Trump says Putin told him in phone call he will respond to Ukraine's weekend drone attacks
By
Kevin Liptak
, CNN
President Donald Trump said he spoke by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, but that the conversation would not yield an immediate end to the war in Ukraine.
Photo:
Jacquelyn Martin/AP/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool/AFP/Getty Images via CNN Newsource
Russian President Vladimir Putin told President Donald Trump in a phone call Wednesday that he was obligated to respond to Ukraine's weekend drone attack, Trump said, setting up a potential escalation in the conflict just as the US president hopes to broker an end to the war.
The leaders' conversation was their second time speaking in a matter of weeks. Trump, who announced the call afterward in a post on Truth Social, made no mention of applying pressure on the Russian leader to agree to a ceasefire, or to calibrate his reprisal for Ukraine's audacious drone attack on Russian airfields over the weekend.
Instead, Trump acknowledged the 75-minute conversation would not yield an immediate end to the war in Ukraine.
"We discussed the attack on Russia's docked airplanes, by Ukraine, and also various other attacks that have been taking place by both sides," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. "It was a good conversation, but not a conversation that will lead to immediate Peace."
"President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields," he went on.
Trump's matter-of-fact description of the call offered little evidence of advancement in his attempts to end the war. The president said last week he would be able to determine within two weeks whether Putin was serious about negotiating a ceasefire but has said little about how he would make that assessment. Meanwhile, there's been increasing pressure on Trump to levy additional sanctions against Russia, which he has so far resisted.
Russian and Ukrainian officials met earlier this week in Istanbul for direct talks on ending the war, but both sides emerged without budging from their positions. Trump has taken credit for bringing the two sides together for face-to-face discussions.
Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov said Putin briefed Trump on the latest round of talks on Wednesday.
"As was emphasized, Ukraine tried to disrupt these negotiations by carrying out, on the direct orders of the Kyiv regime, targeted attacks on purely civilian targets, on the peaceful population," Ushakov said without specifying what attacks.
"The leaders agreed to continue further contacts on the Ukrainian issue, including at the highest level and at other levels and through other channels," Ushakov said.
Neither Trump nor the White House have publicly reacted to the weekend drone attacks beyond saying Ukrainian officials hadn't informed them of the planned assault ahead of time. Previously, Trump had lashed out at Putin after Russian aerial assaults on Ukrainian cities.
New footage released Wednesday showed in stunning detail the surgical precession with which the Ukrainians struck their targets, damaging or destroying military aircraft that Moscow has been using to terrorize Ukrainian civilians with near daily aerial attacks.
The video, released by the SBU, Ukraine's security agency, shows drones approaching dozens of planes of different types across several airfields as aircraft burn and explode around them.
Ukrainian military officials said 41 Russian aircraft were hit, including strategic bombers and surveillance planes, with some destroyed and others damaged.
The call came the same day US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was meeting in Washington with Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine's presidential office, to discuss the US posture amid the ongoing war.
Rubio was expected to tell Yermak that the Ukrainian position - which the US sees as showing flexibility and a desire to get a ceasefire - was useful, a senior administration official said. But the secretary of state also planned to tell the Ukrainian official that dragging the US back into a Biden-era policy of unlimited military support for Ukraine won't happen, the official said.
Yermak posted on social media after meeting with Rubio that they discussed the "urgent need to strengthen support for Ukraine's air defense."
Ukraine's drone strikes deep inside Russia created a dramatic backdrop for the Washington meetings. The Trump administration has not moved to warn Ukraine against such attacks, US officials said, despite a belief that the strike increases the risk level.
"People have to understand in the national security space: when you attack an opponent's part of their national survival system, which is their triad, the nuclear triad, that means your risk level goes up because you don't know what the other side is going to do. You're not sure," Keith Kellogg, special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, said during a Fox interview on Tuesday.
In his readout of the Wednesday call, Trump also said he discussed Iran with Putin as he works to complete a nuclear agreement with Tehran.
