logo
Trump says no ground troops, but maybe air support, to back Ukraine peace deal

Trump says no ground troops, but maybe air support, to back Ukraine peace deal

CNA9 hours ago
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday (Aug 19) he ruled out putting US troops on the ground in Ukraine but said the United States might provide air support as part of a deal to end Russia's war in the country.
A day after Trump pledged security guarantees to help end the war at an extraordinary White House summit, the path to peace remained uncertain as the US and allies prepared to work out what military support for Ukraine might include.
"When it comes to security, (Europeans) are willing to put people on the ground. We're willing to help them with things, especially, probably, ... by air," Trump said in an interview with the Fox News "Fox & Friends" program. He did not elaborate.
Following Monday's meeting, Russia launched its biggest air assault in more than a month on Ukraine, and Trump conceded that Russian President Vladimir Putin might not want to make a deal after all. "We're going to find out about President Putin in the next couple of weeks," he said.
The nature of US military aid for Ukraine under a peace deal was unclear. Air support could take many forms such as missile defense systems or fighter jets enforcing a no-fly zone.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed US air support was "an option and a possibility," but, like Trump, did not provide any details.
"The President has definitively stated US boots will not be on the ground in Ukraine, but we can certainly help in the coordination and perhaps provide other means of security guarantees to our European allies," she said at a news briefing.
Analysts say more than 1 million people have been killed or wounded in the conflict, which began with Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.
TRILATERAL MEETING
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy hailed the White House talks as a "major step forward" toward ending Europe's deadliest conflict in 80 years and setting up a trilateral meeting with Putin and Trump.
Zelenskyy's warm rapport with Trump contrasted sharply with their disastrous Oval Office meeting in February. Trump discussed Budapest as a venue for a summit involving Zelenskyy and Putin with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Tuesday, a White House official said.
Istanbul, where delegations for the two countries have met previously, has also been mentioned, a senior administration official said. Hungary is one of few European places that Putin could visit without fear of arrest on International Criminal Court charges since Orban maintains close ties with the Russian leader.
It was unclear whether Ukraine would accept Hungary as a venue. Neutral Switzerland also said it would be ready to host Putin for any peace talks.
Russia launched 270 drones and 10 missiles in an overnight attack on Ukraine, the Ukrainian air force said. The energy ministry said the strikes caused big fires at energy facilities in the central Poltava region, home to Ukraine's only oil refinery.
However, Russia also returned the bodies of 1,000 dead Ukrainian soldiers on Tuesday, Ukrainian officials said. Moscow received 19 bodies of its own soldiers in return, according to the state-run TASS news agency. Ukraine's allies held talks in the so-called Coalition of the Willing format on Tuesday, discussing additional sanctions to crank up the pressure on Russia.
The grouping has also agreed that planning teams will meet US counterparts in the coming days to develop security guarantees for Ukraine.
NATO military leaders were expected to meet on Wednesday to discuss Ukraine, with US General Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, expected to attend virtually, officials told Reuters.
Zelenskyy was joined at the summit by the leaders of Germany, France and Britain. His warm rapport with Trump contrasted sharply with their disastrous Oval Office meeting in February.
But the path to peace remains uncertain and Zelenskyy may be forced to make painful compromises. Analysts say more than a million people have been killed or wounded since Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.
"TIPTOEING AROUND TRUMP"
Although Trump said on Monday that Putin asked for a bilateral meeting with Zelenskyy, the Kremlin has made no explicit commitment. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday that Moscow did not reject any format for Ukraine peace talks but any leaders' meeting "must be prepared with utmost thoroughness".
Putin has said Russia will not tolerate troops from the NATO alliance in Ukraine. He has also shown no sign of backing down from demands for territory, including land not under Russia's military control, following his summit with Trump on Friday in Alaska.
Neil Melvin, a director at the International Security at the Royal United Services Institute think-tank, said Russia could drag out the war while trying to deflect US pressure with a protracted peace negotiation.
Melvin said both Ukraine and its European allies on one side and Russia on another were striving "not to present themselves to Trump as the obstacle to his peace process", Melvin said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US budget deficit forecast US$1 trillion higher over next decade, watchdog says
US budget deficit forecast US$1 trillion higher over next decade, watchdog says

