logo
Putin and Trump share presidential limo to Alaska summit venue

Putin and Trump share presidential limo to Alaska summit venue

Russia Today17 hours ago
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin left together for the summit venue in the American leader's limousine after greeting each other on the tarmac at Alaska's Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on Friday.
The two shook hands and walked the red carpet side-by-side before stepping into the vehicle. Putin's own limousine was waiting nearby, suggesting there had been no prior agreement for them to ride together.
Putin entered first after a brief exchange, with Trump following. Footage showed them talking and smiling as the vehicle departed for the venue of their high-stakes talks.
The New York Times called it 'highly unusual' for the leaders of two superpowers – much less 'adversaries' – to ride in the same car together. The men appeared to be conversing without interpreters.
The summit in Alaska will address a broad range of issues, primarily the Ukraine conflict, but also bilateral Russia-US relations and possible joint economic projects, according to the Kremlin.
The Russian delegation includes Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Defense Minister Andrey Belousov, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov, and presidential economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev, who has been a key figure in the Ukraine settlement process.
The US team includes Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, according to White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt.
It is the Russian president's eighth visit to the US and the first in a decade. He previously travelled to America in 2015 to attend the UN General Assembly in New York, during which he held talks with then-US President Barack Obama.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European NATO states to continue arming Ukraine
European NATO states to continue arming Ukraine

Russia Today

timean hour ago

  • Russia Today

European NATO states to continue arming Ukraine

Western European leaders have issued a statement backing US President Donald Trump's diplomatic push to end the Ukraine conflict – while also reaffirming their intention to further arm Kiev and seek to bring it into NATO, the very issues Russia has cited as among the root causes of the conflict. The declaration follows the summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday, where the two discussed steps toward ending the Ukraine conflict. Although no deal was announced, both sides characterized the talks as highly productive. Trump said he would speak with Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky in Washington on Monday. The leaders of France, Germany, Italy, the UK, Poland, Finland, as well as the presidents of the EU Council and European Commission, praised the peace efforts in a statement published on Saturday, but vowed to continue providing military aid to Kiev. 'Our support to Ukraine will continue. We are determined to do more to keep Ukraine strong in order to achieve an end to the fighting,' they said. The statement rejects any notion of a territorial compromise, stressing that it was 'up to Ukraine to make decisions on its territory.' Trump has repeatedly raised the prospect of a 'land swap' between Russia and Ukraine as part of a deal. The European leaders added that they were ready to provide Kiev security guarantees via a so-called 'coalition of the willing' – a France- and UK-led effort to deploy a NATO 'reassurance force' in Ukraine, an initiative that Moscow has staunchly opposed. 'No limitations should be placed on Ukraine's armed forces or on its cooperation with third countries. Russia cannot have a veto against Ukraine's pathway to EU and NATO,' the statement says. Just a day earlier, Trump ruled out Kiev's membership in the US-led military bloc. Security guarantees for Ukraine will not come 'in the form of NATO, because you know there are certain things that aren't going to happen,' he told reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday. Moscow has long insisted that Ukraine must commit to neutrality, stay out of NATO, undergo demilitarization and denazification, and recognize the status of the new Russian regions.

Putin-Trump meeting ‘highly commendable'
Putin-Trump meeting ‘highly commendable'

Russia Today

time2 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Putin-Trump meeting ‘highly commendable'

India has praised Friday's meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart, Donald Trump, in Alaska on Friday, calling their leadership 'highly commendable.' New Delhi, which has called for dialogue and diplomacy from the beginning of the Ukraine conflict, said on Saturday it appreciates the progress made between the two countries in Anchorage. 'India welcomes the summit meeting in Alaska between US President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin of Russia,' the Indian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday. 'Their leadership in the pursuit of peace is highly commendable.' The South Asian nation, which is the second largest importer of Russian crude, was closely following the developments in Anchorage, particularly given that Trump recently imposed an additional 25% tariff on Indian goods due to its purchases of Russian oil. ❗️'Dialogue And Diplomacy': India Welcomes Alaska Summit & Appreciates Progress Made - MEA US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had said on Wednesday that Washington could raise tariffs on India even further if Trump's meeting with Putin in Alaska failed to make progress on Ukraine. 'President Trump is meeting with President Putin, and the Europeans are in the wings carping about how he should do it, what he should do. The Europeans need to join us in these sanctions,' Bessent told Bloomberg on Wednesday. 'The Europeans need to be willing to put on these secondary sanctions.' After the talks with Putin, Trump suggested he may delay the additional 25% tariff, which was due to come into effect on August 27. The US President told Fox News that he would consider the question of secondary tariffs on countries buying Russian oil in 'two or three weeks.' If the levies do end up being imposed, imports from India to the US would face 50% tariffs. New Delhi took note of the positive statements that came from Trump and Putin after their meeting. 'India appreciates the progress made in the Summit,' the Foreign Ministry statement on Saturday added. 'The way forward can only be through dialogue and diplomacy. The world wants to see an early end to the conflict in Ukraine.'

