Trump can’t find Alaska on mental map—thinks he’s traveling to Russia for Putin talks
US President Donald Trump confused Alaska with Russia, falsely claimed Ukraine started Russia’s invasion, and pushed for Ukrainian territorial concessions during an 11 August press conference. The President announced he was “going to Russia” for his 15 August Putin summit, apparently forgetting the meeting is in Alaska, while declaring Ukraine must accept “land swapping.”
This comes as Russia continues its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
President mistakes US state for aggressor nation
The Independent says that Trump told reporters from the White House briefing room:
“I’m going to see Putin. I’m going to Russia on Friday.”
Trump’s geographical confusion sparked immediate social media reaction, WION notes. Users asked whether the US plans to give Alaska to Russia as part of Ukraine negotiations.
USA Today reports the president confirmed the meeting location on Truth Social last week, writing:
“The highly anticipated meeting between myself, as President of the United States of America, and President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, will take place next Friday, August 15, 2025, in the Great State of Alaska.”
Trump falsely claims Ukraine started Russia’s invasion
Trump also returned to Russian narratives by suggesting Ukraine somehow started Russia’s invasion of itself. Axios reports that Trump falsely suggested Zelenskyy chose to start the war. The President said he was “a little bothered” by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s weekend assertion that ceding territory would violate Ukraine’s Constitution.
Reuters says Trump told the press conference:
“He’s got approval to go into a war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap?”
Axios notes this represents a return to hostile treatment of the Ukrainian president after months of apparent warming between them.
Trump pushes territorial concessions despite Ukrainian rejection
“There’ll be some land swapping going on,” Trump declared, claiming to know this “through Russia and through conversations with everybody, to the good of Ukraine.“
USA Today says Trump claimed some moves would allegedly benefit Ukraine, while others would not.
“It’s very complex, because you have lines that are very uneven,” Trump stated per the outlet.
European leaders reject concessions before ceasefire
EU policy chief Kaja Kallas said:
“Russia has not agreed to full and unconditional ceasefire, we should not even discuss any concessions.”
Kallas emphasized that “transatlantic unity, support to Ukraine and pressure on Russia” were needed to end the war. The outlet notes she warned concessions would not prevent “future Russian aggression in Europe.”
Trump reveals negotiation strategy without Ukraine
According to Axios, Trump said he would call Zelenskyy after meeting Putin. The US President stated per the outlet:
“I may say, ‘lots of luck, keep fighting.’ Or I may say, ‘we can make a deal.'”
Trump also claimed he would know “probably in the first two minutes” whether progress with Putin was possible, according to Reuters. Trump plans to “feel out” Putin’s willingness to reach an agreement.
President cites misleading Ukrainian opinion data
Axios reports that Trump falsely cited a poll claiming 88% of Ukrainians want immediate peace. The outlet clarifies the true Gallup figure is 69%, though this still represents a dramatic increase. Nevertheless, the desire for peace does not imply the support for ceding territories.
According to Reuters, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke with Canadian counterpart Mark Carney on 11 August. According to a Downing Street readout cited by Reuters, they agreed peace “must be built with Ukraine – not imposed upon it.“
Russian demands
Kremlin officials reportedly demand Ukraine cede strategically vital unoccupied territory in Donetsk Oblast and freeze frontlines elsewhere as ceasefire conditions. Putin appears to offer deliberately unacceptable proposals to delay sanctions and meaningful negotiations while blaming Ukraine.
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