News
Analysis
Putin’s
Trump Strategy: Lots of Flattery, and Talk of Business Deals
After
Thursday’s phone call with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, President
Trump appeared to express doubts about supplying Ukraine with more powerful
weapons.
By Anton
Troianovski and Nataliya Vasilyeva
Oct. 17,
2025
Updated
11:15 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/17/world/europe/putin-trump-call-meeting-ukraine-russia.html
After
weeks of rising tensions with President Trump, President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia picked up the phone.
The
Kremlin said Russia had initiated the call on Thursday between the two leaders,
a telling acknowledgment of a Russian priority as important as any battlefield
in Ukraine: appeasing Mr. Trump.
Even as
Mr. Putin has pounded Ukrainian cities and waged grinding warfare in the
country’s east, he has invested dozens of hours into flattering Mr. Trump,
dangling the prospect of Russian-American business deals and sending the
message that Russia is open to talks to end its invasion.
The
tactic has helped Mr. Putin head off repeated deadlines and sanction threats by
the American president without curtailing Russia’s war effort.
In June,
a time when some Republican allies of Mr. Trump were pushing for sanctions
against Russia, Mr. Putin called Mr. Trump to wish him a happy birthday; Mr.
Trump said Mr. Putin had acted “very nicely,” and the sanctions never appeared.
In
August, as Mr. Trump was threatening to enforce a 12-day deadline for Mr. Putin
to end the war, the Russian leader hosted Steve Witkoff, the White House envoy
and close friend of Mr. Trump, for a three-hour meeting that set the stage for
the two presidents’ summit in Alaska.
This
week, the cease-fire in Gaza gave Mr. Putin a new pretext to call — and praise
— Mr. Trump. More relevant to Mr. Putin, however, was the fact that President
Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine was scheduled to visit the White House on Friday.
“We
proposed the phone conversation on the heels of President Trump’s successful
trip to the Middle East,” Mr. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, said on
Friday. “President Putin’s first thought, of course, was to congratulate Trump
on such a success.”
Thursday’s
call, coming after Mr. Trump’s threats to send Ukraine powerful Tomahawk cruise
missiles “if this war doesn’t get settled,” was Mr. Putin’s eighth phone
conversation with the American leader this year. He has held five hourslong,
in-person meetings with Mr. Witkoff.
Combined
with the August summit in Alaska, Mr. Putin has held about as many meetings and
calls with Mr. Trump and Mr. Witkoff this year as he has with his closest
international ally, President Aleksandr G. Lukashenko of Belarus, according to
official Kremlin statements.
In recent
weeks, it had looked as if the public bonhomie on display in Alaska between Mr.
Putin and Mr. Trump had failed to produce any diplomatic progress. Blaming
Europe, Sergei A. Ryabkov, a Russian deputy foreign minister, said last week
that the “powerful momentum generated by Anchorage” had been “largely
exhausted.”
But Mr.
Putin appeared ready to give it another shot. On Oct. 10, asked about Mr. Trump
not being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, Mr. Putin told reporters the award had
lost credibility. Mr. Trump posted the video of those comments to his Truth
Social account the same day, writing, “Thank you to President Putin!”
By
Friday, after his call with Mr. Trump, Mr. Putin was already preparing for
another summit, while signaling that an end to the war in Ukraine was still a
ways off. He took a call from Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister, to
discuss a possible Trump-Putin meeting in Budapest.
But the
Kremlin’s statement about that call added that Mr. Putin told Mr. Orban that
U.S. and Russian officials would first need to “discuss the algorithm for
further actions in the context of finding ways to peacefully resolve the
Ukrainian crisis.”
The
Kremlin was also getting more creative in trying to appeal to Mr. Trump not
only by praising him, but also by pitching business deals.
In
February, Mr. Putin said American companies could help develop aluminum
production in Siberia and help mine rare earth metals in Russian-occupied
Ukraine. On Thursday, one of his senior aides, Kirill Dmitriev, posted on X
that Elon Musk’s tunneling company could build a “Putin-Trump tunnel” between
eastern Russia and Alaska.
“We also
spent a great deal of time talking about Trade between Russia and the United
States when the War with Ukraine is over,” Mr. Trump posted on social media
after Thursday’s call. It was unclear what kind of trade was discussed.
From the
Kremlin’s perspective, the charm offensive has been well worth the effort even
though it has not yet resulted in business deals being announced, let alone in
Mr. Trump’s conceding to Mr. Putin’s wide-ranging demands over Ukraine. But it
appears to have succeeded in stopping Mr. Trump from significantly increasing
American assistance to Ukraine.
A renewed
sign of that came after Thursday’s call, when Mr. Trump expressed doubts about
whether he would be willing to provide Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine.
“Putin
hasn’t wasted any time in learning how to massage Trump’s ego,” said Alexander
Gabuev, director of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. He predicted that the
United States would pause meaningful aid deliveries to Ukraine while a
potential Budapest summit was being prepared. “Even if that buys Russia a month
— it’s already a good investment.”
Ivan
Nechepurenko contributed reporting.
Anton
Troianovski is the Moscow bureau chief for The Times. He writes about Russia,
Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia.


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