President Donald Trump is already looking beyond his meeting on Friday with Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Trump, who has been lowering expectations for any kind of peace deal for Ukraine emerging from the summit in Alaska, said today he’s aiming for a truce that the would set up a “quick second meeting” involving Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskiy. But only if things go well. Trump said if he “didn’t get the answers that we have to have, then we’re not going to have a second meeting.” And he warned Putin there would be “ very severe consequences” if a ceasefire isn’t forthcoming. Trump Photographer: Kayla Bartkowski/Bloomberg That was seconded by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Bloomberg TV today. He said that sanctions to penalize Russia can be tightened or loosened, depending on the outcome of Friday’s talks. He also said that for US allies that have been cool to the idea putting secondary sanctions on nations that buy Russian oil, “It’s put up or shut up time.” The lead-up to the Trump-Putin meeting has been all about trans-Atlantic consultation and cooperation. The US president, who often has pursued a go-it-alone foreign policy, had an hour-long conference call this morning with European leaders and Zelenskiy. Trump has previously said both Ukraine and Russia will have to cede land to end the war, raising fears in Europe that he’ll push the government in Kyiv to give up territory. Russia, meanwhile, has continued to press its offensive deeper into Ukraine. Moscow is demanding that Ukraine cede its entire eastern Donbas region and Crimea, which Putin’s forces illegally annexed in 2014, as a condition for a ceasefire and the opening of negotiations on a settlement. Trump said he’d consult with Zelenskiy and other European leaders after his meeting with Putin ends. European leaders are pressing Trump to avoid making promises on behalf of Ukraine. French President Emmanuel Macron said after the call that any decision on possible concessions on territory will need to be made by Ukraine. “Until there is a ceasefire and a lasting peace, we must continue to support Ukraine, and when I say we I mean Europeans and Americans,” Macron said. — Joe Sobczyk |