Trump says he doesn’t believe he can convince Putin to stop bombing Ukrainian civilians

WASHINGTON — President Trump said Wednesday that he can’t promise he will be able to convince Russian tyrant Vladimir Putin to stop bombing Ukrainian civilians — but vowed “severe consequences” if Moscow doesn’t let up after their Friday summit.

Trump said his meeting with Putin in Alaska will be “setting the table” for a possible future meeting alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and that the Anchorage summit likely won’t yield a cease-fire.

“I’ve had that conversation with him. I’ve had a lot of good conversations with him. Then I go home and I see that a rocket hit a nursing home, or a rocket hit an apartment building and people are laying dead in the street,” Trump told reporters at the Kennedy Center about convincing Putin to stop bombing Ukrainian civilians.

“So I guess the answer to that is no, because I’ve had this conversation,” he added.

President Donald Trump speaks during an event at the Kennedy Center on August 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images

The president will be meeting Putin for the first time since 2019 in Anchorage on Friday for one-on-one talks, which are meant to reveal whether the Russian leader is serious about ending the war and his possible concessions.

Trump previously told The Post that Putin has told him on the phone that he does want to “end the war” — but never honors his word.

If Putin doesn’t listen after the sitdown, Trump said there will be “very severe consequences,” wihout revealing what the consequences would be.

Trump previously threatened to impose secondary sanctions on Russia with a deadline of Aug. 8, but halted his threat due to the upcoming talks.

Rescuers carry a stretcher with dead person in white body bag from partially destroyed residential building after Russian drone-and-missile attack on July 31, 2025 in Kyiv, Ukraine. Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images
An Eederly resident of a home damaged in an air strike is helped to evacuate her home. ZUMAPRESS.com

There have been at least 13,883 Ukrainian civilian casualties since the start of the war in February 2022, according to the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine.

Russia has launched missiles into Ukrainian cities, hitting apartment buildings, stores, hospitals and streets, killing thousands of innocent people.

The regime has also killed civilians near the front lines.

Zelensky urged Trump in a phone call with other European leaders on Wednesday to focus the Friday meeting on a cease-fire, so negotiations to end the war can formally begin.

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