WATCH: Trump meets Zelenskyy at White House

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0:00

The President of Ukraine, Mr. President.

0:22

Well, thank you very much. It's an honor to have the president of Ukraine with us. We've had a lot of good discussions, a lot of good talks, and I think progress is being made very, very substantial progress in many ways. We had a good meeting, as you know, just a short while ago with the president of Russia. And I think there's a possibility that something could come out of it.

0:47

And today's meeting is very important. We have, I guess, the seven, seven very powerful leaders from Europe. And we're going to be meeting with them right after this meeting. And thank you very much for being here.

0:59

Thanks so much, Mr. President. If I can, first of all, thank you for the invitation, and thank you very much for your efforts, personal efforts to stop killings and stop this war. Thank you. And using this opportunity, many thanks to your wife, First Lady of the United States.

1:17

She sent a letter to Putin about our children, abducted children. And my wife, she, the first lady of Ukraine. She gave the letters.

1:29

It's not to you, to your wife.

1:30

The President.

1:31

I won't.

1:31

I won't. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:34

So we are saying this sensitive topic, yeah. Yes, please. And thanks to our partners and that you supported this format that after our meeting we can have leaders who are around us, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Finland, EU, and NATO.

1:49

I mean, all partners around Ukraine supporting us. Thanks to them. Thank you very much for the invitation.

1:57

Thank you very much for being here.

2:00

President Trump.

2:01

Do you think it's time?

2:03

Yes, Peter, go ahead.

2:04

Thank you, President Trump. Yes, Peter. Thank you, President Trump. So President Zelensky, you say in a post on X today, Russia must end this war, which it itself started. President Trump, you say President Zelensky of Ukraine can end the war with Russia almost immediately if he wants to, which is.

2:22

I think that's true. I think we're going to have a meeting. I think if everything works out well today, we'll have a trilat. And I think there will be a reasonable chance of ending the war when we do that.

2:36

Is this the end of the road for American support for Ukraine? Is today's meeting deal or no deal?

2:43

I can never say that. It's never the end of the road. People are being killed and we want to stop that. So I would not say it's the end of the road. No, I think we have a good chance of doing it. It's been almost four years now that a lot of people were killed last week.

2:57

A lot of people last week. I mean, millions of people killed, but a lot of people last week, I know myself, and I believe Vladimir Putin wants to see it ended.

3:14

And as you met with Putin on Friday, today you've got President Zelensky here. As you listen to Russia and Ukraine, which side has the better cards?

3:22

Well, I don't want to say that. I'm just gonna I'm just here to be like this is in my war. This is Joe Biden's war. He's the one that had a lot to do with this happening. And we want to get it ended. And we want it to end good for everybody.

3:36

We want it to end good. The people of Ukraine have suffered incredibly.

3:39

Mr. President, are you prepared to keep sending Ukrainian troops to their deaths for another couple years? Or are you going to agree to redraw the maps?

3:53

President Zelensky Thank you for your question. So, first of all, you know, we live under each day attacks. You know that today have been a lot of attacks and a lot of wounded people and the child was dead.

4:04

It's a small bomb. One attacks and a lot of wounded people, and the child was dead.

4:05

It's a small one. One year and a half. So we need to stop this war to stop Russia, and we need support, American and European partners. We will do our best for this. So, and I think we showed that we are strong people,

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and we supported the idea of the United States of personal help President Trump to stop this war to make diplomatic way of finishing this war and we are ready for trilateral as President said. This is a good signal about trilateral. I think this is very good.

4:40

Thank you. Mr. President, if the peace deal will be achieved, are you going to be willing to send American

4:53

peacekeepers to Ukraine?

4:54

Well, we're going to work with Ukraine. We're going to work with everybody and we're going to make sure that if there's peace, the peace is going to stay long term. This is very long term. We're not talking about a two year peace and then we end up in this mess again. We're going to make sure that everything's good.

5:10

We'll work with Russia. We're going to work with Ukraine. We're going to make sure it works. And I think if we can get to peace, it's going to work.

5:16

I have no doubt about it.

5:22

Your team has talked about security guarantees. Could that involve U.S. troops?

5:25

Would you rule that out in the future?

