
Trump, basking in Mideast ceasefire, displays a flare of frustration with Putin
THE HAGUE — Aboard Air Force One over the Atlantic on Tuesday, President Trump turned his attention for a brief moment from the diplomatic victory he had brokered between Israel and Iran to one that has proven far more elusive.
'I'd like to see a deal with Russia,' Trump told reporters before arriving in the Netherlands for a NATO summit and referencing his private conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the war in Ukraine. 'Vladimir called me up. He said, 'Can I help you with Iran?' I said, no, I don't need help with Iran. I need help with you.'
'I hope we're going to be getting a deal done with Russia,' Trump added. 'It's a shame.'
It was a rare expression of frustration from Trump with Putin at a critical time in Moscow's war against Ukraine, and as Ukrainian leaders and their allies in Europe desperately seek assurances from Trump that U.S. assistance for Kyiv will continue.
The president will be at the summit in The Hague through Wednesday, where he is expected to meet with leaders from across Europe, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. 'Now we're going to NATO — we'll get a new set of problems,' Trump said of the meetings. 'We'll solve a new set of problems.'
The European bloc hopes to leverage Trump's jubilation over the outcome of Israel's war with Iran — which saw its nuclear program neutered and much of its military leadership and air defenses eliminated — into a diplomatic success for itself, European officials told The Times. After ordering U.S. precision strikes against three of Iran's main nuclear facilities over the weekend to assist the Israeli campaign, Trump announced a ceasefire in the conflict on Monday that has tentatively held.
'The message will be that deterrence works,' one European official said. The hope, the official added, is that Trump will feel emboldened to take a more aggressive stance toward Russia after succeeding in his strategic gamble in the Middle East.
In The Hague, discussions among NATO and European officials have focused on Russia's timetable for reconstituting its land army, with the most aggressive analyses estimating that Moscow could be in a position to launch another full-scale attempt to take over Ukraine — or a NATO member state — by 2027.
In a text message sent to Trump, screenshots of which he posted to social media, NATO Secretary Gen. Mark Rutte fawned over the president's 'decisive action' to bomb Iran, a decision he called 'truly extraordinary.'
'Donald, you have driven us to a really, really important moment for America and Europe, and the world,' Rutte wrote. 'You will achieve something NO American president in decades could get done.'
Rutte was referencing a new commitment by members of the alliance to spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense, a significant increase that has been a priority for Trump since his first term in office.
The matter is not fully settled, with Spain resisting the new spending commitment. 'There's a problem with Spain, ' Trump told reporters on the plane, 'which is very unfair to the rest of the people.'
But the new funding — 'BIG' money, as Rutte put it — could help appease a president who has repeatedly expressed skepticism of the NATO alliance.
As he spoke with reporters, Trump questioned whether Article 5 of the NATO charter, which states that an attack on one member is an attack on all, in fact requires the United States to come to the defense of its allies.
'There are numerous definitions of Article 5, [but] I'm committed to being their friends,' he added. 'I've become friends with many of those leaders, and I'm committed to helping them.'
Trump has failed thus far to persuade Putin to agree to a ceasefire against Ukraine despite applying pressure to both sides — particularly against Kyiv, which Trump has incorrectly blamed for starting the war.
In the Dnipro region of Ukraine on Tuesday, 160 people were injured and 11 were killed in a ballistic missile strike by Moscow, Zelensky wrote on social media.
'Russia cannot produce ballistic missiles without components from other countries,' Zelensky said. 'Russia cannot manufacture hundreds of other types of weapons without the parts, equipment and expertise that this deranged regime in Moscow does not possess on its own. That is why it is so important to minimize the schemes that connect Russia with its accomplices. There must also be a significant strengthening of sanctions against Russia.'
Assuming a similar strategy to the Europeans, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said in an interview on Sunday that Congress should act to enable Trump with leverage against Putin in upcoming negotiations.
'How does this affect Russia?' Graham responded on NBC's 'Meet the Press,' when asked about the war with Iran. 'I've got 84 co-sponsors for a Russian sanctions bill that is an economic bunker-buster against China, India and Russia for Russia's brutal invasion of Ukraine.'
'I think that bill's going to pass,' he added. 'We're going to give the president a waiver. It will be a tool in Trump's toolbox to bring Putin to the table.'

