The US president spoke to the press following what he said was a “great” phone call with his Russian counterpart
US President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office. © Getty Images US President Donald Trump spoke to reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday following his long-awaited phone call with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin. Here are the key takeaways from what Trump said regarding talks with Putin and Ukraine’s future: Trump described the call with Putin as “great,” adding that he later had constructive talks with Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky. The US president signaled that he could ultimately hold in-person talks with Putin. “The first time we’ll meet in Saudi Arabia, see if we can get something done… We know the Crown Prince [Mohammed bin Salman], and I think it’d be a very good place to meet.”
Read more Trump said the exact date for a summit has not been set, but noted that it could take place in the “not too distant future.” According to the US president, the two leaders could also exchange visits, with Putin coming to the US and Trump visiting Russia. “In fact, we expect that he’ll come here, and I’ll go there,” Trump said. He signaled that Zelensky would “probably” not be present at the potential summit in Saudi Arabia. Trump also noted that he “[hasn’t] committed to go to Ukraine.” The US president said he does not think it is “practical” for Ukraine to join the US-led military bloc, echoing an earlier statement by his secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth. Trump recalled that Ukraine’s NATO membership has long been a red line for Russia.
Read more “I think long before President Putin, they said there’s no way they’d allow that. This has been going on for many, many years. They’ve been saying that for a long time, that Ukraine cannot go into NATO. And I’m okay with that.” Ukraine has little to no chance of regaining the territory it has lost to Russia over the past decade, Trump said. “It certainly would seem to be unlikely. They took a lot of land, and they fought for that land, and they lost a lot of soldiers.” The US president, however, suggested that Kiev could get some of the territory currently controlled by Russia, claiming “some of it will come back.” In 2014, Crimea overwhelmingly voted to join Russia following the Western-backed coup in Kiev. Ukraine still claims the peninsula as its own territory. In autumn of 2022, months after the escalation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporozhye Regions followed suit from Crimea and voted to become part of Russia.
Read more Moscow also controls parts of Ukraine’s Kharkov Region, while Ukraine has a foothold in Russia’s border Kursk Region. Trump has pushed back against the notion that he is “freezing out” Zelensky from the peace process, but hinted that the Ukrainian leader – whose presidential term expired in May 2024 and whom Russia considers “illegitimate” – must hold an election at some point. He also noted that Zelensky wants “guarantees of security,” but would not delve into the subject, suggesting that “we’ll see what that means.” “One thing he was very strong about — he wants, if it [war] ends, he wants it to end.” According to Trump, Russia, Ukraine and the US are now “on the way to getting peace.” “I think President Putin wants peace and President Zelensky wants peace, and I want peace. I just want to see people stop getting killed,” he said.Saudi Arabia as a potential venue for historic summit
No NATO membership for Kiev
Pre-2014 borders ‘unlikely’
Elections for Zelensky
‘We want to end that war’