KYIV, Ukraine — U.S. President Donald Trump said in an interview published Friday that ''Crimea will stay with Russia," the latest example of the U.S. leader pressuring Ukraine to make concessions to end the war while it remains under siege.
''Zelenskyy understands that,'' Trump said, referring to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, ''and everybody understands that it's been with them for a long time."
Trump made the comments in a Time magazine interview conducted on Tuesday. Trump has been accusing Zelenskyy of prolonging the war by resisting negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Western European leaders, however, have accused Putin of dragging his feet in the negotiations and seeking to grab more Ukrainian land while his army has battlefield momentum.
The war could be approaching a pivotal moment as the Trump administration weighs its options. Senior U.S. officials have warned that the administration could soon give up attempts to stop the war if the two sides do not come to a settlement. That could potentially mean a halt of crucial U.S. military aid for Ukraine.
Crimea is a strategic peninsula along the Black Sea in southern Ukraine. It was seized by Russia in 2014, while President Barack Obama was in office, years before Russia's full-scale invasion of its neighbor in 2022.
''They've had their submarines there for long before any period that we're talking about, for many years. The people speak largely Russian in Crimea,'' Trump said. ''But this was given by Obama. This wasn't given by Trump.''
Zelenskyy has repeated many times during the war that recognizing occupied Ukrainian territory as Russian is a red line for his country.
Speaking to reporters Friday as he left the White House to attend the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome, Trump said there is no deadline for the conclusion of peace talks.