
Trump threatens to sanction both Russia and Ukraine
The US president has said he would act if a peace deal proves impossible, adding that the deadline is in his brain
US President Donald Trump has signaled that Washington could impose sanctions on both Russia and Ukraine if the conflict between the two nations does not come to an end.
Trump has thus far declined to commit to new sanctions on Russia, despite weeks of pressure from European leaders, saying only that he would act when the time felt right - and that moment had not yet come. He has also expressed concern that levying new restrictions could jeopardize peace talks between Moscow and Kiev.
During a meeting at the White House with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Thursday, Trump said he would decide when to act if it became clear that a peace deal could not be reached, noting that "it's in my brain, the deadline."
He suggested he'd be willing to apply restrictions on both Russia and Ukraine, warning that "we'll be very, very, very tough, and it could be on both countries to be honest."
READ MORE: Lavrov and Rubio discuss Ukrainian attacks on Russia
"You know, it takes two to tango," the US president added.
Trump likened the Ukraine conflict to "two children fighting in a park." He also said a sanctions bill moving through the US Senate would be "guided by me," but suggested it might be better to let Russia and Ukraine continue fighting "for a while" before "pulling them apart."
The US president was referring to legislation backed by Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a longtime Russia hawk and Trump ally, that would impose a 500% tariff on countries that buy Russian energy, uranium, and other raw materials - measures aimed chiefly at India and China.
Trump's statement comes as Kiev has ramped up attacks on Russian territory, including a UAV strike on several Russian airbases and recent acts of railway sabotage in Bryansk and Kursk regions, which claimed the lives of seven people and left scores injured.
Moscow has accused Kiev of orchestrating a series of violent incidents aimed at undermining peace talks.
Russia has also claimed that Trump is receiving "filtered" information about the Ukraine conflict from those pushing Washington toward supporting Kiev.
Moscow has repeatedly stressed that it is carrying out strikes on Ukrainian military-linked installations in response to Kiev's increased drone attacks on Russian civilian targets.
In a previously unannounced phone conversation on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin informed his US counterpart that Kiev's recent attacks were intended to derail direct talks with Moscow, the second round of which took place in Istanbul on Monday.
Revealing details of the phone call, which he described as "a good conversation," Trump said that the Russian president "did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields."
(RT.com)

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