Trump says Ukraine is able to win back all the land it lost since the beginning of the invasion
In a post on Truth Social, Donald Trump said that Ukraine is in a position to “fight and win back” all of the territory it has lost since the beginning of the 2022 Russian invasion.
“Why not? Russia has been fighting aimlessly for three and a half years a War that should have taken a Real Military Power less than a week to win,” Trump wrote, in a rare full-throated endorsement of Ukraine’s potential.
“Ukraine would be able to take back their Country in its original form and, who knows, maybe even go further than that! Putin and Russia are in BIG Economic trouble, and this is the time for Ukraine to act,” Trump said in his lengthy social media meditation. He added that the US will continue to supply Nato with weapons for purchase.
Earlier, in a bilateral meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump said that the “Russian economy is terrible right now” and Ukraine has done a “pretty amazing” job at staving off the Kremlin’s forces.
Key events
Hundreds of federal employees at the General Services Administration, who lost their jobs during mass federal layoffs spearheaded by Elon Musk’s “department of government efficiency”, have been asked to return to work, according to an internal memo obtained by the Associated Press.
The memo offers fired employees the opportunity to return to work by 6 October after seven months of paid leave.
North Carolina’s legislature has approved a criminal justice bill named in honor of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska, who was stabbed to death on a commuter train last month.
The Republican-backed package will head next to the Democratic governor, Josh Stein..
“Iryna’s law” would eliminate cashless bail for many crimes and offer conditions for when offenders should be evaluated for involuntary commitment. The bill could also help restart executions in the state.
A gathering of the security council focused on the war in Ukraine has ended.
During the meeting, Russia’s deputy ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy said Ukrainians are fighting for the “advancement of Western geopolitical interests” and criticized “unsubstantiated allegations” of Russian drones entering Polish and Estonian air space.
Macron urges nations to work together to stop ‘might is right’ from prevailing
The French president Emmanuel Macron offered a dramatically different vision of the United Nations during his general assembly speech today, just hours after Donald Trump railed against the effectiveness of the body.
Acknowledging that this meeting of the general assembly falls on the United Nation’s 80th anniversary, Macron invoked the memory of the UN’s founding – following two world wars.
“Our world today deserves the same resolve we had then in terms of working together,” he said. “We need more than ever before to restore the state of cooperation that prevailed 80 years ago. However, in spite of that, we’re isolating ourselves.”
He noted that “climate change is not under control, biodiversity is collapsing” – just hours after Trump called climate change a “green scam” – and that “global trade is weathering tariff wars”.
While the United Nations’ “harshest critics are those who want to change the name of the game; they want to dominate” Macron emphasized that “we don’t want ‘might is right’ to prevail. That is the risk.”
Trump suggests he will meet Israel after multilateral talks with Arab and Muslim leaders
Donald Trump’s meeting with Arab and Muslim leaders at the United Nations has concluded. The president did not answer any questions, but White House pool reporters noted that he said he had a “very good meeting” and teased his intention to follow up with a meeting with Israel.
The Associated Press also noted that special envoy Steve Witkoff offered a thumbs-up in response to a question about how the meeting went.
China’s representative to the security council criticized the use of sanctions, a strategy that the Trump administration has shown renewed interest in at this meeting of the UN general assembly.
“Abusing unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction under the pretext of the crisis does not contribute to a political settlement,” the representative said.
The US has previously levied sanctions against China, and Chinese companies, for supporting Russia.
Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, touted Donald Trump’s role in negotiations to end the war in Ukraine during a meeting of the UN security council, while also noting that the president was open to levying “additional economic costs” on Russia and selling additional defensive weaponry and “potentially offensive weaponry” to Ukraine.
“The president is a very patient man,” Rubio said, “but his patience is not infinite.”
“The United States remains as committed as it has ever been to a peaceful resolution to this dangerous conflict, but there will come a moment where we will have to conclude that perhaps there is no interest in a peaceful resolution,” he added.
Defense secretary Pete Hegseth has decided to close a defense department advisory committee dedicated to recruiting and retaining women in the military.
In a social media post announcing the closure of the defense advisory committee on women in the services, Kingsley Wilson, a Pentagon spokesperson, wrote: “The Committee is focused on advancing a divisive feminist agenda that hurts combat readiness, while Secretary Hegseth has focused on advancing uniform, sex-neutral standards across the Department.”
The advisory committee was founded in 1951 under Harry Truman’s presidency. The Military Times reported earlier this year that the committee was one of 14 defense advisory committees flagged for potential termination, though many of those would require congressional approval to be disbanded.
Here’s more from my colleague Rachel Leingang:
Speaking to the UN general assembly today, Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African president, said “trade is now being used as a weapon against a number of countries in the world”.
The comment may have been a reference to Donald Trump’s tariffs – which include a 30% levy against South Africa. In May, Ramaphosa met Trump in the Oval Office, where the president played Ramaphosa a video that he falsely claimed proved genocide was being committed against white people under “the opposite of apartheid”.
