The Republican Party of the Senate is defending Trump, Ukraine, the temporary suspension of the negotiating tactic



Republicans in the Senate are defending President Trump’s decision to stop the aid of Ukraine as a negotiating tactic days after his general disagreement with Ukrainian President Folodimir Zelinsky at the Oval Office.

The Republican Party lawmakers still feel the final shake of Friday’s bombing, which launched a metal deal between the two leaders.

However, many of the enthusiastic supporters of Ukraine believe that the administration’s decision to pressure stop providing assistance is nothing more than a trick in order to return the Ukrainians to the table to sign the metal deal and distribute the road towards a larger deal to end the war with Russia.

“I don’t think it will continue for a long time. I hope it will not last long. Senator Mike Rollts (Ru ru) said:” I think the president only wants to move everyone to the table, and I think he is making progress. “I think President Zelinski’s response this morning was positive and moved in the right direction.”

“Even if you have Russia to invade Ukraine, at some point in the day, you should overcome the position of the First World War we have in the battlefield at the present time. I think the president wants to get there and seems to be some progress,” Trump’s invitation is called “the negotiating tactic.”

Trump announced on Monday night the decision, which is temporarily stopping the military aid of the war.

Zelensky said at X on Tuesday morning that he is ready to sign the metal deal at “any time and in any appropriate format,” and he called on Friday to Trump and Vice President Verse, “Unfortunately.”

“We see this agreement as a step towards more security and solid security guarantee, and I really hope it will work effectively,” Zelinski added.

Reuters reported that Trump told his aides that he wanted to sign the deal and agree during his speech to Congress on Tuesday, although things remained liquid.

The suspension also culminated in aid to a strain that included Trump, stressing that Ukraine began the war and described Zelinski as a dictator, and the United States voted against a United Nations resolution that declares that Russia was the aggressor, and to face tension on Friday against the media.

A number of Republicans welcomed the latest comments of the Ukrainian President and remains in the hope that he would harm any Moscow’s final deal when everything is said and done.

But the first step is to conclude the metal deal. Verse said during his appearance on the Capitol Hill that it was time for the Ukrainians to reach the table and start negotiating “again and that Trump is still committed to the metal agreement.

“There is a deal there,” said the majority leader of the Senate John Thun (RS.

Thun also described the Friday meeting “unfortunate”.

However, many legislators were not clear about the immediate effect that a pause would cause. Senator Tom Teleles (RN.C), a great supporter of Ukraine recently, said he was still trying to determine when Ukrainian fighters will feel pain in the battlefield.

“There is stopping help, but it does not necessarily start today because President Biden provided a lot of aid,” said Teles. “So the question I am trying to get is to answer any point that this stop becomes a material to maintain the daily voltage? You don’t have an answer yet.”

“To the extent that Putin does not benefit from, I am fine,” continued a possible deal to end the war. “But my only concern is what kind of scenario that Putin is satisfied with. I don’t want an agreement that he is satisfied with. I want to make him feel completely lost for three years and a horrific loss of life.”

Senator Tillis said, saying that he is still trying to collect more information about the situation and was hoping to obtain some possible clarity from the president during the joint session on Tuesday to Congress.

Friday’s meeting also prompted the leading European allies in Kiev alongside them at a time when the Trump administration became more sympathetic to the Russians. The United Kingdom, France and Germany have all pledged to enhance their help towards the nation.

But the members are still hoping that the metal deal will end and that the aid will continue to flow.

“It is clear that Ukraine needs our support and I think the vast majority of us support Ukraine,” said Rlonds. “They were the ones who were attacked and we needed to overcome this point where people simply die in the battlefield and I think this is what the president wants to do is reach the part in which we end the war.”

“Let’s discover the amount of pressure that can actually wear on the Russians,” continued. “They are the aggressors. I don’t think this has not noticed anyone, including people in management.”

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