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Trump threatens tariffs targeting Russia without Ukraine deal in 50 days

by Kathryn Watson
July 14, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Trump threatens tariffs targeting Russia without Ukraine deal in 50 days

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Washington — President Trump said Monday that the U.S. will impose 100% tariffs on countries that do business with Russia if there is no peace deal to end the war in Ukraine within 50 days, unveiling his plans to implement secondary sanctions as his frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin grows.

“We’re going to be doing secondary tariffs if we don’t have a deal within 50 days. It’s very simple,” Mr. Trump said in the Oval Office, alongside NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. “And they’ll be at 100%.” 

“We are very unhappy, I am, with Russia,” the president explained. 

Mr. Trump also said the U.S. has reached a deal to sell weapons to NATO nations, and Rutte said those countries will in turn send weapons to Ukraine to replenish their depleted stockpiles. The Pentagon paused shipments of some weapons shipments to Ukraine earlier this month, but Mr. Trump reversed course last week, saying Ukraine must be able to defend itself.

“We’ve made a deal today where we’re going to be sending them weapons and they’re going to be paying for them,” Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “We, the United States, will not be having any payment made. We’re not buying it, but we will manufacture it, and they’re going to be paying for it.”

“This is really big,” said Rutte, who said Mr. Trump called him last week to inform him of his decision. “And the decision is that you want Ukraine [to have] what it needs to have to maintain to be able to defend itself against Russia, but you want Europeans to pay for it, which is totally logical.” 

Mr. Trump on Monday expressed frustration with Putin following his multiple calls with the Russian leader since taking office in January. 

“I always hang up, say, ‘Well, that was a nice phone call.’ And then missiles are launched into Kyiv or some other city and I say, ‘That’s strange.’ And after that happens three or four times, you say, the talk doesn’t mean anything,” he said.

“He’s — I don’t want to say he’s an assassin, but he’s a tough guy,” Mr. Trump said of Putin, adding that Putin has fooled other presidents, “but he didn’t fool me.” 

“Ultimately, talk doesn’t talk, it’s got to be action, it’s got to be results,” Mr. Trump said. 

Some in Congress have pushed for even higher secondary sanctions on Russia as the war grinds on. Sen. Lindsey Graham is pushing legislation in the Senate that would give the president the ability to impose tariffs of up to 500% on any country that helps Russia. He told “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Sunday that these sanctions would give Mr. Trump a “sledgehammer” to end the war.

“We’re going after the people who keep Putin in business, and additional sanctions on Russia itself,” Graham said. “This is truly a sledgehammer available to President Trump to end this war.”

Graham called this a “turning point” in the war that started when Russia invaded Ukraine in Feb. 2022. 

Graham, a close ally of Mr. Trump’s, told “Face the Nation” that the U.S. has “given Ukraine a lot. We give them the money, we give them military aid.” But he noted that there could be a “plan where America will begin to sell to our European allies tremendous amounts of weapons that can benefit Ukraine.”

Republican Rep. French Hill, who spearheaded legislation during the Biden administration giving the president authority to seize foreign assets, said on “Face the Nation” on Sunday that now is the time to act.

“I think it’s time for the president to convert those seized assets to a trust account for the benefit of Ukraine,” Hill said. 

No American president has ever seized the sovereign central bank assets of a country that the U.S. is not at war with. Former U.S. officials told CBS News that the Biden administration declined to use that authority because of European opposition related to the unintended consequences on their own banking systems and economy that might result from seizing those state assets.

Kathryn Watson

Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital, based in Washington, D.C.

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