(Opinion Peice)
Trump’s latest comments on Ukraine sound like a pivot, but if you strip them down they read more like a step back.
He told NATO allies they could shoot down Russian jets, called Moscow a “paper tiger,” and said Ukraine could “win all of Ukraine back.”
Then he closed with: “I wish both Countries well.” That doesn’t sound like someone about to throw America’s weight behind Kyiv. It sounds like someone moving on.
And unless his words are backed by concrete action, more weapons, tougher sanctions, restored enforcement, they’re hollow.
His line about sending weapons “to NATO for NATO to do what they want with them” was odd. The US is NATO. Treating it like a separate organisation makes it sound like he’s distancing America from the alliance rather than leading it.
Look at the record. The administration shut down Task Force KleptoCapture, the unit that tracked oligarch money. It ended the Ukraine Conflict Observatory, which gathered evidence of deported children. It closed the disinformation office meant to counter Kremlin narratives. They have even recently blocked weapon sales to Denmark.
That’s why European officials immediately read his “Ukraine can win” line as a farewell. His own secretary of state, Marco Rubio, walked it back hours later, saying the war will end at the negotiating table.
So yes, the words sounded tougher. But there’s no new aid, no sanctions push, no material change. Just a hand-off to Europe and NATO.
The test will be what happens next. If the US munitions pipeline stays patchy and the sanctions machine remains dismantled, then this “pivot” is just rhetoric.