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


Axios
35 minutes ago
- Axios
Scoop: Trump denies 9 former Biden aides executive privilege
The Trump White House has decided that nine former senior Biden aides won't be protected by executive privilege during their interviews for a congressional probe into Joe Biden 's mental fitness for office. Why it matters: The White House's move means the former Biden aides will have to answer questions about their private conversations with Biden, unless they or Biden try to challenge the decision in court. Republicans have launched four separate investigations into Biden, 82. They're examining whether his declining health affected his abilities in the White House, and allegations that his staff helped cover up his decline. Driving the news: Trump's White House sent a letter Tuesday waiving executive privilege for former adviser Neera Tanden, according to a White House official. The White House told Tanden's lawyers that invoking executive privilege is not "in the national interest" given the "exceptional circumstances," according to a copy of the letter obtained by Axios. Trump has decided to do the same for eight other former top Biden aides the GOP-led House Oversight Committee plans to interview. They include Jill Biden's adviser Anthony Bernal along with Joe Biden's advisers Annie Tomasini, Ashley Williams, Mike Donilon, Anita Dunn, Ron Klain, Bruce Reed and Steve Ricchetti, a person familiar with the matter told Axios. The letter to Tanden cited the probe of Biden's mental and physical decline in office by the House Oversight panel, which began interviewing former Biden aides on Tuesday — starting with Tanden, who was the domestic policy adviser. "Evidence that aides to former President Biden concealed information regarding his fitness to exercise the powers of the President — and may have unconstitutionally exercised those powers themselves to aid in their concealment — implicates both Congress' constitutional and legislative powers," Trump's deputy White House counsel, Gary Lawkowski, wrote in the letter sent to Tanden's lawyers. A Biden spokesperson declined to comment. In a draft of her opening statement, Tanden said she had only "periodic discussions" with Biden after May 2023, but that she had "no experience in the White House that would provide any reason to question his command as president." The big picture: Presidents normally have maintained the right of executive privilege for their predecessors and their advisers as a means of protecting the executive branch — even when previous presidents have been from a different party. "It's highly unusual," Jonathan Shaub, an associate professor at University of Kentucky Law School who has written extensively on executive privilege, told Axios. "The norm as an institutional matter is that a current president will protect executive privilege of previous presidents." There was a recent exception. In late 2021, Biden's White House waived executive privilege for former Trump aides who were being investigated by the select House panel that examined the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol and Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Then-White House counsel Dana Remus wrote that Biden had determined that "an assertion of executive privilege is not in the best interests of the United States." Between the lines: Some of the language in the letters prepared by Trump's team mirrors Remus' justifications. "The letter [to Tanden] is strikingly similar in its stated reasoning to a past Biden refusal to support a claim of executive privilege by then-former President Trump," Mark J. Rozell, dean of George Mason University's school of policy and government and an expert on executive privilege, told Axios. "Could it be more than a little vindictive?" "This might be one of the only times President Trump hasn't tried to ratchet up presidential powers," said Mitchel Sollenberger, a political science professor at University of Michigan-Dearborn who also has written extensively on presidential power and executive privilege.


Business Insider
37 minutes ago
- Business Insider
Stock Market News Review: SPY, QQQ Surge on Israel-Iran Ceasefire, EU Tariff Threat
Israel and Iran have officially agreed to a ceasefire, providing a boost to both the S&P 500 (SPX) and the Nasdaq 100 (NDX). Both countries have begun preparations to open up their respective airspaces as the threat of missiles disappears. Confident Investing Starts Here: Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter 'Both Israel and Iran wanted to stop the War, equally! It was my great honor to Destroy All Nuclear facilities & capability, and then, STOP THE WAR!' said President Trump on Truth Social. While Trump was able to broker a ceasefire, his efforts to pressure the Fed to lower interest rates remain unsuccessful. On Tuesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the central bank is in a good position to maintain its 'wait-and-see' approach before adjusting interest rates. The Fed has declined to lower rates given the risk of a tariff-driven inflation revival during the second half of the year. Meanwhile, consumer sentiment took a step back in June, as the Consumer Confidence Index registered a reading of 93.0 compared to the expectation for 99.8 and falling from 98.4 in May. Furthermore, current and future sentiment toward business and labor market conditions fell as consumers remain worried about the effects of tariffs. On the bright side, the 12-month average inflation expectation dropped to 6.0% from 6.4% in May and 7.0% in April. On the trade front, the European Union is prepared to deliver retaliatory tariff threats to the U.S. in order to secure a better trade deal, reported the Financial Times. Bjoern Seibert, Chief of Staff to the European Commission President, has initiated the process of collecting support to tariff approximately $110 billion of U.S. goods. In addition, the EU may increase tariffs on U.S. technology companies while increasing non-tariff measures on other American companies. 'We're ready to use a variety of options if there is no deal. We can and we will defend our interests,' said German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Finally, a White House official has confirmed that President Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during the NATO Summit in The Hague. Zelensky was unable to meet with Trump during the G7 Summit as a result of his early departure in order to address the Israel-Iran war situation. The S&P 500 closed with a 1.11% gain while the Nasdaq 100


CNN
43 minutes ago
- CNN
Trump Says Ceasefire 'In Effect' After Scolding Iran, Israel - The Source with Kaitlan Collins - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
Trump Says Ceasefire 'In Effect' After Scolding Iran, Israel The Source with Kaitlan Collins 48 mins President Trump brokers a fragile ceasefire deal between Israel and Iran and heads to the Netherlands to attend the annual NATO military alliance summit.