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

US budget deficit forecast US$1 trillion higher over next decade, watchdog says

[WASHINGTON] US federal budget deficits will be nearly US$1 trillion higher over the next decade than projected in January by the Congressional Budget Office as a result of tax and spending legislation and tariffs, a budget watchdog said on Wednesday (Aug 20). The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget's (CRFB) latest forecasts show a cumulative deficit of US$22.7 trillion from fiscal 2026 to 2035, compared to the CBO's January forecast of US$21.8 trillion, which was based on laws and policies that were in place before US President Donald Trump took office in January. The CBO, Congress' non-partisan budget referee agency, said on Monday that it will not issue its customary mid-year budget update this year and will issue its next 10-year budget and economic outlook in early 2026, offering no explanation for the move. The CRFB, which advocates for deficit reduction, projected a US$1.7 trillion deficit in fiscal 2025 or 5.6 per cent of GDP, down slightly from US$1.83 trillion in 2024 and the CBO's 2025 projection of US$1.87 trillion in January. But it said that deficits steadily rise over the decade, reaching US$2.6 trillion or 5.9 per cent of GDP by 2035. The new CRFB estimates include the budget effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act tax and spending bill, as well as Trump's tariffs that are currently in place. But like CBO, they do not include the dynamic economic effects on growth from these changes, a forecasting rule that has drawn criticism from the Trump administration. The group projects the tax cut and spending bill to increase deficits, including interest, by US$4.6 trillion to 2035, adding another year to the CBO's US$4.1 trillion cost estimate to 2034. But CRFB estimates that this will be offset by US$3.4 trillion worth of extra import duty revenue over the next decade due to Trump's new tariffs that are currently in place. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up New rules restricting eligibility for health insurance subsidies will reduce deficits by another US$100 billion to 2035, and Congress' rescission of prior funding to foreign aid, public broadcasting and other programmes would save another US$100 billion if sustained over a decade, CRFB said. Net interest payments on the national debt will total US$14 trillion over the decade, CRFB projected, rising from nearly US$1 trillion or 3.2 per cent of GDP in 2025 to US$1.8 trillion or 4.1 per cent of GDP in 2035. Tariff challenge The forecasts are based on legislative and tariff changes since January but keep CBO's economic forecasts unchanged. Under an alternative scenario forecast by CRFB, the budget picture looks far worse, boosting deficits nearly US$7 trillion higher than the CBO baseline. This scenario would see a significant part of Trump's tariffs cancelled if the Court of International Trade's ruling against many of Trump's new tariffs is upheld, cutting US$2.4 trillion from revenues over a decade. The alternative scenario also assumes extension of a number of temporary tax cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, including tax breaks on overtime, tips, Social Security income and car loan interest, higher state and local tax deduction allowances and full expensing of factory investments, adding US$1.7 trillion to deficits over 10 years. CRFB's alternative scenario also ditches the CBO's projection of a decline in 10-year US Treasury yields over the decade to about 3.8 per cent. If that interest rate stays at the current level of about 4.3 per cent, interest costs would grow by about US$1.6 trillion through 2035, CRFB said. The total 2035 debt-to-GDP ratio would grow from 118 per cent in the CBO January baseline to 120 per cent under the CRFB's projected baseline scenario and 134 per cent under the CRFB's alternative scenario. REUTERS

Russian foreign minister praises Trump, criticises Europeans over approach to Ukraine peace push, World News
Russian foreign minister praises Trump, criticises Europeans over approach to Ukraine peace push, World News

AsiaOne

time3 hours ago

  • AsiaOne

Russian foreign minister praises Trump, criticises Europeans over approach to Ukraine peace push, World News

MOSCOW — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday (Aug 19) that it was clear at Friday's US-Russia Alaska summit that US President Donald Trump and his team sincerely wanted to achieve a long-term and sustainable peace in Ukraine. Lavrov said the atmosphere at the Putin-Trump summit was "very good." "It was clear that the head of the United States and his team, firstly, sincerely want to achieve a result that will be long-term, sustainable, reliable," Lavrov told the Rossiya 24 state television channel. Lavrov contrasted what he said was the constructive US position to that of Europe, some of whose leaders took part in an extraordinary summit at the White House on Monday with Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to discuss Ukraine. Lavrov said "the Europeans had... insisted at every turn only on a cease-fire, and that after that they would continue to supply weapons to Ukraine." [[nid:721542]]

Trump says Putin 'tired' of war, but possible he doesn't want to make a deal, World News
Trump says Putin 'tired' of war, but possible he doesn't want to make a deal, World News

AsiaOne

time5 hours ago

  • AsiaOne

Trump says Putin 'tired' of war, but possible he doesn't want to make a deal, World News

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday (Aug 19) he hoped Vladimir Putin was going to "be good" and move forward toward ending the war in Ukraine, but conceded it was possible the Russian president doesn't want to make a deal. "I don't think it's going to be a problem, to be honest with you. I think Putin is tired of it. I think they're all tired of it, but you never know," Trump said in an interview with the Fox News Fox & Friends programme. Trump spoke the day after hosting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and European leaders at the White House for talks on his peace efforts, a meeting that followed his summit with Putin in Alaska last Friday. "We're going to find out about President Putin in the next couple of weeks... It's possible that he doesn't want to make a deal," Trump said. "I hope President Putin is going to be good, and if he's not, it's going to be a rough situation. And I hope that... President Zelenskiy will do what he has to do. He has to show some flexibility also," he said. Trump has faced sharp criticism from Democrats and others who have warned against placing any trust in Putin. "President Trump must abandon the delusion that Putin is going to engage in good faith to end this conflict," US Representative Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee said in a statement, calling for swift action to put real pressure on Russia. "He must do what is necessary to end this war, not simply on Putin's terms, but in a way that delivers a just and durable peace in Ukraine," Meeks said. On security guarantees for Ukraine that Kyiv and its allies are seeking as part of any peace settlement, Trump said that while Europe was willing to commit troops in some form, the United States would not, although it could provide other assistance. "There'll be some form of security. It can't be Nato," he said. "They're willing to put people on the ground. We're willing to help them with things, especially, probably, if you could talk about by air." Asked what assurances he could give that the US troops would not be on the ground defending Ukraine's border, he said: "You have my assurance. You know, I'm president." Trump said relations between Russia and Europe had been fractured for years, and that was part of the reason the war had gone as long as it had. Trump also told Fox News he thought relations between Putin and Zelenskiy might be "a little bit better" or else he would not have pursued their one-on-one meeting. Trump said he had called Putin after his talks with the European leaders to help set up a one-on-one meeting between Putin and Zelenskiy that would be followed by a trilateral meeting to include himself. The US president said he went into another room to call Putin out of respect for the Russian leader, adding that he had taken the call "very happily" despite the fact that it was 1am local time in Moscow. "I didn't do it in front of them. I thought that would be disrespectful to President Putin. I wouldn't do that because they have not had the warmest relations. And actually, President Putin wouldn't talk to the people from Europe," he said. [[nid:721540]]

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store