5:28

We'll let you know that maybe later today. We're meeting with seven great leaders of great countries also, and we'll be talking about that. They'll all be involved, but there'll be a lot of help. When it comes to security, there's going to be a lot of help. It's going to be good.

5:45

They are first line of defense because they're there. They're Europe. But we're going to help them out also. We'll be involved.

5:52

Vladimir Putin mentioned that the war will not end without addressing the root causes of this war. Do you have you had an understanding? What are the root causes of this war?

6:05

Look, the war is going to end when it ends. I can't tell you, but the war is going to end. And this gentleman wants it to end. And Vladimir Putin wants it to end. I think the whole world is tired of it. And we're going to get it ended.

6:20

It was, you know, I've done six wars. I've ended six wars. I've ended six wars. And I thought this maybe would be the easiest one. And it's not the easiest one. It's a it's a it's a tough one. A lot of a lot of reasons for it. And they'll be talking about it for a long time. But they'll be talking about the others. Look, India, Pakistan. We're talking about the big places when you look at you just take a look at some of these wars, you go to Africa and take a look at

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that Rwanda and the Congo Republic of the Congo. That's been going on for 31 years. And so we've done a total of six. And we really have six, not including the fact that we obliterated and it turned out to be a total obliteration. The nuclear in, be a total obliteration the nuclear

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in, as you said, the nuclear, the future nuclear capability of Iran. And this one, I think we're going to get solved also. I think I feel confident we're going to get it solved.

7:17

Thank you, Mr. President.

7:21

Can you tell us about your conversations with European leaders and what they need to see to support an end to the war?

7:28

President Trump Yeah, well, we're going to be meeting with a great representative group and seven very powerful, very big countries. They're great people. All friends of mine and friends of yours. And we're going to have some suggestions made.

7:44

They want to see peace. They would like to see peace.

7:46

The Press.

7:47

President Trump, do you think it's fair to, for Ukraine and for Russia to achieve a lasting and durable peace if Ukraine cedes its territories that Russia hasn't yet conquered? Do you think it's a fair peace if Ukraine cedes its territories that Russia hasn't yet conquered? Do you think it's a fair peace for Ukraine?

8:08

We're going to have a lasting peace. Just to answer the first part of your question, we're going to have a lasting peace. I hope it's going to be immediately. I hope it doesn't have to go on.

8:19

And I think people in the whole world is going to be very happy when that's announced. You posted on social media, Mr. President, a very touching letter from the first lady and the letter was hand delivered to President Putin and it calls for an end to the war essentially because of the children and the children's future. Why did the first lady feel that letter was necessary? Was it because she believes that Mr. Putin is the aggressor in the war? Is a similar letter being hand-delivered to President Zelensky?

8:51

So the First Lady felt very strongly. She's watched the same thing that you watch and that I watch. I see things that you don't get to see. And it's horrible. But when she's got a great love of Children, she has a wonderful son that she loves probably more than anybody, including me. I hate to say it, but she loves her son. She loves Children, and she hates to see she hates to see something like this happening. And that goes for other wars, too. I mean, she sees that the heartbreak the parents, the funerals that goes for other wars, too. I mean, she sees that the heartbreak,

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the parents, the funerals that you see on television, always funerals. We want to see something other than funerals. No, she felt it was a beautiful letter. It was very well received by him. And she did ask me to say, you know, she she would love to see this and she would love to see it. And then she says it very openly, very proudly, and with great sorrow because so many people have been killed.

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The Press.

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The Press.

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The Press.

10:00

The Press. I said the same thing. Yeah, you look good. I said the same thing. Yeah, look good on you. I said the one that attacked you last time.

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See, now he's saying I remember that. Yeah, I apologize to you.

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You look wonderful.

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No, my first question for you, President Zelensky.

10:09

But you're in the same suit. You see, I changed you. I'm not. Maybe yours is much better. Look, quickly, upon peace, God willing we get peace, are you open to holding an election in your country?

10:26

Yes, of course, we are open for election, yes. We have to do safety circumstances and a little bit we need to work in the parliament because during the war you can't have election, but we can do security. We need, maybe, how to say, we need a truth, yes, everywhere, the battlefield, in the sky and the sea, yeah, to make possible for people to do democratic, open, legal, legal elections.