"We also discussed Iran, and the fact that time is running out on Iran's decision pertaining to nuclear weapons, which must be made quickly!" he wrote. "I stated to President Putin that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon and, on this, I believe that we were in agreement."
He said Putin would likely join discussions with Iran.
"President Putin suggested that he will participate in the discussions with Iran and that he could, perhaps, be helpful in getting this brought to a rapid conclusion. It is my opinion that Iran has been slowwalking their decision on this very important matter, and we will need a definitive answer in a very short period of time!" Trump wrote.
Ushakov said the two leaders discussed the negotiations on the Iranian nuclear program, with Trump saying assistance from Russia "may be needed."
-
CNN
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

1News
3 hours ago
- 1News
Musk threatens to withdraw Dragon spacecraft, a key link for NASA
As US President Donald Trump and Elon Musk argued on social media today, the world's richest man threatened to decommission a space capsule used to take astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. After Trump threatened to cut government contracts given to Musk's SpaceX rocket company and his Starlink internet satellite services, Musk responded via X that SpaceX "will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately'. It's unclear how serious Musk's threat was. But the capsule, developed with the help of government contracts, is an important part of keeping the space station running. NASA also relied heavily on SpaceX for other programmes including launching science missions and, later this decade, returning astronauts to the surface of the moon. The Dragon capsule SpaceX is the only US company capable right now of transporting crews to and from the space station, using its four-person Dragon capsules. ADVERTISEMENT Boeing's Starliner capsule has flown astronauts only once; last year's test flight went so badly that the two NASA astronauts had to hitch a ride back to Earth via SpaceX in March, more than nine months after launching last June. Starliner remains grounded as NASA decides whether to go with another test flight with cargo, rather than a crew. SpaceX also uses a Dragon capsule for its own privately run missions. The next one of those is due to fly next week on a trip chartered by Axiom Space, a Houston company. Cargo versions of the Dragon capsule are also used to ferry food and other supplies to the orbiting lab. NASA's other option: Russia Russia's Soyuz capsules are the only other means of getting crews to the space station right now. The Soyuz capsules hold three people at a time. For now, each Soyuz launch carries two Russians and one NASA astronaut, and each SpaceX launch has one Russian on board under a barter system. That way, in an emergency requiring a capsule to return, there is always someone from the US and Russian on board. ADVERTISEMENT With its first crew launch for NASA in 2020 — the first orbital flight of a crew by a private company — SpaceX enabled NASA to reduce its reliance on Russia for crew transport. The Russian flights had been costing the US tens of millions of dollars per seat, for years. NASA has also used Russian spacecraft for cargo, along with US contractor Northrup Grumman. SpaceX's other government launches The company has used its rockets to launch several science missions for NASA as well as military equipment. Last year, SpaceX also won a NASA contract to help bring the space station out of orbit when it is no longer usable. SpaceX's Starship mega rocket is what NASA has picked to get astronauts from lunar orbit to the surface of the moon, at least for the first two landing missions. Starship made its ninth test flight last week from Texas, but tumbled out of control and broke apart.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Elon Musk and Donald Trump in fiery war of words
America's biggest bromance has broken up. Elon Musk and US president Donald Trump are stuck in a fiery war of words that kicked off on social media. Musk called for the president's impeachment and alleged Trump's name appears in unreleased files related to late billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. It is a feud sparked by Donald Trump's so-called "big beautiful" tax and spending bill which Elon Musk has spoken out against since leaving the White House last week. US correspondent Todd Zwillich spoke to Lisa Owen.


