- Trump threatened new tariffs on Russia unless Moscow agrees to end the Ukraine war, urging Europe to join in.
- He rejected Palestinian statehood, aligning with Israel and demanding hostages’ release first.
- His speech also pushed hardline migration policies and previewed new asylum restrictions.
In his first address to the UN General Assembly since returning to power, US President Donald Trump delivered a fiery speech warning Russia of sweeping new economic measures. He declared that unless Moscow makes a deal to end the war in Ukraine, the US is prepared to impose “a very strong round of powerful tariffs.” But he also pressed European nations to match his policies, saying coordinated sanctions were the only way to force Vladimir Putin to pull back.
Trump is scheduled to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy later in the day, signaling that Washington still intends to play a central role in shaping the war’s outcome. Yet he admitted that his threats will mean little without Europe cutting off Russian oil purchases first.
Rejecting Palestinian Statehood, Backing Israel
Dozens of world leaders at the UN embraced Palestinian statehood as a path to peace. Trump, however, flatly rejected the idea, aligning himself with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He argued that granting recognition now would “reward Hamas terrorists” and insisted that any peace framework must first secure the return of hostages.
“We have to stop the war in Gaza immediately. We have to negotiate peace,” Trump said, but only under terms that favor Israel’s current stance. His comments sparked sharp contrast with the diplomatic push happening in the chamber.
Migration, Isolationism, and a Few Jabs at the UN
Beyond foreign wars, Trump doubled down on his hardline migration policies, urging world leaders to follow his example of mass deportations. “It’s destroying your country, and you have to do something about it,” he warned, repeating his long-held argument that migration threatens national security.
In typical Trump fashion, the speech also included personal grievances. He mocked the UN for its “bad escalator and bad teleprompter,” recalling how he and Melania Trump were briefly stuck before the event. His America First stance, slashed foreign aid, and tariff-heavy policies have unsettled US allies and thrown UN diplomacy into uncertainty.
Asylum Restrictions on the Horizon
According to planning documents reviewed by Reuters, Trump’s administration is preparing to narrow asylum rights further. The proposal would force asylum-seekers to apply in the first country they enter instead of choosing their destination. Critics say this unravels the post-WWII framework for humanitarian protection.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres is expected to meet Trump this week as 150 heads of state and government gather in New York. With Trump’s tougher asylum stance and his combative speech, many diplomats left the chamber wondering how far the US will go in reshaping the global order.