Trump on Ukraine-Russia talks in Turkey: 'Nothing's gonna happen until Putin and I get together'
"I don’t believe anything's gonna happen, whether you like it or not, until he and I get together," President Trump said.
President Trump said Thursday regarding the Ukraine-Russia talks in Turkey that "nothing's gonna happen until Putin and I get together."
The president made the comments as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in Turkey for peace talks with Russia on Thursday regarding the ongoing war between the two countries, but Russian President Vladimir Putin chose not to attend and sent a lower-level delegation, Politico reported.
“Look, nothing's gonna happen until Putin and I get together, okay?” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One while heading to the United Arab Emirates. “And obviously, he wasn’t gonna go -- he was gonna go, but he thought I was gonna go. He wasn’t going if I wasn’t there. And I don’t believe anything's gonna happen, whether you like it or not, until he and I get together. But we're gonna have to get it solved because too many people are dying.”
Ukraine's high-level delegation includes Zelensky, his top aide, and foreign and defense ministers in an effort to show Trump that Russia is the country against making peace. Ukraine was frustrated with the lower-level Russian delegation and doubted whether there would be any negotiations at all.
"The Russian chair in Turkey is de facto empty," a Ukrainian diplomatic official told Politico on the condition of anonymity. "Because it makes little difference whether Mr. Nobody, sent by Putin, and his insignificant colleagues sit in their chairs or not. They are not the ones making decisions. And the person who does — Putin — is either afraid to come or does not take the U.S.-led peace effort seriously.
“Still, we are considering sending someone at the appropriate level to at least hear what these people have to say and whether they are able to decide at least anything. If they are willing to have a serious conversion, we may engage in it. Otherwise, we will have the right to conclude that this is a Russian charade, not meaningful work for peace,” the official added.