Trump says Putin should end the Ukraine war, not test missiles

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Smoke marks on the facade of a residential building damaged during a Russian drone and missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, October 22, 2025. REUTERS/Alina Smutko

US President Donald Trump has said that finding peace in Ukraine has been harder than reaching a ceasefire in Gaza or ending conflict between India and Pakistan.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- US President Donald Trump said that Russian President Vladimir Putin should end the war in Ukraine instead of

testing a nuclear-powered missile

, adding that the US has a nuclear submarine positioned off Russia’s coast.

Mr Putin said on Oct 26 that Russia had successfully tested its nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile, a nuclear-capable weapon Moscow says can pierce any defence shield, and will move towards deploying the weapon.

Asked on Air Force One about the test of the 9M730 Burevestnik (Storm Petrel) – dubbed the SSC-X-9 Skyfall by Nato – which Moscow said had flown for 14,000km, Mr Trump said the US did not need to fly so far as it has a nuclear submarine off the coast of Russia. 

“They know we have a nuclear submarine, the greatest in the world, right off their shores, so I mean, it doesn’t have to go 8,000 miles,” Mr Trump told reporters, according to an audio file posted by the White House. “I don’t think it’s an appropriate thing for Putin to be saying, either, by the way: You ought to get the war ended, the war that should have taken one week is now in... its fourth year, that’s what you ought to do instead of testing missiles,” Mr Trump said.

Mr Trump has repeatedly said he

wants to end the war in Ukraine

, Europe’s deadliest since World War II, though he has said that finding peace there has been harder than reaching a ceasefire in Gaza or ending conflict between India and Pakistan.

Since first announcing the 9M730 Burevestnik in 2018, Mr Putin has cast the weapon as a response to moves by the US to build a missile defence shield after Washington in 2001 unilaterally withdrew from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and to enlarge the Nato military alliance.

Asked about Mr Trump’s remarks, the Kremlin said Russia would be guided by its own national interests but saw no reason for the missile test to strain relations with the White House.

“Despite all our openness to establishing a dialogue with the United States, Russia, first of all, and the president of Russia, (are) guided by our own national interests,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“That’s how it was, that’s how it is, and that’s how it’s going to be.”

The Kremlin said Russia was ensuring its own security by developing new weapons.

“There is nothing here that can and should strain relations between Moscow and Washington,” Mr Peskov said.

Warnings of risk of war

Mr Trump has repeatedly spoken of moving US submarines to Russia’s coast after remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev on the risk of war between the nuclear-armed adversaries.

It is rare for either side to discuss in public the location of nuclear-armed submarines.

Speaking about the Russian missile test, Mr Trump said: “We test missiles all the time.”

“They’re not playing games with us and we’re not playing games with them, either,” he said.

Reuters reported from Washington on Oct 25 that Mr Trump’s administration has

prepared additional sanctions

it could use to target key areas of Russia’s economy if Mr Putin continues to delay ending Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

Asked if he was considering additional sanctions on Russia, Mr Trump said: “You’ll find out.”
REUTERS

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