logo
Trump: No Business With Putin Until Ukraine War Is 'Settled'

Trump: No Business With Putin Until Ukraine War Is 'Settled'

President Donald Trump has offered the potential to resume business with Russia if they are able to make progress towards ending the war in Ukraine, signaling that renewed economic engagement between the U.S. and Russia could be on the horizon should peace negotiations yield tangible results.
'I noticed he's bringing a lot of business people from Russia, and that's good,' Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One en route to his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. 'I like that because they want to do business, but they're not doing business until we get the war settled.'
The prospect of renewed business discussions comes after years of Russia's near-total estrangement from the global economy following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, as sweeping sanctions and diplomatic pressure from the U.S., Europe, and allied nations have left Moscow largely isolated from major markets and financial systems.
Read More: Why Trump's Summit in Alaska Cannot End Putin's War in Ukraine
But Trump's suggestion that he might ease economic restrictions and resume business with Russia has drawn sharp criticism from European allies, who warn that any premature normalization could undermine the unified Western stance on sanctions and harm Ukraine's position in ongoing negotiations.
Some analysts and Congressional Republicans, including Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Don Bacon of Nebraska, have also warned that such a move risks rewarding Putin's invasion by effectively legitimizing Russia's territorial gains and military aggression.
When asked by TIME in the Oval Office on Thursday whether his peace incentives to Russia might inadvertently reward Putin and what message that could send to other potential aggressors, Trump responded: 'I don't see it as a reward.'
The summit on Friday, which Trump referred to as 'high stakes,' marks the first face-to-face meeting between the two Presidents since 2019, with its outcome closely watched for any sign that the long-standing conflict may finally begin moving toward resolution. The talks will give Putin a chance to pitch his conditions for peace. The Kremlin has expressed its desire for Ukraine to hand over swaths of its territory—particularly areas in the south and east, which Putin's army has failed to fully occupy.
Read More: Zelensky on Trump, Putin, and the Endgame in Ukraine
Trump on Friday suggested he would not negotiate on behalf of Ukraine, particularly over whether to engage in territorial swaps with Russia. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly said he is not willing to cede any territory to Russia, insisting that such a move would 'gift their land to the occupier." European leaders have also warned that giving Russia land could embolden it to invade other countries.
'We are counting on America,' Zelensky said in a social media post on Friday. 'The key thing is that this meeting should open up a real path toward a just peace and a substantive discussion between leaders in a trilateral format—Ukraine, the United States, and the Russian side. It is time to end the war, and the necessary steps must be taken by Russia.'
The summit will also give Putin the chance to appeal to Trump's business interests. Russia's Finance Minister Anton Siluanov and Kirill Dmitriev, a senior economic negotiator and head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, are among those who accompanied Putin to Alaska.
Asked if he would be discussing business opportunities with Russia during the meeting, Trump said: 'If we make progress, I would discuss it, because that's one of the things that they would like; they'd like to get a piece of what I built in terms of the economy.'
Read More: The Secret White House Backchannel That Paved the Way For Trump's Summit With Putin
It's unclear what kind of business deals Trump could use as leverage to resolve the war, but the President has previously threatened 'severe consequences' if Putin doesn't agree to end the conflict, including possible secondary sanctions on countries importing Russian oil and gas.
Trump told reporters that he believes 'something' will come of the summit in Alaska and praised his relationship with Putin, whose invasion of Ukraine has resulted in tens of thousands of civilians killed and millions displaced.
'Look, he's a smart guy. Been doing it for a long time, but so have I. I've been doing it for a long time, and here we are. We're President[s],' Trump said on his way to the summit. 'We get along. There's a good respect level on both sides and I think something's going to come of it.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This week in Trumponomics: Everybody's worried about stocks
This week in Trumponomics: Everybody's worried about stocks

