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06-05-2025 – President Trump Participates in a Bilateral Meeting with the Chancellor of Germany

Chancellor Merz: So to let you know, this is the birth certificate of Donald Trump’s grandfather, born in 1869, close to Bad Dürkheim.

The President: That’s called serious –.

Chancellor Merz: And his Christian name was Friedrich.

The President: That’s serious German.

Chancellor Merz: Serious German name.

The President: That’s a serious German name, but Durkheim is serious German too. But I want to thank you very much for — first of all, I want to thank for that. That’s beautiful. Thank you very, very much. Fantastic. We’ll put it up in a place of honor. I don’t know, maybe we can — let’s see. We’ll have to put it there someplace. It’s an honor to have you. As you know, the Chancellor just won a great election — very, very strong election. A very respected man. I can tell you, we’ve been on the phone many times talking about some of the problems of the world outside of Germany. And it’s very sad what’s going on. We both feel that way. What’s going with Russia-Ukraine. Ukraine in particular. I’d like to see it end, and maybe it’ll end. But we get some news. There’ll be some fighting. Something happened a couple of days ago, and now they do a return, and, you know, here it goes. It’s not good. He’s unhappy about it. I’m unhappy about. But I think eventually we’re going to be successful in stopping the bloodshed. It’s pure bloodsheds. Five, six thousand young soldiers a week are being killed. You know that? Those numbers. There’s staggering numbers. But, Chancellor, I just want to congratulate you, and I want to welcome you to the Oval Office.

Chancellor Merz: Thank you.

The President: It’s an Oval office that’s in very good shape. We like fixing things up and having them tippy-top, like they have in Germany. They do that in Germany very much. And we do it here. We’re having a very good run. We had a — I also had a great election, a great win. Won everything. Won the popular vote, the all-seven swing states, which is a big deal. It’s pretty unusual to do that. And we have a great mandate from the people. And part of our mandate is we’re going to have a great relationship with your country. So I just want to thank you very much for being here. And if you’d like to say a few words?.

Chancellor Merz: Absolutely. Thank you, first of all, Mr. President, for your kind invitation to come to Washington, D.C. I was in this building first time ever in 1982, I told you, when former President Ronald Reagan was in office. So I’m very happy to be here again and to offer our close cooperation with the United States of America. We are having so much in common, our history. We owe the Americans a lot. We will never forget about that. And so with your German provenance I think this is a very good basis for close cooperation between America and Germany. So again thank you. Thank you for the hospitality and thank you for having your guest house for a night. This is a great place, great place. Many thanks for that. I really enjoy it.

The President: It’s a wonderful place. It’s the landmark also. And Blair House, it’s a nice place to stay. Thank you very much for saying that. Would you have any questions, please?.

The Press: Mr. President, on your new travel ban, why now? And if the Boulder attack was part of your reasoning, why not include Egypt on that list where the suspect is from?.

The President: Well, because Egypt has been a country that we deal with very closely. They have things under control. The countries that we have don’t have things under control, and why now? I can say that it can’t come soon enough, frankly. We want to keep bad people out of our country. The Biden administration allowed some horrendous people, and we’re getting them out, one by one. And we’re not stopping until we get them out. We have thousands of murderers. I hate to — I even hate to say this in front of the Chancellor. But you have a little problem, too, with some of the people that were allowed into your country. It’s not your fault. It’s not your fault, it shouldn’t have happened. I told her it shouldn’t have happened what she did. But you, you have your own difficulty with that, and we do, and we’re moving them out. And we’re moving them out very strongly. But it can’t come fast enough. We want to get them out, we want to them out now. We don’t want to have other bad people coming into our country, but using the word bad, I’m being nice.

The Press: Okay, you put out on Truth Social a post regarding your conversation with President Xi. Can you talk about whether or not you feel that trade talks, trade relations are back on track after appearing to be a little bit off track last week?.

The President: A little bit off track. It was only the complexity. Yes, it’s pretty complex stuff. We had a very good conversation with President Xi a little while ago, just before your arrival. In fact, we just hung up, and they said, you’re here. I said, that’s pretty good. Two great leaders of the world in a very short period of time. We had very good talk, and we’ve straightened out any complexity. And it’s very complex stuff, and we straightened it out. The agreement was we’re going to have Scott and Howard and Jamison will be going and meeting with their top people and continue it forward. But no, I think we have everything I think were in very good shape with China and the trade deal. We have a deal with China as you know but we were straightening out some of the points having to do mostly with rare-earth magnets and some other things.

