News
Analysis
Trump
Condemns Putin’s Killings in Ukraine, but Doesn’t Make Him Pay a Price
President
Trump says that the Russian president has “gone absolutely CRAZY’’ with attacks
in Ukraine, but has so far refused to join Europe with its newest sanctions.
David E.
Sanger
By David E.
Sanger
David E.
Sanger, who has covered national security for more than four decades, writes
often on the re-emergence of superpower conflict, the subject of his latest
book.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/26/us/politics/trump-putin.html
May 26, 2025
“I don’t know what the hell happened
to Putin,” President Trump told reporters on Sunday afternoon, just before
boarding Air Force One for a short trip from his golf club in New Jersey to
Washington. Hours later, he posted about the Russian leader, saying, “He has
gone absolutely CRAZY.”
Mr. Trump’s
rare criticism of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia came after a weekend of
the largest bombardment of Ukrainian cities over the past three years, mostly
aimed at civilian targets, from residential areas in Kyiv to university
dormitories. The Russian attacks also happened only days after Mr. Trump had
what he described publicly as an “excellent” two-hour phone call with Mr. Putin
that Mr. Trump promised would immediately lead to direct peace negotiations.
Mr. Trump
has long said he enjoys a “good relationship” with Mr. Putin, and it was not
the first time he expressed shock that the Russian president was unleashing
attacks on Ukrainian civilians. A month ago Mr. Trump wrote “Vladimir, STOP” as
a barrage of missiles and drones hit Ukraine, including crowded playgrounds.
But Mr. Trump has never linked the attacks with his own decision, reaffirmed
last week, to refuse to join the Europeans in new financial sanctions on
Russia, or to offer new arms and help to the Ukrainians.
The result
is a strategic void in which Mr. Trump complains about Russia’s continued
killing but so far has been unwilling to make Mr. Putin pay even a modest
price.
The pattern
is a familiar one, several outside experts and former government officials
said. Mr. Trump signals he is pulling back from a conflict he often describes
as Europe’s war, then expresses shock that Mr. Putin responds with a familiar
list of demands that amount to a Ukrainian surrender, followed by accelerating
attacks. Mr. Trump episodically insists he is “absolutely” considering
sanctions, including on Sunday.
Yet each
time when he is forced to make a decision about joining Europe in new economic
penalties, he has pulled back.
“Russia said no cease-fire and Trump
is increasingly washing his hands of it,” Ian Bremmer, the president of Eurasia
Group, a geopolitical consulting firm, wrote on Monday. The result is that
“support for Ukraine continues to recede in importance for the Americans,” he
added. Mr. Bremmer predicted that “what comes next is more fighting — expanded
Russian attacks across Ukraine, fewer restraints on Ukraine targeting inside
Russia.”
The latest
cycle of this odd interaction between the American and Russian leaders happened
just last week. Mr. Trump, who has made no secret of his desire for a summit
meeting soon with Mr. Putin, declared that only he and the Russian leader had
the power and influence to end the war. Yet by the time they were done talking
in their call last week, Mr. Trump had changed his position, saying it was now
up to Ukraine and Russia to end the war in direct negotiations.
In a
subsequent conversation with the leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Finland,
along with the European Commission, Mr. Trump had yet another view: Mr. Putin
thought he was winning the war and would press his advantage. According to
several officials briefed on the conversation, Mr. Trump made it clear he had
no intention on putting pressure, much less harsh economic sanctions, on
Russia.
“He said, essentially, ‘I’m out,’”
said one of the officials, who declined to be named because he was not
authorized to describe the conversation.
Mr. Trump,
the official said, clearly meant that he was disengaging from the conflict in
an echo of Vice President JD Vance’s public statement that “we’re more than
open to walking away.” Mr. Trump also made clear that he was pulling back from
a commitment he made just a few weeks earlier to the leaders of France, Germany
and Britain to join an economic crackdown on Russia if it refused a cease-fire.
Mr. Trump is
usually eager to threaten economic penalties, whether they are tariffs or
sanctions, to influence the decisions of other nations. But he has repeatedly
carved an exception for Russia.
When he
announced his “Liberation Day” sanctions on trading partners around the world
in early April, Russia was largely exempt. After Mr. Trump’s phone call with
Mr. Putin last week, White House officials said that sanctions on Russia had a
poor track record and would not be in U.S. interests.
Mr. Trump’s
withdrawal of pressure on Russia goes beyond economics: He has dismantled the
Justice Department effort to collect evidence of Russian war crimes in Ukraine,
for eventual prosecution in international courts. On the third anniversary of
the war, the United States refused to vote for a United Nations declaration
that identified Russia as the aggressor in the invasion, putting Washington
against the position taken by its NATO allies but on the side of North Korea.
President
Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who has not wanted to repeat the Oval Office
blowup with Mr. Trump in February, has been careful not to criticize Mr. Trump,
as he has veered between pleas to Mr. Putin to stop and refusals to pressure
Russia. But in his own social media post on Monday, Mr. Zelensky pressed for
more economic sanctions, writing that “only a feeling of total impunity can
allow Russia to launch such strikes.”
Mr. Trump
himself has clearly hoped to get beyond the conflict, and just last week was
musing about the possibilities for a normalization of relations with Moscow.
“Russia wants to do large scale TRADE with the United States when this
catastrophic ‘blood bath’ is over, and I agree,” he wrote after talking with
Mr. Putin.
Missing from
Mr. Trump’s zigzags is any explanation of why he has been unable to use his
relationship with Mr. Putin to persuade him to halt the violence, even for a
30-day cease-fire. When he was running for president, Mr. Trump often argued
that Mr. Putin ignored Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Barack Obama during their
presidencies because he didn’t “respect” them. Things would be different when
he got into office, Mr. Trump said, arguing that he would end the war in “24
hours.” (He has since said the comment was sarcastic.)
On Sunday
Mr. Trump's tone was different. “I’m not happy with what Putin is doing. He’s
killing a lot of people,” he said. “I don’t know what the hell happened to
Putin. I’ve known him a long time. Always gotten along with him, but he’s
sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don’t like it at all.”
Later he
wrote that Mr. Putin’s ambitions were to retake all of Ukraine, contradicting
what his chief negotiator, Steve Witkoff, said two months ago in an interview
with Tucker Carlson.
“Why would they want to absorb
Ukraine?” Mr. Witkoff asked Mr. Carlson in late March. “For what purpose,
exactly? They don’t need to absorb Ukraine.”
But on
Sunday Mr. Trump wrote of Mr. Putin: “If he does, it will lead to the downfall
of Russia!”
Dmitry
Peskov, Mr. Putin’s spokesman, dismissed Mr. Trump’s statements about the
Russian leader. He termed them an “emotional reaction.”
David E.
Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues.
He has been a Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four
books on foreign policy and national security challenges.
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