Trump ‘strongly considering’ new sanctions on Russia to force ceasefire deal
President Donald Trump said Friday that he was “strongly considering” imposing sanctions and tariffs on Russia until a ceasefire and permanent peace deal was reached in its war with Ukraine, even as he defended Russia’s stepped-up attacks on Ukraine after the United States paused aid and intelligence sharing.
Asked in the Oval Office on Friday whether he believed Russian President Vladimir Putin was taking advantage of the situation, which resulted from a tense Oval Office meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine last month, Trump defended Putin’s actions, saying “he’s doing what anybody else would do.”
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“I think he’s hitting him harder than he’s been hitting him,” Trump said. “And I think probably anybody in that position would be doing that right now.”
It was the latest about-face for Trump, coming just hours after threatening sanctions, but also a return to aligning himself with Putin’s narrative of the war. In recent weeks, Trump has falsely accused Ukraine of starting it, even though Ukraine was invaded by Russia, and accused Zelenskyy of being the “dictator” who didn’t want peace.
Trump’s remarks came hours after Russia unleashed a furious bombardment aimed at critical Ukrainian infrastructure overnight on Thursday and Friday. Ukraine’s energy minister, German Galushchenko, said Russian forces launched a “massive missile and drone” assault on power and gas facilities across the country.
In an early morning post announced on his social media site, Truth Social, Trump said he was “strongly considering” imposing what he described as “large scale” sanctions, including on banks, because of the perilous state of the war, now in its fourth year.
“Based on the fact that Russia is absolutely ‘pounding’ Ukraine on the battlefield right now, I am strongly considering large scale Banking Sanctions, Sanctions, and Tariffs on Russia until a Cease Fire and FINAL SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT ON PEACE IS REACHED,” Trump wrote.
Trump did not elaborate on his plan for new sanctions on Russia in the Oval Office briefing on Friday.
Trump and Zelenskyy have spent recent days smoothing over tensions after the explosive Oval Office meeting, which resulted in Zelenskyy leaving the White House without signing a deal that would grant the United States a share of its revenues from mining rare earth metals.
After the meeting, the United States halted military aid to Ukraine, as well as intelligence sharing, to pressure Ukraine to resume negotiations. In his post on Friday, Trump urged Putin and Zelenskyy to “get to the table right now, before it is too late.”
But even as Trump tiptoed into holding Russia accountable as the aggressor in the war, the president continued to align himself with Moscow’s view of what it would take to ultimately broker a peace deal.
In his Oval Office remarks on Friday, Trump said he believed that Putin wanted to end the war and would “be more generous than he has to be.”
Trump also suggested that it was Ukraine that would be more difficult to work with to get a peace deal.
“In terms of getting a final settlement, it may be easier dealing with Russia,” he said, “which is surprising, because they have all the cards, and they’re bombing the hell out of them right now.”
Trump also said he would not provide air defenses to stop Russia’s “pounding” until he knew that Ukraine would “settle.”
“If they don’t want to settle, we’re out of there,” he said, “because we want them to settle.”
Russian officials met last month with top Trump officials in Saudi Arabia, although Russia has not given any public indication that it would accept any truce, ceasefire or end to the war it started three years ago.
But U.S. officials have said Russia has shown openness to continuing discussions. On Thursday Trump said that he believed they would make a deal because “in a certain different way — a different way that only I know, only I know — they have no choice.”
The Biden administration imposed numerous sanctions on Moscow, seeking to cripple the Russian economy and choke off its funding for its invasion, most recently targeting Russia’s energy sector and its “shadow fleet” of oil tankers.
Ever since the United States first imposed sanctions on Russia more than a decade ago, Russia has honed the art of circumventing them. Russian cities are full of Western goods, be they luxury cars or everyday consumer items. And with the help of third countries — most of all China, Turkey and Central Asian states — Russian companies, including airlines, have been able to buy new equipment and service their old parts.
The United States could still try to target Russia’s “shadow fleet” of tankers Russia has been using to deliver oil to its customers. But such a move would also likely increase the price of oil. For any oil sanctions to be fully effective, the United States would need to solicit cooperation from China and India, which have emerged as the top buyers of Russian crude.
U.S. and Ukrainian officials confirmed Thursday that Ukraine would send a delegation to meet with “military representatives of countries that are ready to make greater efforts to reliably guarantee security within the framework of ending this war.”
Zelenskyy said the Ukrainians would insist at next week’s meeting on commitments from Russia to test whether a lasting peace could ultimately be reached. Those demands include Russian pledges not to attack Ukraine’s energy or other civilian infrastructure; a truce for missiles, bombs and long-range drones; and no military operations in the Black Sea. Zelenskyy said the meeting was scheduled for Tuesday, but did not specify who would attend.
“Ukrainians truly want peace, but not at the cost of giving up Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said. “The real question for any negotiations is whether Russia is capable of giving up the war.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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