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

This week in Trumponomics: Everybody's worried about stocks

Two contradictory things can happen at the same time. But maybe not indefinitely. Investors are contemplating what seem to be contradictory trends in financial markets and wondering how long they can last. President Trump's tariffs are beginning to cause tremors in the real economy. But the stock market keeps drifting higher, as if boom times are nigh. Does it make sense? Investors must think so, for now, anyway. Buyers keep buying, with the broad S&P 500 (^GSPC) index hanging out near record highs and the narrower Dow (DOW) index near its first record close since last December. Stocks have been on a tear since Trump backed away from steep tariffs in early April and instead pursued a more modest country-by-country approach to trade deals. But all is not well. An Aug. 15 New York Times headline told readers, "The stock market is getting scary." Economist Burton Malkiel pointed out that stock valuations are near the highest levels in 230 years, warning that "there are worrisome signs that investor optimism may have gotten out of hand." It's not just the mainstream press that's worried. Money managers at Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, and Evercore are preparing clients for a possible 10% to 15% drop in stock values, according to Bloomberg. Goldman Sachs sees a "latent risk of unwinds" if anything upsets a fragile "Goldilocks" setup. In an Aug. 14 video for clients, Tom Lee, co-founder of investing firm Fundstrat, highlighted the recent jump in wholesale inflation and said, "yet the stock market barely cared." What seems to be happening is that the stock market is diverging from the real economy. The signs of an economic slowdown include sharply slowing job growth and a surge in wholesale inflation caused largely by all of Trump's new taxes on imports. Consumers expect higher producer costs to push up retail costs in the coming months, pushing overall inflation from 2.7% now to around 4.5%. That's depressing overall consumer not alarming for the stock market and the economy to go in slightly different directions. As Sam Ro points out in his TKer newsletter, the stock market often functions as a "discounting mechanism" assessing future growth and earnings. And some Wall Street analysts think the early 2025 swoon — with the S&P down 21% from late February to early April — represented stocks pricing in the slowdown we're undergoing now. If so, the current run-up might be telling us the economy will do better by the end of the year than the meek 1% GDP growth many economists are forecasting. Economist Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research asked, "Why are stock prices still rising?" in his Aug. 11 newsletter. Then he answered the question, providing four reasons for optimism about stock values. One is the growing likelihood that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates, the normal remedy for a slowing economy. Lower rates make borrowing cheaper and help boost corporate earnings. Investors put nearly 90% odds on a quarter-point rate cut in September, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool. Read more: How jobs, inflation, and the Fed are all related Yardeni also thinks the US economy remains resilient, with strong productivity growth offsetting a slowing pace of job growth. And there's increasing evidence that artificial intelligence and other digital advances are real drivers of earnings growth rather than a passing fad. He forecasts another 55% rise in the S&P by the end of the decade. If there is a near-term correction, it would obviously undermine Trump's claim that a new "Golden Age" has arrived in America. Voters are already skeptical of the Trump economy, with his approval rating on the issue falling from 42% in February to 37% now. His tariffs are unpopular, and worries about the job market are rising. But a stock market correction would hardly be unprecedented, and most investors would simply ride it out. Trying to buy and sell stocks to time market ups and downs is a notoriously bad investing strategy, because markets often move unpredictably. Even the New York Times, while warning of a scary market, said the only thing a typical investor can really do about it is occasionally rebalance assets, which is evergreen advice. So is this: Invest smartly, then find something else to worry about. Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Bluesky and X: @rickjnewman. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Behind the scenes of Trump's historic summit with Putin
Behind the scenes of Trump's historic summit with Putin

The Hill

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Behind the scenes of Trump's historic summit with Putin

JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – When a door swung open to the small room where President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin were holding an historic sit-down meeting, I had barely caught my breath. I had just run from a van about 100 yards away to the building where Trump and Putin were set to hold high stakes talks on the war in Ukraine. White House staff urged us to hurry into the room because Trump and Putin were already inside. Indeed, it was a madhouse as the American and Russian press jockeyed for photos and shouted questions that would go unanswered. 'Thank you very much, everybody,' Trump said, signaling he was ready for the press to leave. I flew aboard Air Force One as part of the group of reporters, known as the traveling press pool, who document the president's movements for those who can't be with him on such trips. The day began around 6 a.m. Friday and ended just after 3 a.m. early Saturday morning with the president essentially making a day trip to the Last Frontier state. I witnessed the carefully choreographed greeting between the two leaders. I was in the room for the frenetic opening moments of their sit-down summit, and I watched as members of the press were stunned to see Trump and Putin walk off stage without taking a single question at what was billed as a joint press conference. The entire trip had an unpredictable pace to it, which can often be the case when part of the travel pool. Long stretches of waiting for a presidential movement are punctuated by rapid developments that force reporters to be at the ready on a moment's notice. I have traveled with Trump several times before, but no trip was as consequential as Friday's summit in Alaska. Witnessing the meeting with Putin first-hand revealed and reinforced certain characteristics about who Trump is as a leader. Trump at his core is a showman, and that was on full display during Friday's summit. Upon exiting Air Force One in Anchorage, I watched as officials unfurled a literal red carpet so that it rolled right up to where Putin would step off his plane. I saw staff put the finishing touches on 'ALASKA 2025' block letters that would serve as the foreground of an initial photo op for Trump and Putin. And my ears rattled as the roar of a B-2 bomber and other military aircraft flew overhead as Trump and Putin stepped onto a riser, part of an elaborate bit of planning from the White House intended to create maximum dramatic effect. The mere act of hosting Putin on U.S. soil was something of a made for TV moment. The coverage was breathless, critics suggested the event's existence was a win for Putin, and European leaders held out hope that Trump could make headway in bringing an end to the fighting that started in 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine. It was notable to watch Putin face questions from U.S. reporters about whether he would stop killing civilians. He reacted with a shrug. There were indications on the ground that Friday's meeting did not go entirely as planned. Trump and Putin rode together in the presidential limousine for the short drive from the tarmac to the meeting site. A U.S. official confirmed to me that no interpreter or other staff were present for the brief trip, and photos and video footage captured Putin laughing in the backseat. A planned one-on-one meeting between Trump and Putin turned into a three-on-three meeting, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff joining Trump for what ended up being a roughly three-hour discussion. While that played out, American reporters and Russian reporters gathered in the same media tent, divided by a rope line to keep the two sides mostly separate. Unless of course you needed a bathroom, then all reporters used a row of port-a-potties that had been set up outside.) Plans for an expanded bilateral meeting with a wider delegation of officials never materialized. Instead, we were rushed into an auditorium for a planned joint press conference right after the summit, somehow ahead of schedule. The press conference turned out to be a 12-minute appearance by the two leaders in which they each gave remarks: First Putin, then Trump, an unusual maneuver considering the U.S. was the host country. Putin used a lot of his time speaking about Russian history and then flattered Trump with comments about how he would not have invaded Ukraine if it were Trump in office in 2022, and not former President Biden. He gave no indication as to why he thought that. And Trump would not answer follow-up questions about why Putin agreed with him on that notion in an interview with Fox News' Sean Hannity that aired after the press conference. Trump only spoke for three minutes, offering few specifics about what, if anything, had been agreed upon at Friday's summit. The abrupt ending to the press conference left many reporters wondering whether Trump was frustrated by the summit. The Hannity interview before departing Alaska only added to those questions. On the way to Alaska, Trump came to the back of the plane to speak to reporters roughly 20 minutes after taking off for the seven hour flight from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. He fielded questions ahead of his summit with Putin about what he was expecting. But the typically talkative Trump was apparently no longer interested in taking questions once he arrived in Alaska. He did not respond to questions shouted by this reporter and others during various photo ops with Putin, nor did he take any questions at what had been billed as a joint press conference with the Russian leader. The president did not speak to the traveling pool during the roughly six-hour return flight to Washington, D.C., though we learned that he did speak with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European allies. Those calls set the stage for a Monday meeting in Washington with Zelensky, and perhaps for a future trilateral meeting involving Trump, Zelensky and Putin. As for where that meeting will take Trump and the traveling press pool, the president has suggested another trip to Alaska could be an option. On Friday, Putin had another idea.

Swalwell hits Trump for no progress in Putin meeting: ‘Art of no deal'
Swalwell hits Trump for no progress in Putin meeting: ‘Art of no deal'

The Hill

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Swalwell hits Trump for no progress in Putin meeting: ‘Art of no deal'

Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) on Friday criticized President Trump for walking away from his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin without a ceasefire agreement. The lawmaker, a vocal critic of the president, suggested that the lack of a deal shows the Trump administration may be 'being soft' on Russia — especially after the threat of increased sanctions has been delayed. 'Being soft on Russia also means that we end up being soft on China, because if China was to move on Taiwan, there's no European ally for a second [that] would consider even jumping in with us after watching us abandon Ukraine,' Swalwell said during a Friday appearance on MSNBC's ' The Weeknight.' He added, 'So today, Donald Trump masterfully demonstrated the art of no deal.' The California Democrat's comments come as Trump has faced pushback for welcoming Putin to Alaska after foregoing the sanctions on Russian trading partners despite continued fighting in Ukraine. Though, he did say Friday that he would walk away from the summit if the Russian leader offered a bad deal and earlier this week threatened ' severe consequences ' in the future if peace talks fail. 'Trump wanted to point out a couple times the business potential that could come out of this. But I don't really understand. What can we get from Russia? What do we need from Russia, like more vodka and caviar at Mar-a-Lago?' Swalwell said. 'They're not big trading partners, even during the best time,' he continued. 'So, it just shows how easily he can be manipulated by them to believe that he's getting something.' The Democrat earlier Friday also roasted the president following Trump's interview with Fox New's Bret Baier on Air Force One en route to Alaska's Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, calling him out for saying he 'would return' to the U.S. if the meeting is 'bad.' 'Dummy Donald still thinks he went to Russia,' the lawmaker wrote on social platform X, in response to a clip. Trump, following the nearly three-hour closed-door meeting with Putin, said the meeting was ' productive ' but offered few other details on the conversation. While the duo held a news conference following the summit, they did not take questions from the press. The president and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky are slated to meet on Monday at the White House. Trump has said it will ultimately be up to Kyiv to solidify a peace deal with leaders in Moscow, including potential land swaps.

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