Secretary of State Marco Rubio scrambled to justify the administrationâs lack of progress toward a UkraineâRussia ceasefire during Donald Trumpâs recent meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska.
In a round of interviews on four Sunday news programs, Rubio, who used to be strongly anti-Putin, struggled to defend the administrationâs position, despite Trumpâs boasting that he made âBIG PROGRESS ON RUSSIAâ in a Truth Social post that morning.
Thatâs a big change of tune to what Trump said before he met with Putin: âI want to see a ceasefire rapidly. I donât know if itâs going to be today, but Iâm not going to be happy if itâs not today.â
This Week host Martha Raddatz pointed out this inconvenient fact, asking Rubio if Trump changed his mind.
âThe fighting hasnât stopped. The killing hasnât stopped. And there is no ceasefire. What changed President Trumpâs mind?â Raddatz asked.
âI donât think his mind has changed at all,â Rubio said. âI think, ultimately, if this whole effort doesnât work out then, yes, there is going to have to be additional consequences to Russia, but weâre trying to avoid that by reaching a peace agreement. And thatâs not going to be easy. Itâs going to take a lot of work.â
Rubio continued to hedge: âSo, weâre still a long ways off. I mean, weâre not at the precipice of a peace agreement. Weâre not at the edge of one, but I do think progress was made.â
But Rubio refused to elaborate on what that progress was, nor would he name any concessions that Putin agreed to.
Raddatz pressed Rubio. âThe president went in to that meeting saying he wanted a ceasefire and there would be consequences if they didnât agree on a ceasefire in that meeting, and they didnât agree to a ceasefire. Where are the consequences?â she asked.
âThatâs not the aim,â Rubio responded.
âThe president said that was the aim,â Raddatz said.
The public meeting between Putin and Trump went so poorly, even Fox News described it as a flop where Putin clearly dominated the conversation: âThe way that it felt in the room was not good. It did not seem like things went well. And it seemed like Putin came in and steamrolled, got right into what he wanted to say and got his photo next to the president and then left,â the networkâs senior White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich said.
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On Fox Newsâ Sunday Morning Futures, Rubio said that while âthereâs a lot of work that remains,â the U.S.-Russia conversation zeroed in on issues of borders, long-term security for Kyv, and Ukraineâs military alliances.
Steve Witkoff, Trumpâs special envoy to Russia, disclosed more details, saying on CNN that the U.S. allegedly won âthe concession that the United States could offer Article Five-like protectionâ to Ukraine, referring to the kind of protection NATO countries provide one another. Putin has vehemently opposed Ukraine becoming a NATO member.
Rubioâs role in the administration has led him to compromise his views on Putinâs aggression toward Ukraine. On Meet the Press, host Kristen Welker rolled out a clip of Rubio from 2022 arguing that âyou canât cut deals with guysâ like Putin.
As a senator, Rubio called Putin several things â âbloodthirsty,â âa butcher,â and âa monster.â He also pressed the Biden administration to continue supporting Ukrainians âas long as they are willing to fight.â
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Democrats have been staunchly critical of the administrationâs handling of Russiaâs aggression toward Ukraine.
âThat meeting was a disaster. It was an embarrassment for the United States,â Sen. Chris Murphy said Sunday on Meet the Press. âIt was a failure. Putin got everything he wanted.â
â[Putin] didnât have to give up anything. Nothing, right?â Murphy continued. âPresident Trump said he wanted a ceasefire. It appears the ceasefire wasnât even seriously discussed. And, then⊠thereâs no consequences. Trump said, âIf I donât get a ceasefire, Putinâs going to pay a price.â And then he walked out of that meeting saying, âI didnât get a ceasefire. I didnât get a peace deal. And Iâm not even considering sanctions.â You heard Secretary Rubio downplay sanctions. And, so, Putin walks away with his photo op, with zero commitments made and zero consequences. What a great day for Russia.â
Murphy also unleashed on congressional Republicans for doing Trumpâs bidding. âIn the Congress, the Republicans essentially work for President Trump,â he said. âAnd if President Trump tells them that his number one priority is to keep Vladimir Putin happy, not to actually levy the kind of sanctions that would create a realistic negotiating table, Republicans are gonna listen.â
Rep. Jason Crow also pointed out what a failure the meeting was, calling it a âhistoric embarrassmentâ for the U.S.
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âWhat [Putin] cares about is three things: economic pressure in the form of sanctions, being a pariah state, and military defeat⊠This admin continues to be unwilling to do anything to assert pressure in any of those three areas,â he said.
Ukraineâs President Volodymyr Zelensky will visit Washington on Monday where he will meet with Trump. The last time Zelensky visited D.C., both Trump and Vance publicly berated him in the Oval Office, with Vance bashing him for not saying âthank youâ enough to the United States.