Here’s more on the state of the US-South Africa relationship from my colleague David Smith:
Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer criticized Donald Trump for canceling a meeting with top Congressional Democrats, scheduled for Thursday, ahead of an approaching government funding deadline at the end of the month.
At a press conference, Schumer said Trump should “stop ranting” and that “time is of the essence” as the 30 September deadline approaches.
“Mr. President, do your job,” Schumer said.
Zelenskyy tells UN Russia is ‘doing everything’ to prolong war in Ukraine
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy is also speaking currently at a UN meeting of the Security Council.
“One of the prominent members of this council is doing everything to prolong the largest war in Europe since World War II,” Zelenskyy said. “Russia does this with its veto power.”
“China is also represented here, a powerful nation on which Russia relies completely,” he added. “Without China, Putin’s Russia is nothing.”
Zelenskyy also nodded to his recent meeting with Donald Trump. “We expect America’s actions to push Moscow toward peace,” he said.
Donald Trump’s multilateral meeting with several leaders of Arab and Muslim countries has begun.
In brief remarks to reporters, Trump said, “We want to end the war in Gaza.”
“This is my most important meeting,” he added. “We’re going to end something that should have probably never started.”
During his pull aside with Macron, Donald Trump flagged that his next meeting – a multilateral sitdown with several leaders of Arab and Muslim countries – will be crucial to address the ongoing crisis in Gaza.
“We’re going to see if we can do something about it. We want to stop that. We want to get our hostages back, or their hostages back.”
Much like his address to the general assembly today, the president said that we can’t “forget” the October 7 attack by Hamas in his meeting with Macron. In response, the French president said “nobody forgets the seventh of October”.
This week, France joined Britain, Canada, Portugal and Australia to formally recognize Palestinian statehood. For his part, Donald Trump has branded the move as a “reward to Hamas”.
In meeting with Macron, Trump reiterates belief that Ukraine has power to gain back territory: ‘I really do feel that way’
In a meeting with French president Emanuel Macron, Donald Trump reiterated his recent comments on Truth Social that Ukraine has the potential to win back all the territory it has lost to Russia in the three and a half years since the most recent war in the region began.
Trump said that Ukraine’s ability to fight back might prove that Russia is a “paper tiger”.
“I feel that way. I really do feel that way. Let them get their land back,” the president added.
Trump says Ukraine is able to win back all the land it lost since the beginning of the invasion
In a post on Truth Social, Donald Trump said that Ukraine is in a position to “fight and win back” all of the territory it has lost since the beginning of the 2022 Russian invasion.
“Why not? Russia has been fighting aimlessly for three and a half years a War that should have taken a Real Military Power less than a week to win,” Trump wrote, in a rare full-throated endorsement of Ukraine’s potential.
“Ukraine would be able to take back their Country in its original form and, who knows, maybe even go further than that! Putin and Russia are in BIG Economic trouble, and this is the time for Ukraine to act,” Trump said in his lengthy social media meditation. He added that the US will continue to supply Nato with weapons for purchase.
Earlier, in a bilateral meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump said that the “Russian economy is terrible right now” and Ukraine has done a “pretty amazing” job at staving off the Kremlin’s forces.
EU chief says Trump is ‘absolutely right’ about Europe buying Russian oil
Earlier, president of the EU commission Ursula von der Leyen said that Donald Trump was “absolutely right” about European countries continuing to buy Russian energy products. A move the president described as “inexcusable” in his address to the UN general assembly today.
“We’re on it. We have reduced already massive gas supply from Russia, completely gotten out of Russian coal, and massively also reduced the oil supply. But there’s still some coming to the European continent,” von der Leyen said during a pull aside meeting with the presiden. “So what we do now? We put sanctions out to those ports where, for example, energy is coming from Russia. And we want to put tariffs on oil supplies that are still coming to the European Union.”
Man who attempted to assassinate Trump at Florida golf course found guilty
Ryan Routh, the man who attempted to assassinate Donald Trump at the president’s Florida golf course last year, has been found guilty in federal court today.
Routh, 59, was convicted on five counts, including attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate and possessing a firearm as a convicted felon. In September 2024, he was spotted with a rifle hiding in the bushes at the president’s West Palm Beach club as Trump’s golfing party approached. Routh represented himself in court, and prosecutors accused him of plotting for months to kill Donald Trump during his successful run to return to the White House.
“Today’s guilty verdict against would-be Trump assassin Ryan Routh illustrates the Department of Justice’s commitment to punishing those who engage in political violence,” said attorney general Pam Bondi.
Jurors deliberated for just a few hours before returning with a guilty verdict. According to reports from the courtroom, as the verdict was being read, Routh attempted to stab himself in the neck with a pen.
Fox News reports that four marshals then dragged Routh out of the court room, shackled him, and brought him back.