I'm 'disappointed but not done' with Putin, Trump tells BBC
Donald Trump
has said that he is disappointed but not done with Vladimir Putin, in an
exclusive phone call with the BBC.
The US
president was pressed on whether he trusts the Russian leader, and replied:
"I trust almost nobody."
Trump was
speaking hours after he announced plans to
send weapons to Ukraine and warned of severe tariffs on Russia if
there was no ceasefire deal in 50 days.
In an
interview from the Oval Office, the president also endorsed Nato, having once
described it as obsolete, and affirmed his support for the organisation's
common defence principle.
The
president made the phone call, which lasted 20 minutes, to the BBC after
conversations about a potential interview to mark one year on since the attempt
on his life at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Asked about
whether surviving the assassination attempt had changed him, Trump said he
liked to think about it as little as possible.
"I
don't like to think about if it did change me," Trump said. Dwelling on
it, he added, "could be life-changing".
Having just
met with Nato chief Mark Rutte at the White House, however, the president spent
a significant portion of the interview expanding on his disappointment with the
Russian leader.
Trump said
that he had thought a deal to end the war in Ukraine was on the cards with
Russia four different times.
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When asked
by the BBC if he was done with Putin, the president replied: "I'm
disappointed in him, but I'm not done with him. But I'm disappointed in
him."
Pressed on
how Trump would get Putin to "stop the bloodshed" the US president
said: "We're working at it, Gary."
"We'll
have a great conversation. I'll say: 'That's good, I'll think we're close to
getting it done,' and then he'll knock down a building in Kyiv."
Russia has
intensified its drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities in recent weeks,
causing record civilian casualties. It launched a full-scale invasion of its
neighbour in 2022.
Putin has
insisted he also wants peace but has said what he calls the "root
causes" of the war must be resolved first. He argues that the
war is the result of external threats to Russia's security from Kyiv, Nato and
the "collective West".
1:38
Listen: ‘I
don't like dwelling’ on the assasination attempt, Trump tells BBC
The
conversation moved on to Nato, which Trump has previously criticised as
"obsolete".
He said he
did not think that was still the case as Nato "is now becoming the
opposite of that" because the alliance was "paying their own
bills".
Trump said
it was "amazing" that Nato leaders had agreed to ramp up defence
spending to 5% of their economic output.
"Nobody
thought that was possible."
He said he
still believed in collective defence, because it meant smaller countries could
defend themselves against larger ones.
Trump said
that the leaders of countries including Germany, France and Spain, had come to
respect him and his decision making, partly because world leaders believed that
there was a "lot of talent" in being elected to the presidency twice.
When asked
whether world leaders were at times "obvious in their flattery",
Trump replied that he felt they were "just trying to be nice".
0:59
Listen:
World leaders have 'come to respect me', Trump tells BBC
President
Trump was also asked about the UK's future in the world and said he thought it
was a "great place - you know I own property there".
Asked if he
thought the UK had made the most of Brexit, he said "no", adding:
"I think it's been on the sloppy side but I think it's getting
straightened out."
The
president also said of Sir Keir Starmer: "I really like the prime minister
a lot, even though he is a liberal", and praised the UK-US trade deal. He
said he had a "special bond" with the UK and that was why he had made
a deal with the country - "for the most part, in terms of your competitors
and in terms of the European Union I haven't made a deal".
He spoke
about how he was looking forward to an unprecedented second state visit to the
UK in September this year.
On what he
wanted to achieve during the visit, Trump said: "Have a good time and
respect King Charles, because he's a great gentleman."
He said he
would not want the UK parliament, which is not sitting during his September
visit, to be recalled so he could give a speech there, saying instead that MPs
should enjoy their time away: "I think let them go and have a good
time."
The
president also said he had not been concerned by Charles's speech at the
opening of Canada's parliament, in which the British monarch - who is Canada's
head of state - stressed its sovereignty after Trump had suggested the
US could annex the country.
"They're
wrapped up with Canada so what's he gonna do, you know, he has no choice,"
the president said, adding: "I thought he was very good, very
respectful."
He said the
US was "negotiating with Canada right now" and it was going to
"work out very well".
Turning to
his domestic agenda, the president said he had done a "great job" on
one of his key election pledges - tackling illegal crossings at the US-Mexico
border, which have dropped to record lows in the first months of his second
term.
"I've
done actually more than the promises that I've made," he said.
His
administration has now shifted its focus to the identification, detention and
deportation of migrants across the US who are in the country illegally.
Pushed on
what level of deportations would represent a success, Trump said he would not
"put a number" on it, adding: "I want to get the criminals out
quickly, and we're doing that."
"We're
bringing them to El Salvador, lots of other places," he said, referring to
the controversial deal which saw the deportation of people the White House
called gang members to a prison in the central American country.
As for the
action by some courts to halt aspects of his deportation policy, he said:
"We've won all these cases in appeal. We've had some judges that are
radical left lunatics, and every case has been overturned."
The Trump
administration has had some success on this front, including a recent Supreme
Court ruling allowing it to
deport migrants to third countries.
The
president also praised his landmark tax and spending bill - "the one big
beautiful bill" - which extends
2017 tax cuts from Trump's first term, as well as creating new tax breaks
on tips and including steep cuts to Medicaid, the state-provided healthcare
scheme.
"We
have the largest tax cuts in history," he said.
Asked what
he thought would define his legacy as president, he said: "Saving
America."
"I
think America is now a great country and it was a dead country one year
ago."
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1e02q12z32o
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