Fox News interrupted for breaking Donald Trump news in 'sad' bombshell



During a live broadcast from the White House, President Donald Trump made what he himself described as a “sad” admission while sitting alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and a group of European leaders.

Fox News cut straight to the Oval Office where both presidents faced a round of tough questions from reporters. One journalist asked Trump if he believed the American media even wanted to see a peace deal, pointing out that coverage of his efforts has often been critical.

This moment came just days after Trump’s high-profile meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska, a summit that raised new questions about whether Trump could realistically broker a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine.

In his response, Trump emphasized that he was not aiming for temporary ceasefires but long-term peace deals. He claimed that since taking office he had “ended six wars,” citing conflicts between countries such as Israel and Iran, Congo and Rwanda, Cambodia and Thailand, India and Pakistan, Serbia and Kosovo, and Egypt and Ethiopia.

Trump told reporters:


“The level of hatred and animosity is incredible. Not with everyone there are great people too but some of the press refuses to recognize what has been accomplished. I’ve solved major wars that lasted decades, and yet the coverage is always negative.”


He pointed to Zelensky while adding:


“Whatever deal I do, you’ll come out well, and Putin will come out well. But the story will still be ‘Trump was horrible.’”


The president went on to say that he had grown used to negative press since his first election campaign, contrasting his earlier “great publicity” with what he now sees as the “worst publicity any president has faced.”

What he described as “sad” was the way his actions were being interpreted:


“It’s very sad when you do the right thing. Putin coming to America was not a defeat for me it was a difficult step for him, and the fact he did it should be seen as significant. But if he hadn’t come, the same voices would have called it a disaster for me.”


By the time of Monday’s meeting with European leaders, Trump had already shifted away from discussing a ceasefire. Referring to his past negotiations, he told Zelensky:


“If you look at the six deals I settled this year, they were all wars. I didn’t do any ceasefires. I don’t think you need a ceasefire.”

Whether Trump’s approach will bring results in Ukraine remains to be seen, but his comments underline his insistence on permanent peace agreements rather than temporary pauses in fighting.

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