Washington, July 8: President Donald Trump delivered some of his sharpest-ever criticism of Vladimir Putin and said the U.S. is resuming deliveries of weapons to Ukraine to counter Russian attacks on civilians.Speaking at Tuesdayâs cabinet meeting, the president said he was ânot happyâ with the Russian president, who he accused of âkilling a lot of peopleâ, including many of his own soldiers to the tune of â7,000 a week.â
Trump said there is âno reasonâ for Russiaâs continued attacks on Ukraine and complained that reaching a ceasefire in the three-year-old war Putin launched has been âtougherâ than expected, while crediting Kyivâs forces for bravery as theyâve battled back Russiaâs invasion.
âI will say the Ukrainians were brave, but we gave them the best equipment ever made … we gave them missiles, the latest and the greatest. They were able to shoot down a lot of things,â he said.
The president also acknowledged that many of his supporters might consider it âunfairâ that the U.S. has spent billions for weapons bound for Ukraine while still crediting Ukrainians for exhibiting valor while using their American-made military supplies against Russia.
âI will say this, the Ukrainians, whether you think it’s unfair that we gave all that money or not, they were very brave, because somebody had to operate that stuff. And a lot of people I know wouldn’t be operating it, they wouldn’t have the courage to do it. So they fought very bravely, but we gave them the best equipment in the world,â he said.
He later added that Putin was ânot treating human beings rightâ and is âkilling too many peopleâ in Ukraine.
âSo we’re sending some defensive weapons to Ukraine, and I’ve approved that,â he said.
Trumpâs comments came less than 24 hours after he said the U.S. would resume weapons shipments to Kyiv during the ongoing Russian aerial attacks, just days after the Pentagon halted shipments to review whether current stockpiles were sufficient for American defense needs.
Trumpâs comments came less than 24 hours after he said the U.S. would resume weapons shipments to Ukraine.
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Trumpâs comments came less than 24 hours after he said the U.S. would resume weapons shipments to Ukraine. (Ukraine’s 127th Separate Brigade)
Speaking during a dinner on Monday with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and members of their respective staffs, Trump was asked if he planned to send more weapons for use by Kyiv.
He replied affirmatively, telling reporters: âWe’re going to send some more weapons.â
âWe have to, they have to be able to defend themselves,â he added.
The abrupt reversal happened after Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky told ABC News that his forces had been counting on promised weapons shipments, including 20,000 anti-drone missiles that the Trump administration diverted to the Middle East. Zelensky said the missiles in question, which had been pledged by the Biden administration, were needed to counter the Shahed drones that Moscow has been raining down on his country.
That diversion, which had been ordered by defense secretary Pete Hegseth, ostensibly to give U.S. and Israeli forces needed arms for a potential war with Iran, was part of a larger pause in aid that Pentagon officials say was prompted by concerns that U.S. stockpiles were getting too low.
