Trump Eyes Russia-Ukraine Peace Deal as Casualties Soar, Cites Economic Pressure

US President Donald Trump stated that a deal to end the Russia-Ukraine war remains possible, highlighting the urgency due to mounting casualties on both sides. He argued that economic pressure on Russia is effective and contrasted his approach by claiming the conflict is no longer a financial burden on the United States. Senator Lindsey Graham supported this, stating that sanctions and tariffs are hurting Russia's economy and could push Moscow toward negotiations. Both emphasized that stopping the bloodshed, which primarily affects Russians and Ukrainians, is the top priority.

Key Points: Trump on Russia-Ukraine War: Deal Possible, Casualties Mount

  • Trump hopeful for peace deal
  • Cites massive monthly casualties
  • Claims U.S. recovers costs, not bears burden
  • Graham says sanctions hurting Russian economy
  • Both prioritize stopping the bloodshed
2 min read

Trump says Russia-Ukraine deal possible as casualties mount

President Trump says a deal to end the Russia-Ukraine war is possible, citing high casualties and claiming U.S. economic pressure on Moscow is working.

"If you want to end this conflict, put pressure on Putin's customers. - Senator Lindsey Graham"

Washington, Jan 5

US President Donald Trump said a deal to end the Russia-Ukraine war remains possible, citing mounting casualties on both sides and arguing that economic pressure on Moscow is beginning to take effect.

Speaking aboard Air Force One, on Sunday, Trump told reporters newly released figures underscore the urgency of ending the conflict. "Thirty thousand soldiers were killed this current month," he said, adding that about 27,000 were killed the month before.

Trump said he does not set deadlines but remains hopeful. "Hopefully in the not too distant future," he said, referring to a possible agreement.

Addressing reports that Ukraine may have targeted Russian President Vladimir Putin's residence, Trump said initial information was unclear. "Nobody knew at that moment," he said, adding that later checks suggested the claim was inaccurate.

"We don't believe that happened," Trump said.

Trump said the war is no longer a financial burden on the United States. "It's costing us nothing," he said, contrasting his approach with that of the Biden administration. "Biden gave $350 billion... now we get paid."

He said the US is recovering costs through trade and resource arrangements, including rare earth deals. "We're going to get a lot of that money back," he said.

Later, Senator Lindsey Graham said sanctions and tariff pressure are hurting Russia's economy and could force Moscow toward negotiations. He cited sanctions on Russia's largest oil companies as the strongest pressure applied since the war began.

"If you want to end this conflict, put pressure on Putin's customers," Graham said.

Trump agreed, saying the Russian economy is struggling. "The Russian economy is lousy," he said.

Both said stopping the bloodshed remains the priority. "They're not from America," Trump said of the casualties. "They're from Russia and Ukraine. And if I could get it stopped, I'd like to get it stopped."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
"It's costing us nothing" is a very concerning statement. Global stability has a cost, and America's leadership role shouldn't be measured just in dollars. The world needs responsible powers to help resolve conflicts, not just transactional deals.
P
Priyanka N
As an Indian, I see this from a different angle. The economic pressure and sanctions have ripple effects on the global south too, affecting oil and food prices. A swift end is in everyone's interest, including India's.
A
Aman W
The casualty numbers are heartbreaking. 30,000 in a month? That's like a small town wiped out. Whatever the politics, this must stop. Dialogue is the only way.
M
Michael C
Interesting to see the focus on economic pressure. Sanctions can work, but they take time and hurt ordinary people. Hope the negotiation window opens soon before more lives are lost.
K
Kavya N
The talk about recovering costs through rare earth deals sounds very transactional. Peace should be the primary goal, not a business opportunity. The priority should be saving lives, not balancing ledgers.

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