The United States President presented a clear ultimatum regarding the Russia- Ukraine war situation, saying, "You are either going to make a deal, or we're out, and if we are out."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky "disrespected America," US President Donald Trump accused in a post on Truth Social minutes after a contentious meeting between the leaders in the Oval Office.
Zelenskyy's visit comes at a time when the US is pursuing a rare earth material deal with Ukrainem, and the US President has been actively talking about ending the Russia-Ukraine war soon, talking with various Western leaders on the issue.
Speaking to reporters before his first cabinet meeting, Trump said that US will "try very hard" to make a good deal so that Ukraine gets as much back as possible.
"It's now confirmed, and we're going to be signing an agreement," Trump said on Wednesday morning (local time) at the outset of his first Cabinet meeting at the White House, as per Politico.
After the United States and Ukraine agreed to terms on a deal over natural resources and reconstruction, Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to travel to Washington, DC in the coming days, according to CNN. Negotiations have been ongoing for days over a deal that could grant the US access to U
The Canadian Prime Minister's visit to Ukraine on February 24 aimed to reaffirm Canada's commitment to supporting Ukraine, both militarily and financially, according to the Ukrainian President's office.
This vote against the Ukrainian and European-backed resolution saw the US at odds with its longtime European allies and instead aligning with Russia on the third anniversary of Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, as per CNN.
NATO is the most cost-effective option for preventing another war. It is the simplest and most logical solution. If Ukraine does not join NATO, we will have to create NATO within Ukraine, which means maintaining an army strong enough to repel aggression, financing it, producing and storing e
Trump drew parallels between the circumstances of the election in Germany and the political situation in the United States, asserting that Germans had grown tired of a "no common sense agenda."