10:57

So you say during the war, you can't have elections. So let me just say three and a half years from now. So you mean if we happen to be in a war with somebody, no more elections. Oh, I wonder what the fake

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lies is.

11:14

Speaking of news, I got a question for you. This sounds insane for me even to ask this, but do you think the American media really doesn't even want a peace deal? Because they've seen they've been so critical of you every step of the way as you leave the charge for peace.

11:31

It's an amazing, it's an amazing phenomenon. I said that if in the settlement, you got Moscow, St. Petersburg and thousands of miles around them, they would say I made a bad deal. The level of hatred and animosity is incredible.

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Not with all.

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I mean, we have great people up here. We also have terrible people up there that I think are told what to say. But you know, in solving all of these wars, they don't even write about it. You know, I saw major wars. I saw wars that have been going on for thirty, 35 and 37 and a couple of quicker ones. One that was going to go into a full blown deal very quickly.

12:11

You know, with the one I'm talking about, it was a big one. But they don't even write about that. No matter what I do, no matter what. And you know, this is not anything to do with you. It's probably to your advantage in a certain way. But no matter what I do, no matter what deal I make, from my standpoint, you'll come out

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good. Maybe President Putin will come out good. But they'll say Trump was absolutely horrible. It's just that. And I've lived with that for a long time. I've lived with it since just before the first election.

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I used to get great publicity. Now I get the worst publicity anyone's ever gotten in office. But I wanted a landslide so that people understand they're the only ones that count, ultimately. But I've also had great reporters. I've had journalists that are very good. But it's it's it's very sad when you do the right thing. As an example, they said because of the fact that Vladimir Putin came to American soil, this was a tremendous defeat for Donald Trump.

13:14

No, it was really wonderful that he did it. It was a hard thing for him to do, to be honest with you. It was the opposite of what they said. But they said it now if he didn't come, they'd say that was also bad for Trump. Yeah, there's no way. And there's just a great dishonesty of the press. And I think that's why it's lost its credibility. You know, it's credit. Its credibility is at an all time low. We have a thing going

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on right now in D.C. We went from the most unsafe place anywhere to a place that now people friends are calling me up. Democrats are calling me up and they're saying, sir, I want to thank you. My wife and I went out to dinner last night for the first time in four years. And Washington, D.C. is safe. And you did that in four days.

14:03

I'll tell you, it's safe. And you did that in four days. I'll tell you it's safe. I had another friend of mine is a son who's a great golfer. He's on tour. And he came in fourth yesterday in the big tournament with Scottie Scheffler made the great shot. And he said his son is going to dinner in Washington, D.C. tonight. I said, would you have allowed that to happen a year ago? He said, no way. No way. He said, what you've done is incredible. And I think the people realize it. But the press says he's a dictator.

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He's trying to take over. No, all I want is security for our people. But people that haven't gone out to dinner in Washington, D.C. in two years are going out to dinner and the restaurants the last two days were busier than they've been in a long time.

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Thank you.

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I walked around yesterday with MTG. If you can walk around with DC with MTG and not be attacked, the city is safe.

14:55

Thank you, Mr. President. Last week you warned of what you called severe consequences. If a 30 day ceasefire or any type of ceasefire were not agreed to by Russia. Will there be severe consequences? Does that change because of the meeting with the President?

15:11

I don't think you need a ceasefire. You know, if you look at the six deals that I settled this year, they were all at war. I didn't do any ceasefires. And I know that it might be good to have, but I can also understand strategically why well, you know, one country or the other wouldn't want it. You have a ceasefire and they rebuild and rebuild and rebuild.

15:32

And, you know, maybe they don't want that. But if you look at the six deals that we made peace and, you know, long term, long running wars, I didn't do any ceasefires. Would I like I like the concept. You know, I like the concept of a ceasefire for one reason, because you'd stop killing people immediately, as opposed to in two weeks or one week or whatever it takes.

15:53

But we can work a deal where we're working on a peace deal while they're fighting.

15:57

They have to fight.

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I wish they could stop. I'd like them to stop. But strategically, that could be a disadvantage for one side or the other. But all of these deals I made without even the mention of the words ceasefire.

