Trump, Ukraine and Vladimir Putin
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For a fleeting moment, Ukraine’s conflict may have come full circle. In the past 48 hours, US President Donald Trump has perhaps said his most forcefully direct words yet on arming Ukraine. And in the same period,
President Trump is weighing new funding for Ukraine for the first time since taking office in January, diplomatic sources told CBS News.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte will travel to Washington on Monday for talks with U.S. President Trump about American arms deliveries to Ukraine, as expectations grow over a possible policy reversal,
New provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act aim to prevent unilateral Pentagon decisions on Ukraine aid after Trump's oscillating support and sudden aid withdrawals.
President Trump, in a notable policy shift, will send weapons to Ukraine using the Presidential Drawdown Authority. This decision signifies a renewed U.S. commitment to aiding Ukraine amid Russian aggression,
President Donald Trump seems to have learned the lesson painfully gleaned by all his 21st-century predecessors: You can’t reset US relations with Vladimir Putin.
"I think they may have lost some of their footing with the president," Pence told CNN about isolationists in the White House.
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New York Magazine on MSNTrump’s Mass State Department Layoffs Upend Foreign PolicyAlong with rescissions hitting foreign aid, the new round of firings shows Trump is still bent on tearing down bipartisan foreign-policy traditions.
Let us start with Trump’s comments on arming Ukraine, a reversion to a basic bedrock of US foreign policy for decades – opposing Russian aggression. “We’re going to send some more weapons ...
In a remarkable policy shift, President Trump resumed weapons shipments to Ukraine after changing his tune on Russia’s president. The panel discusses whether Trump has soured on Putin.