Scoop
7 hours ago
- Scoop
Trump And Republicans Want Taxpayers To Fund Their Pet Project: Private Schools
When is a 'school choice' proposal not really about school choice? In the budget bill that Republicans rushed through the House on May 12, 2025, school choice is just a cover-up for tax relief for the rich. President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans are trying to ram through a major taxpayer-funded private school programme, according to education policy experts who appeared on an online 'town hall' on May 22, 2025, which was about a nationwide school voucher scheme that's buried deep in the text of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. On the surface, the bill promises to provide $5 billion annually in school voucher funds for parents to apply for and use to pay for private-school tuition, homeschooling, and for-profit online learning. 'Supporters [of school choice have] hailed the proposal as 'historic' and a 'huge win,'' reported Dana Goldstein of the New York Times in May. But that topline description of what the measure proposes is deceptive and hides what amounts to 'a tax shelter that serves to benefit only the most wealthy Americans,' said David R. Schuler in the town hall. Schuler is the executive director of AASA, the School Superintendents Association. Although Goldstein framed the measure in pure political terms as a way for Republicans to push through a bill Democrats oppose, it's not really about party politics, and opposition to the proposal is bipartisan. And like Goldstein reported, while it's true that the rhetoric of school choice is at the center of the fight over this measure, 'This is not about giving families or parents choice,' said Jacqueline Rodriguez, CEO of the National Center for Learning Disabilities, another speaker at the town hall. 'This is about giving schools choice to discriminate against kids.' Yet there is a reason for this deception, and it's got everything to do with what's at the core of the Trump administration's MAGA agenda. An 'Unprecedented Giveaway' to the Wealthiest It's telling that the measure, originally called the Educational Choice for Children Act of 2025 when it was introduced and in committee, is now called 'tax credit for contributions of individuals to scholarship granting organisations' and appears in the part of the bill devoted to 'Additional Tax Relief for American Families and Workers,' rather than grouped with other education proposals in the Committee on Education and Workforce section. But the subterfuge goes much deeper than the name, according to the speakers at the town hall, including Amy Hanauer, executive director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), who called the measure 'the quintessential definition of a tax shelter.' The tax advantages are derived from how the programme is funded. As Hanauer explained, school vouchers would be funded by a tax credit system and a federally mandated network of scholarship granting organisations (SGOs), one in every state. Each SGO is its own nonprofit that can grant vouchers to parents who apply. When private individuals and corporations donate to an SGO, they would, in turn, receive a tax credit from the federal government that's dollar-for-dollar equal to the amount of the donation—limited to 10 percent of a donor's income. The first advantage is that the reward for donating comes in the form of a credit rather than a tax deduction, which, as the Tax Policy Center pointed out, increases the value of the tax advantage because a credit is 'subtracted directly from a person's tax liability,' while the value of a deduction 'depends on the taxpayer's marginal tax rate, which rises with income.' Those specifics make the voucher program a more attractive system for giving than other charitable causes. Also, 'no other charity, not pediatric cancer research, not disaster relief, not assisting disabled veterans, nothing gets this level of tax incentive,' said Hanauer, 'no other charity has ever gotten this kind of one-for-one payback.' There's a ripple effect of savings on state tax, too. 'Because state income taxes largely piggyback on federal law,' Hanauer said, 'the bill would also reduce [a donor's] state tax.' Even more lucrative to donors is a provision in the proposal to allow stock donations and avoid capital gains taxes on what they earned from the stock. In other words, by donating to an SGO, wealthy donors can profit from their 'donations,' and the wealthier the donor, the higher the potential profit. 'Elon Musk would have cut his capital gains tax bill by $690 million alone, him personally, if this [provision] had been in effect in 2021,' Hanauer said. It's an 'unprecedented giveaway that would enrich the wealthiest people, particularly those whose incomes come from stock,' she said. Whose Choice? Perhaps all these tax-related shenanigans could be justified as a federal programme for 'kids and families,' but that's not really true of this proposal. As Rodrigues explained, parents who want to use voucher money to pull their children out of the public system and send them to a private school will find that these schools don't have to accept them. She and other speakers in the town hall pointed out that private schools, regardless of whether or not they get public funding through a voucher programme, will continue to have the freedom to screen out applicants who struggle with academic work, who aren't fluent in English, who have