charlie Kirk, a conservative influencer and vocal Trump supporter, told his podcast audience Tuesday that he would no longer be talking about the Epstein situation after speaking with the president. Michael Wolff, author of four books on Trump, told The Daily Beast on Tuesday that the president is shaken by the response to the Epstein memo and the fact that people are ruminating on it. 'This is a problem of their own making. And I think that Trump has been determined to ignore the subject of Epstein for years and years and years,' Wolff said. Wolff also claimed that Trump is 'at war' with his Justice Department because they underdelivered any new or shocking claims after hyping up potential findings of the Epstein investigation. For years, Epstein c onspiracy theorists have accused the government of withholding information on Epstein to protect high-profile people. Bongino, a former radio host and one of the biggest Epstein conspiracy boosters in the conservative space, had previously insinuated that there was a 'reason' officials were not releasing the supposed 'client list', before taking up his FBI posting.

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