16:10

Can you explain the decision to offer Ukraine Article 5 life security guarantees but stop

16:21

short of pushing for their full membership?

16:23

Yeah, well, we haven't done anything on that yet. If you look back and you go back long before President Putin, it was always a statement that they would never allow Ukraine in Geneva. So that was a statement that was made. But we haven't discussed any of that yet. We're going to be discussing it today.

16:40

But we will give them very good protection, very good security. That's part of it. And the people that are waiting for us, they are, I think they're very like-minded. They want to help out all the time.

16:50

So, sir, can I ask you a question?

16:52

Thank you, President Trump.

16:52

Thank you, President Trump. Are you disappointed there's no ceasefire, Mr. President?

16:56

The United States has already given hundreds of billions of dollars to this war effort in Ukraine. At best, it is a stalemate, and the killing continues. So, President Trump, how much more is the United States willing to give Ukraine? And, President Zelensky, how much more do you want?

17:12

The President Well, I'll start off just by saying we're not giving anything. Now, we're selling weapons. This is something before, I guess, the numbers, well over $300 billion. I was under Joe Biden, a corrupt politician, not a smart man, never was.

17:31

By the way, go back 40 years. He was not a smart man 40 years ago either. But now he's in particular bad. This was done by a corrupt administration that shouldn't have been in. And if the and frankly, if the right results of the election were given, if I were president, this war would have never taken place.

17:49

And he would have been very happy because he would have liked to have seen, I mean, they went through hell. He went through hell. This war would have never happened. And the people that were killed, a couple of million people, a lot of people with soldiers and everything else, and the people that have been displaced and forced into other areas and other countries because of what's happened,

18:08

none of that would have happened. And I'm just saying that he was a horrible president, whether it was the borders or this, he was just a horrible, corrupt president.

18:20

Do you want to answer?

18:23

I can.

18:24

Thank you so much.

18:25

First of all, we have this ability now to buy weapons from the United States. We are thankful for this program and this opportunity. We are thankful for Europe. They pay for this. And through NATO program for example, and et cetera, we have some programs where we can have some money to finance this.

18:42

And this is a part, I think, it's not a part for the war and to defend us, it also will be a part for security guarantees to strengthen our army, to rearm Ukrainian army. This is very, very important. And it depends how much money we need to rearm.

19:02

For example, the question of air defense, we spoke about it with President Trump, and I'm happy that we have now bilateral decisions and we work on it with production, American production. Nobody in Europe has so many air defense, like Patriots, for example. We need it very much.

19:19

And this is also about defending.

19:21

Because...

19:22

I think the good news, we make the best military equipment in the world by far. You mentioned the Patriots.

19:29

How good are they?

19:30

Yeah, systems.

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They have systems, they're literally 100% foolproof. And it's really like shooting two bullets, you know, two bullets hitting each other in the air in a space like this, the chances 100 percent. It's ninety nine to 100 percent. So we sell the equipment to NATO and NATO does what I don't know what the arrangement is that you have with. But I know that they want you to have that equipment and we're getting the best equipment

19:59

in the world. But they pay us for the equipment under Biden. It was just crazy what was going on. I believe the numbers over 300. I think it could be $350 billion worth of equipment and money and everything else. And we've made more progress in settling this war in the last two months than they made

20:17

in four years. They should have been settled a long time ago, but it should have never happened.

20:21

Yeah. time ago, but it should have never happened. Yeah, please. You pushed out on social media.

20:25

Go first.

20:27

You pushed out on social media about doing away with mail-in ballots and potentially electronic voting machines. Can you expand on that and how important?

20:35

That's a very off topic. Just really quickly. Mail-in ballots are corrupt. Mail-in ballots, you can never have a real democracy with mail-in ballots. And we, as a Republican Party, are going to do everything possible that we get rid of mail-in ballots.

20:52

We're going to start with an executive order that's being written right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots because they're corrupt. And you know that we're the only country in the world, I believe I may be wrong, but just about the only country in the world that uses it because of what's happened. Massive fraud all over the place. The other thing we want change are the machines for all of the money they spend.

