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Lip reader reveals Putin's pledge to Trump and Don's advice after leaders landed in Alaska for showdown

Lip reader reveals Putin's pledge to Trump and Don's advice after leaders landed in Alaska for showdown

The Irish Sun20 hours ago
A LIP reader has revealed Vladimir Putin's pledge to Donald Trump as the two leaders met in Alaska.
The US President greeted his Russian counterpart on the tarmac at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Air Base on Friday.
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Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet on the tarmac in Alaska
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Trump and Putin spoke as they walked, which microphones couldn't hear
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The pair were polite to each other and said they wanted to end the war, according to one expert
The pair went on to address the world in a brief press conference and negotiate with their teams in private, but they also shared words in front of cameras that couldn't be heard.
That hidden speech can tell us a lot about their pair's relationship and hint at what could be happening behind closed doors.
Forensic lipreader Nicola Hickling has now revealed what the powerful men said when they greeted each other airport.
The world's eyes were on the moment when Putin walked towards Trump to shake hands.
Putin looked relaxed as he walked down a red carpet towards Trump - giving the US leader a thumbs-up before greeting him with a warm handshake.
Trump begins clapping as Putin approaches and the American says: 'Finally,' according to Hickling.
Hickling then said that as the pair shook hands Trump added: 'You made it, fantastic to see you and appreciated."
The pair then appear to begin talking about Ukraine and the bringing the fighting to an end with a ceasefire.
Putin responds in English, saying: 'Thank you — and you."
He also makes a pledge to Trump: "I am here to help you.'
Trump Putin meeting erupts into CHAOS as press bombard Putin with questions
Trump replies: 'I'll help you.'
Pointing towards Trump, Putin says: 'All they need is to ask.'
Trump answers simply: 'Okay.'
Putin continues: 'I will bring it to a rest.'
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Microphones couldn't listen into the pair as they spoke at the airport
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Putin told Trump
Trump responds: 'I hope it does.'
Turning towards the vehicle, Hickling said Trump smiles and says: 'Come on, let's get straight into the vehicle. We need to move forward, both giving it attention. I know this is serious, it's quite long. What a journey it is.'
Trump salutes and says: 'Thank you.'
On the podium, Trump says: 'Thank you. Let's shake hands — it gives a good impression.'
Putin nods in agreement, shakes his hand, and says: 'Thank you.'
The pair then shared a moment alone in Trump's presidential limo - known as The Beast - which drove them to the summit venue.
They were then next seen when they posed for photos in front of the press to record the historic moment.
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Putin shouted at the press when the photocall descended into chaos
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Vlad said to a reporter that they were 'ignorant', according to Hickling
But the photocall descended into chaos when the journalists started shouting at Trump and the tyrant - who doesn't face that sort of opposition in Russia.
Hickling said that Trump noticed Putin wasn't happy with a question or remark made.
The American leans in to his aide, according to the lipreader, and whispers: 'I'm uncomfortable, we need to move them quickly.'
Putin then makes a face after being on the receiving end of the aggressive questioning.
Hickling said the Russian tells a reporter: 'You is ignorant.'
Then, as he cups his hands to his mouth to shout above the chaos, he says again: 'You are ignorant.'
After nearly three hours of talks in Alaska, the US president said the pair "agreed on some big points" they said in a brief press conferece.
There was a lot of flattery between the pair as they spoke in front of the world.
Hickling's analysis of the chumminess between the pair out of range of the microphones suggests that there could possibly be a real relationship between the pair, despite the geopolitical differences.
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Ukraine will be forced to surrender eastern territory & forget about joining Nato under Trump and Putin's peace terms
Ukraine will be forced to surrender eastern territory & forget about joining Nato under Trump and Putin's peace terms

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Ukraine will be forced to surrender eastern territory & forget about joining Nato under Trump and Putin's peace terms

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Putin has laid cunning trap that makes Zelensky's White House visit a minefield… Russian leader knows the peace he wants
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The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Putin has laid cunning trap that makes Zelensky's White House visit a minefield… Russian leader knows the peace he wants

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Jim McDowell: Let's pray Trump's Alaska summit doesn't become a cold war carve up
Jim McDowell: Let's pray Trump's Alaska summit doesn't become a cold war carve up

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

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Jim McDowell: Let's pray Trump's Alaska summit doesn't become a cold war carve up

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Alaska. Photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters. Remember that quote when all the dust has settled — and, hopefully, not the nuclear ash — around the Trump/Putin head-to-head on Friday. However, those words were not uttered by a US delegate to the Alaska summit. In an uncanny twist, they were voiced 80 years ago at another US/Russia rumpus over land... with Britain as the tripartite participant. That took place in Crimea. Remember Crimea? That was the first part of Ukraine Putin annexed before trying to invade the rest of President Volodymyr Zelensky's brave but battered and embattled country. But it was in Crimea, in the Black Sea port of Yalta eight decades ago at the end of the Second World War, that a summit not dissimilar to that in Alaska took place. And what was at stake was not just the survival of one small sovereign state which for over three years has stood toe-to-toe with the might of the Red Army. But the future of Europe. And a Cold War carve-up which was to last for the next 34 years, until the fall of the USSR in 1991, the historical symbol of which was the fall of the Berlin Wall. At that Yalta conference were US President Franklin D Roosevelt, Russian Premier Joseph Stalin and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill — dubbed 'The Big Three' in the press at the time. And in another uncanny twist, another leader who thought he should be there, the Free French forces leader and then provisional President of France, Charles de Gaulle, took it as a slight that he was not invited. Just like President Zelensky on Friday. And there are more similarities. President Donald Trump greets Russia's President Vladimir Putin (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson) Trump, who with his vice-president puppet JD Vance bullied and berated Zelensky at the White House, didn't want him there: because he had already ill-disguised his dislike of the Ukrainian leader. De Gaulle believed Roosevelt harboured a long-standing personal antagonism towards him. And Stalin and the Russians also point-blank objected to de Gaulle being a full participant. Just as Putin did to Zelensky this time around. So a direct European input was denied in Yalta back then. Even though it was Europe, and Germany in particular, which was to be split East and West. Now the European Union and the UK, with PM Keir Starmer and his counterparts limited to phone diplomacy, are left sidelined again. Trump may have promised that he would take their opinions and concerns into consideration. But when was Trump ever concerned about anything, or anybody, other than himself? Ditto Putin. History dictates that Stalin tried to strong-arm the Yanks and Brits into getting what he wanted at Yalta. And he did. It remains to be seen, in retrospect, whether Putin, whose hero is said to be Stalin, managed to do the same in Anchorage: or will succeed at subsequent summits, if they transpire. Meantime, that quote at the top remains as relevant today as it did 80 years ago. The observation was made by James F Byrne, a senior US delegate at Yalta who was later to become the White House Secretary of State. Only this time, it is 'not a question of what Trump would let the Russians do, but what the US can get Putin to do'. It is too soon to make a call on that so soon after Friday. But perhaps it is not too soon to hope that both parties adhere to an old Russian proverb. It is: 'You have two ears, one mouth — listen twice as much as you speak'. As the dust settles on this summit, we can only hope that both so-called world leaders did just that: not just for the future of Ukraine, but for the future of the world.

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