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Donald Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia said the president-elect wants The biggest war in Europe since World War II. finish as soon as possible, as it will enter its third year in February.
Keith Kellogg, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general who served in the first Trump administration, told “America Reports” on Wednesday that the “carnage” of the war, which began after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, it should end. quickly.
“The Russian casualties, the Ukrainian casualties, the damage to their cities – this is a war that must end. And I think he (Trump) can do it in the short term,” Kellogg said.
“I really have a lot of confidence in his ability to get to a position where this war is over. And I think what people need to understand is that he’s not trying to give anything to anyone.” (Russian President Vladimir) Putin or to the Russians. “He’s actually trying to save Ukraine and save its sovereignty, and he’s going to make sure it’s fair and just.”
Trump repeatedly said during the 2024 election campaign that he could resolve the war between Russia and Ukraine within 24 hours.
At a news conference at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday, Trump said he knows Putin would like to meet with him, but believes such a meeting would be inappropriate until he is officially sworn in as president on Inauguration Day on the 20th. of January.
He added that he would like to see the fighting end within six months.
“Look, Russia is losing a lot of young people, as is Ukraine, and this should never have been started,” he said. “That is a war that should never have happened.”
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Kellogg said he would like to set an even shorter timeline with a goal of 100 days to end the war.
“Let’s set it at 100 days and let’s go back completely and find a way to do this in the short term to make sure that the solution is robust, sustainable and that this war ends so we can stop the massacre” he told Fox News host Sandra Smith. “I think it’s going to be very, very important to do that. It’s going to be important for our national security. “It is part of our vital national interests and it is also good for Europe and the world.”
TO said a senior US defense official in October that Russia has had more than 600,000 casualties since 2022, and in September alone, its forces suffered “more casualties in terms of combat deaths and injuries than in any other month of the war.”
Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy, who met Trump for the first time in New York in late September, said the incoming president of the United States. is “strong and unpredictable” and would like that “unpredictability” to be “directed primarily towards the Russian Federation.”
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United Nations Deputy Director of Human Rights Nada Al-Nashif He said earlier this week that more than 12,300 civilians, including more than 650 children, have been killed in Ukraine since the start of the war.