21:18

It's approximately 10 times more expensive than paper ballots and paper ballots are very sophisticated with the watermark paper and everything else. We would get secure elections. We'd get much faster results. The machines, I mean, they say we're going to have the results in two weeks. With paper ballots, you have the results that night.

21:37

Most people almost, but most people, many countries use paper ballots. It's the most secure form. So between paper ballots, very, very important paper ballots. And I think maybe even more important, the mail-in voting, we're going to end mail-in voting. It's a fraud. If you have mail-in vote, even Jimmy Carter with this commission, they set it up. He said the one thing about mail-in voting, you will never have an honest election if you have mail inin. And it's time that the Republicans get tough and stop it, because the Democrats want it.

22:10

It's the only way they can get elected, because with men and women's sports and with transgender for everybody and open borders and all of the horrible things. And now the new thing is they love crime. They're fighting me on the fact that I've made Washington, D.C. safe. We're not going to get mugged, beaten up or killed like all the people you've been watching get so badly hurt. I'm glad I hate to take your time with this, but I'm

22:36

glad you asked me that question. We're going to stop mail in ballots because it's corrupt. You know, when you go to a voting booth and you do it the right way and you go to a state that runs it properly, you go in. They even asked me. They asked me for my license plate for identity. I said, I don't know if I have it.

22:54

He said, Sir, you have to have it. I was very impressed, actually. But it's very hard to cheat with mail in voting. We're going to have to get smart. We're going to have to get smart. We're going to have to get smart. We're going to have to get smart. We're going to have to get smart. We're going to have to get smart.

23:25

We're not going to have a country, I said for a long time, at rallies, you need borders and you need free and fair elections.

23:35

Those two things.

23:36

Otherwise, you don't have we have strong borders now. In 90 days, Mr. President, we didn't have one, zero, zero, and three months. Not one person came in illegally into our country. In fact, even I find that hard to believe, but it's run by a little bit of a liberal group that put out the numbers. So I guess it's but zero, zero, and zero.

23:57

You go back a year ago, two years ago, three millions of people poured into our country. It was terrible.

24:03

Thank you very much. What guarantees do you need from President Trump to be able to make a deal? Is it American troops, intelligence, equipment?

24:14

What is it?

24:16

Everything. Really, it includes two parts. First, strong Ukrainian army. That's what I began to discuss with your colleagues. And it's a lot about weapon and people and training missions and intelligence. And second, we will discuss with our partners.

24:36

It depends on the big countries, on the United States, on a lot of our friends.

24:42

And Mr. President, are you willing to commit American troops to that NATO-like protection in order to get President Zelensky to a deal today?

24:50

Well, I don't know if you define it that way, but NATO-like. I mean, we're going to give β€” we have people waiting in another room right now. They're all here from Europe, biggest people in Europe. And they want to give protection. They feel very strongly about it, and we'll help them out with that. I think it's very important.

25:05

I think it's very important to get the deal

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done.

25:08

The Press.

25:09

The Press.

25:09

The Press.

25:10

Go ahead.

25:11

The Press. You've been involved with the peacekeeping in Ukraine since your first day in the administration. What would you say to the Ukrainian people right now who are suffering under the Russian attacks and hoping that the American people will stand

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with them?

25:27

Well, I know Ukrainian people. I've known many over the years. They're great people. They're smart. They're energetic.

25:33

They love their country.

25:34

I mean, they love their country. And we want to get this war ended. That's all I can do. I love the Ukrainian people, but I love all people. I love the Russian people. I love the Ukrainian people, but I love all people. I love the Russian people. I love them all. I want to get the war stopped

25:52

Any aspect of your discussion with Vladimir Putin that left you disappointed

25:57

look

25:59

We just spoke to I was just telling the president I just spoke to President Putin indirectly and we're going to have a phone call right after these meetings today. And we may or may not have a trial that if we don't have a trial that then the fighting continues and if we do we have a good chance. I think if we have a trial that there's a good chance of maybe ending it.

26:18

But he's he's expecting my call when we're finished with this meeting. Thank you very much.

26:25

Thank you. Thank you. All right. All right.

26:28

So that concludes the conversation there with President Trump and Ukrainian President Zelensky.

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