The Alaska summit was a success. The challenge is to make it last
The Alaska summit was a success. The challenge is to make it last

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

The Alaska summit was a success. The challenge is to make it last

Do not expect Western mainstream media, NATO-EU Europe's politicians, or the Zelensky regime and its surrogates to admit it, but there is no doubt that the Alaska summit between the Russian and American presidents was a success. Not a breakthrough either, but clearly also more than an 'it's-good-they're-at-least-talking' event. This was not comparable to the Geneva meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and then US President Joe Biden in 2021, which was doomed to fail due to the Biden administration's hubristic intransigence. Fundamentally, both sides – no, not only one – have scored what Western pundits love to call 'wins': The US has shown the EU-NATO Europeans that it and it alone decides when and how it talks to Russia and with what aims. The European vassals find this hard to grasp because it's an application of genuine sovereignty, something they don't have or want anymore. Russia, for its part, has shown that it can negotiate while the fighting continues and that it is under no legal or moral obligation – or any practical pressure – to stop fighting before negotiations show results it finds satisfying. The fact that we know so little – at this point at least – about the specific, detailed content of the summit talks and their outcomes is, actually, a sign of seriousness. That is how diplomacy worth the name works: calmly, confidentially, and patiently taking the time to achieve a decent, robust result. In that context, US President Donald Trump's explicit refusal to make public what points of disagreement remain and have prevented a breakthrough for now is a very good sign: Clearly, he believes that they can be cleared up in the near future and, thus, deserve discretion. Yet we do have a few hints allowing for some plausible guessing about the summit's vibe: Not surprisingly, both leaders made no secret of their respect and even guarded sympathy for each other. That is – and has always been – a good thing, too. But in and of itself that cannot carry an agreement about Ukraine or a broader policy of normalization (or perhaps even a new détente, if we are all very lucky). For that, both Trump and Putin are too serious about adhering to national interests. More tellingly, immediately after the meeting, Trump used a Fox News interview to state three important things. He confirmed that there was 'much progress,' acknowledged that the Russian president wants peace, and told Zelensky 'to make a deal.' When Putin, at a short press conference, warned Brussels and Kiev not to try to sabotage the talks, Trump did not contradict the Russian leader. The commemorative events accompanying the summit carried more than one message. Publicly honoring the American-Russian (then Soviet) alliance of World War Two obviously implied that the two countries then cooperated intensely across a deep ideological divide, which, today, does not even exist anymore. But arguably, there was a second, subtle message here: Another – if often unjustly 'forgotten' (in the words of historian Rana Mitter) – ally of World War Two was, after all, China. In that sense, Putin's deliberate and repeated invocations of the memory of Washington-Moscow cooperation was also yet another signal that Russia would not be available for any 'reverse Kissinger' fantasies of splitting the Moscow-Beijing partnership. By now, Trump has had phone conversations with Kiev, as well as EU capitals. There, too, we know little. Yet it is interesting to note that nothing we have heard about these conversations indicates another change of mind on Trump's side. For now at least, the American president seems to leave little hope to European bellicists and the regime in Kiev that he will turn against Moscow again. There are reports that Trump may have shifted his position toward that of Russia, preferring talks about peace to the Ukrainian demand to focus on only a ceasefire first. This makes sense, especially since they and the mainstream media aligned with them cannot stop trying to lecture Trump on, in essence, how gullible they consider him. It is to be hoped that the US president has had enough of Zelensky, Bolton, the New York Times and co. telling him publicly that he is a fool about to be duped by the big bad Russians. The adequate punishment for these offensive inanities is to make triple sure their authors find themselves entirely irrelevant. This is the single most important question about the future of what has been successfully begun (or really, publicly continued) at the Alaska summit. Russia has been exceedingly consistent and is giving no sign that it intends to become less predictable. But the West has been fractious and volatile. This is the moment when Washington has to stick to a course of normalization with Moscow regardless of what its European clients and the Ukrainian regime want. Ironically, not listening much to them, if need be, is best for their people as well.

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