Share and Follow

by Juliana Cruz Lima, Foreign News Reporter

RIGHT now, everything hangs in the balance – and the power dynamic could shift in a heartbeat.

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, former British Army officer and military analyst, said the fact the summit is even happening is a win in itself.

But as for who’s calling the shots? That’s where things get complicated.

Noting the Russian leader still believes he’s making ground in Ukraine, the expert told The Sun: “Until fairly recently, it’s been pretty clear that President Putin has absolutely no desire for peace.

“His aim at the beginning of his special military operation over three and a half years ago was to subjugate the whole of Ukraine.”

According to de Bretton-Gordon, Trump has only recently woken up to the fact that he’s being played.

“It would appear that Trump has had a bit of an epiphany, a bit of a change of mind, and has now realised that Putin has been playing him.”

And now, Don is bringing the businessman in him and threatening to hit Russia where it hurts most: the wallet.

“If Trump follows through with his sanctions and tariffs… then this is the reason I think that Putin has come to the table,” de Bretton-Gordon explained.

“Economic and financial analysts who really know about these things believe that the Russian economy would peter out pretty quickly without the massive amounts of money and resources it gets from oil.”

In other words, Trump holds the economic sledgehammer — if he’s willing to swing it.

But Putin isn’t out of the game. His forces are still advancing, still hammering Ukrainian cities, and still killing civilians.

“Russia seems to be moving forward slowly,” de Bretton-Gordon warned.

“Attacking civilian targets in Ukraine at an unbelievable scale.”

Zelensky, meanwhile, remains the wild card.

“The people who are most important here are the Ukrainians,” he said.

“A bad deal for Ukraine is worse than no deal at all.”

And that’s the real risk. Trump might be chasing headlines, not justice.

“I think Trump probably just wants to get a deal of some description,” the former army officer said.

“One just hopes that Trump doesn’t try and do some sort of backhand deal with Putin, just so that he can claim that there is now peace in Ukraine, because the short-term peace is no good to anybody.”

So who has the upper hand? Right now, it’s still up for grabs.

But if Trump sticks to his economic guns, and if Putin starts to feel the heat on the home front, the balance might just tip.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Mystery deepens over sudden death of designer, 33, on board boat in the Hamptons after cops issue ‘violence’ update

THE death of a fashion designer found dead on a boat at…

How Conservative Grassroots Movements Can Protect the Nation from Legal Battles

On Thursday’s “Alex Marlow Show,” host and Breitbart Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow talked…

James Cameron Cautions Against AI-Weapons Combo, Predicts ‘Terminator’-Like Catastrophe

Hollywood director and filmmaker James Cameron is warning “there’s danger” of a…

Italian city experiences significant decline in hotel and Airbnb reservations with half of the rooms unoccupied following anti-tourism demonstrations sweeping across Europe.

A popular Italian city has seen a massive drop in hotel and…

Kamala Harris stumbles right out of the gate

It might be the only thing Team Biden got right politically —…

Actor, 35, is shot and killed on dog walk in broad daylight while trying to help stranger ‘arguing with boyfriend’

AN actor has been shot to death after getting in the middle…

According to Janowski, Trump Faces Challenges from Epstein Documents and Israel’s Response

A blog post by Yoseph Janowski on The Times of Israel suggests…

Influencer wife ‘defends husband’ who hurled horrific abuse at Virgin Atlantic stewardess he threatened to ‘gang rape’

ONE of the wives of a business tycoon who threatened to gang…