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topicnews · July 16, 2025

Russia does not take care of Trump's theater, says Beamter – National

Russia does not take care of Trump's theater, says Beamter – National


The Kremlin reacted to the warnings of the US President of the US President, Donald Trump, ahead of Russian President Vladimir Putin in front of Ukraine and said that the recent decisions of the US President and the NATO military alliance of Kyiv would be interpreted as a signal for the continuation of the war.

Trump, who is sitting on July 14, in addition to NATO General Secretary Mark Rutte in the Oval Office, announced new weapons for Ukraine and threatened with “biting” secondary petroleums of 100 percent for buyers of Russian exports, unless there is a peace agreement in 50 days.

“The US President's statements are very serious. Some of them are personally addressed to President Putin,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“We certainly need time to analyze what was said in Washington.”

However, Peskov added that it was already clear that decisions in Washington and other NATO capitals “were not perceived as a signal for peace from the Ukrainian side, but as a signal to continue the war”.

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Putin, who spoke to Trump at least six times this year, still has to comment on Trump's statements.

But two other high -ranking Russian officials did not hold back.

Former President Dmitry Medvedev, now the deputy chairman of the Russian security council, said Moscow was not concerned about Trump's “Theater -Ultimatum”, while a high -ranking Russian diplomat, Sergei Ryabkov, suggested that it was unacceptable and senseless to give Ultimatum to Moscow.

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Trump, who said that he wanted to be considered a “peace pier” president, said he wanted to see the end of the war -for whom he said that the United States had spent $ 350 billion -but he was “disappointed” by Putin.

Trump expressly expressed the frustration that Putin's “speech” about peace was often followed by Russian strikes in large Ukrainian cities, and pointed out that Washington Moscow wanted to urge the war by sending more weapons to Ukraine.

“I don't want to say that he is an assassin, but he is a hard guy,” said Trump about Putin, a reference to the former US President Joe Biden, who describes the Russian leader in an interview in 2021 as a “murderer”.


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Russia starts the blocking fire of drones, rockets in Kyiv, while the US gun deliveries resume Ukraine


The Financial Times reported that Trump had encouraged Ukraine privately to improve the strikes deep in the Russian territory, and even to ask the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy if he could meet Moscow if the United States provided long -term weapons.

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Trump told the BBC that he was “not finished” with Putin and that he thought that a peace agreement in Ukraine was on the rise.

In February 2022, Putin ordered Russian troops to Ukraine after eight years in eastern Ukraine between Russian -supported separatists and Ukrainian forces. The United States say that 1.2 million people were injured or killed in the war.

In Moscow, state television programs led with the progress of the Russian troops in Ukraine, of which the Russian armed forces control the fifth and an attack on Russia by Ukrainian drones that violated 18 people.


Kommertant, one of the most respected newspapers in Russia, referred to the headline of the headline of William Shakespeare's “Julius Caesar” to suggest the betrayal:

Putin repeatedly said that he was ready to make peace – but on his conditions – and it makes no sense to discuss a ceasefire until the details of peace would look.

In Washington, an official from the White House said that Trump's intention was to “100 percent tariffs on Russia” and secondary sanctions against other countries that buy oil from Russia if no peace agreement is hit in 50 days.

“We can secondary,” said Trump. “We are probably talking over 100 percent or the like. We can do secondary tariffs without the Senate without the house, but what they tinker could also be very good.”

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Eighty and eighty-to-one of the 100 US senators sponsors a legislative template with which Trump would give the authority to impose 500 percent tariffs in every country that helps Russia.

China, India and Turkey are the largest crude oil buyers from Russia, the second largest oil exporter in the world.