U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday (July 15, 2025) downplayed the possibility of sending Ukraine long-range weapons as Kyiv awaits an injection of U.S. weaponry that it hopes will help it beat back an intensifying Russian air offensive.
Trump offered a more cautious tone on what to expect after he threatened Russia a day earlier with steep tariffs if President Vladimir Putin doesnβt act within 50 days to end the three-year conflict. He also on Monday announced plans to bolster Kyiv’s stockpile by selling American weapons to NATO allies who would in turn send arms to Ukraine.
Providing Ukraine with more long-range weaponry would give Kyiv the chance to strike further into Russian territory, a move that some in Ukraine and the U.S. have said could help push Putin toward negotiations to end the fighting.
Asked if he intended to supply Ukraine with weapons that could reach deeper into Russian territory, Mr. Trump replied, βWe’re not looking to do that.β He made the remarks to reporters before departing the White House for an energy investment event in Pittsburgh.
While Mr. Trump’s threats of weapons, sanctions and tariffs mark the most substantive pressure heβs placed on Mr. Putin since returning to office nearly six months ago, some lawmakers said they remain concerned that the administration, with the 50-day deadline, is giving Mr. Putin time to grab even more Ukrainian territory.
Sens. Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina, and Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat from New Hampshire, said waiting 50 days before imposing sanctions on Russia would give Putin more time to gain an advantage in the war.
βThe 50-day delay worries me that Putin would try to use the 50 days to win the war, or to be better positioned to negotiate a peace agreement after having murdered and potentially collected more ground,β said Mr. Tillis, who recently announced he wonβt run for reelection.
Mr. Tillis and Ms. Shaheen lead the Senate NATO Observer Group, which facilitates work between Congress and NATO, and met on Tuesday with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Capitol Hill.
Mr. Trump himself scoffed at the idea that 50 days is giving Mr. Putin too much time. The president suggested he may act more quickly if he does not see signs that Putin is taking steps toward ending the conflict.
βI donβt think 50 days is very long and it could be shorter than that,β he said.
Ahead of Mr. Trump’s announcement that he would impose a 100% tariff on Russiaβs trading partners if Mr. Putin doesn’t negotiate an end to the war, bipartisan legislation proscribing even tougher sanctions on Moscow was gaining steam in the Senate.
The legislation, in part, calls for a 500% tariff on goods imported from countries that continue to buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and other exports. It would have an enormous impact on the economies of Brazil, China and India, which account for the vast majority of Russiaβs energy trade.
But Mr. Trump on Monday said βat a certain point it doesnβt matterβ how high the tariff is set and that “100% is going to serve the same function.β Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he was putting the legislation on hold following Mr. Trump’s announcement.
Mr. Trump during his campaign described the conflict as a waste of U.S. taxpayer money and vowed to quickly end it on his first day back in office. He deflected when asked by a reporter on Tuesday if his tougher tone on Mr. Putin suggests he’s now on Ukraineβs side in the bloody conflict.
βIβm on nobodyβs side,β Mr. Trump said, adding this concern was for βhumanity.β
U.S. officials say they are still sorting through Ukraineβs wish list of weaponry to determine what can be most quickly replaced after Mr. Trump announced an agreement for Europe to supply Ukraine with defensive munitions from existing stocks.
The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss arms transfers that have not yet been approved or completed, said Ukraineβs requests for military equipment are roughly the same as they have been since the start of Russiaβs invasion. Those include air defenses like Patriot missiles and Advanced Precision Kill Weapon Systems, long-range missiles known as ATACMS and short- to medium-range ground-to-air missiles known as NASAMs, and assorted artillery, according to the officials.
Under the terms of the very rough agreement sketched out by Mr. Trump and Mr. Rutte on Monday, NATO members would ship billions of dollars of these weapons to Ukraine and then purchase replacements for them from the United States.
One official said some of the larger items β such as Patriotsβ could take up to five years to produce to deliver to the European donors, while smaller munitions like 155mm artillery shells can be produced on a much shorter timeline.
Mr. Trump has lately changed his once friendly tune toward Mr. Putin, whom he has long admired and whom he sided with publicly over his national security team during his first term when asked whether Russia had interfered in the 2016 election.
In recent weeks, Mr. Trump has chastised Mr. Putin for continuing his brutal assault on Ukrainian cities, even noting that the Russian leader βtalks nice and then he bombs everybody.”
Mr. Trump has continued to blame his White House predecessors for Putin’s 2022 invasion on neighboring Ukraine β a conflict he says would have never happened if he were reelected in 2020.
βHeβs fooled a lot of people,β Mr. Trump said on Monday at the White House. βHe fooled Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden. He didnβt fool me.β
In February, Mr. Trump expressed confidence that Mr. Putin βwill keep his wordβ on any deal to end the war in Ukraine. But in an interview with the BBC published on Tuesday, when asked whether he trusted Mr. Putin, Mr. Trump paused before answering.
βI trust almost nobody, to be honest with you,β Mr. Trump said. βIβm disappointed in him, but Iβm not done with him. But Iβm disappointed in him.”
Published – July 16, 2025 05:24 am IST