histories of discipline problems, or who have learning disabilities. Although the bill includes language about holding voucher receiving schools accountable for ensuring federally required supports—IEPs or Individual Education Programs—for students with learning disabilities, there's no enforcement mechanism included, according to Rodriques, and the bill 'doesn't enforce or ensure any dispute resolution' when a parent doesn't agree with how a school is treating their child. Another speaker at the town hall, Amanda Tyler, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, noted that because the vast majority of private schools are religious, the voucher programme would fund religion with tax dollars. Religious private schools 'cannot separate their faith from their teaching, and nor should they,' she said, but that condition creates problems for kids and families when practicing religious faith means excluding LGBTQ+ families and students or barring enrollment of families who do not share the school's religious faith. Passage of a federal voucher program would be especially detrimental to rural families, said Ginny Mott, vice president of the Maine State Parent Teacher Association, who also spoke at the meeting. There are very few private schools in rural parts of her state, she pointed out. 'For rural working families, limited availability, distance, lack of transportation, and cost of tuition beyond what the voucher system will cover means for many families there is no realistic choice,' she said. While a voucher programme with limited choice would provide benefits for a very select group of families, it would inflict serious harm on the public schools that 83 percent of families send their children to, according to 2024 figures provided by Pew Research Center. 'Rural communities, children, and families will be especially hard hit by a voucher school system which would divert funding away from their public schools,' Mott said. '[I]mposing a new national voucher program would simply drain… resources away from our existing schools.' Indeed, public schools everywhere would feel the impact, according to ITEP's Hanauer, as public coffers that pay for education and other services lose funds to tax credits taken by donors. 'We estimate that this bill would reduce federal tax revenue by $23.2 billion over the next decade,' she said. States would take a revenue hit too, losing $459 million to voucher tax credits, according to Hanauer. AASA's Schuler also noted that '[private schools] can also kick kids out whenever they want.' And when they do, the voucher funds the school collected don't follow the child back to the public school. The Worst Possible Scenario for Our Children Given all the negatives in the bill, numerous speakers questioned why it was pushed through. True, President Trump and his Secretary of Education Linda McMahon are openly hostile to public schools, and many in the Republican party have long campaigned to privatize education by expanding school voucher programs and enticing parents to pursue education options other than their local public schools. Town hall participant Denise Forte, President and CEO of the Education Trust, echoed this theme when she called the voucher proposal 'part of the great American heist on public education.' But politics alone doesn't explain the design of this particular bill. Kentucky parent Maria Clark, who also spoke at the town hall, described her state's rejection of a school voucher referendum in the 2024 November election, noting that 'voters in all 120 counties' voted against vouchers in a state where Trump won the popular vote in 118 of those counties. Voters also gave thumbs down to vouchers in Nebraska in November 2024, another conservative state where Trump won overwhelmingly. 'Why is Congress,' Clark asked, 'specifically a Republican Congress, voting to force a voucher program on our state?' Hanauer likely put her finger on the primary motivation when she said the bill 'is something that's as much about increasing inequality as it is about undermining our public schools.' Public education, after all, has long been an engine for equality, so any effort to undermine it is an effort to undo the public system's equalizing force. Such an outcome makes sense in the minds of Trump and his MAGA followers, who see the world in terms of a 'zero-sum' struggle with winners and losers. In this worldview, proposing a federal voucher system with an accompanying budget to fund it is not enough. The program must come at the expense of the public school system. It's not enough that beneficiaries of this bill—primarily well-to-do, white Christian parents who already can afford to send their children to private schools—get a boost; the rest of us who remain in the public system must make do with less. That goal might sound fine to Trump and his supporters, but it's a governing philosophy that will result in the worst possible outcomes for our children. Author Bio: This article was produced by Our Schools. Jeff Bryant is a writing fellow and chief correspondent for Our Schools. He is a communications consultant, freelance writer, advocacy journalist, and director of the Education Opportunity Network, a strategy and messaging center for progressive education policy. His award-winning commentary and reporting routinely appear in prominent online news outlets, and he speaks frequently at national events about public education policy. Follow him on Bluesky @jeffbinnc.