The Press: So those reduced trade tariff rates, they remain in effect?.

The President: We have the deal. I mean, we’ve had a deal. We announced the deal, and we’ll be — I guess you could say — I wouldn’t even say finalizing it up, Scott. I would say we have a deal, and we’re going to just make sure that everybody understands what the deal is. We had a really good conversation. By the way, he invited me to China, and I invited him here. We both accepted. So I’ll be going there with the First Lady at a certain point, and he’ll be coming here, hopefully, with the first lady of China.

The Press: Did you talk about the Chinese students? Are you allowing them to come?.

The President: Oh, yeah, no, Chinese students are coming. No problem. No problem, it’s our honor to have them, frankly. We want to have foreign students, but we want them to be checked. You know, the case of Harvard and Columbia and others, all we want to do is see their list. There’s no problem with that. This is anybody outside of our country, international students, because when we see some of the people that we’ve been watching, we say, where do these people come from? How is that possible? No, we want to have foreign students come. We’re very honored by it, but we want to see their list. Harvard didn’t want to give us the list. They’re going to be giving us the list now. I think they’re starting to behave, actually, if you want to know the truth.

The Press: On Russia, are you willing to put more pressure on Putin to end the war by imposing new sanctions on Russia and also on China?.

The President: Well, remember, I’m the one that ended Nord Stream 2, going to a place called Germany. Come to think of it. I’m sorry I did that. But I ended Nord Stream 2. Nobody else did. And then when Biden came in, he immediately approved it. That’s the largest — essentially the largest pipeline in the world, going to Germany and other countries. And, by the way, we have so much oil and gas. You will not be able to buy it all. I mean, you literally — we have much. And I hope we’re going to make that a part of our trade deal because we have more than anybody else. We have actually the most, by far, in the world, probably double what anyone else has. So we’ll work on that. I’m sure that’s something we’ll discuss today.

The Press: What do you expect from Germany and what do you expect from the Chancellor?.

The President: Well, first of all, I’m glad to meet, because I’ve been dealing with the Chancellor, and he’s a very good man to deal with. He’s difficult, I would say. Can I say that? It’s a positive. You wouldn’t want me to say you’re easy, right?.

Chancellor Merz: No.

The President: He’s a very great representative of Germany. I think all we want is just going to have a good relationship. The rest we’ll just sort of follow very easily. We’ll have a good trade deal. I mean, I guess that will be mostly determined by the European Union, but you’re a very big part of that, so you’ll be involved. But we’ll end up, hopefully, with a trade deal or we’ll do something. You know, we’ll the tariffs. I mean I’m okay with the tariffs or we make a deal with the trade, and I guess that’s what we’re discussing now. Oh please, go ahead, no, no. Not you. I’ve had enough of you.

Chancellor Merz: Is Germany doing nothing on defense? Is Germany doing enough on defense?

The President: What?.

The Press: Defense spending?.

The Press: Is Germany doing enough on defense?.

The Press: The Chancellor wants to spend 3.5.

The President: Well, I don’t know. I mean, I haven’t discussed it very much. I know that you’re spending more money on defense now, and quite a bit more money. And that’s a positive thing. I’m not sure that General McArthur would have said it’s positive, you know? He wouldn’t like it, but I sort of think it’s good. You understand what I mean by that?.

Chancellor Merz: I certainly understand.

The President: He made a statement, never let Germany rearm. And I said — I always think about that when he says, sir, we’re spending more money on defense. I say, oh, is that a good thing or a bad thing? I think it’s a good. But at least to a certain point. There’ll be a point when I’ll say, please don’t arm anymore, if you don’t mind. We’ll be watching him.

The Press: Presidend Biden –.

The President: Yeah, Biden, you said Biden.

The Press: Your predecessor dismissed your autopen investigation and made all the decisions during the president’s time. I’m curious to your reaction [inaudible].

The President: Well, look, the auto pen, I think, is the big scandal. Outside of the rigged election of 2020, I think the biggest scandal of the last many years is the auto pen. And who’s using it? I happen to think I know, okay, because I’m here. And I’m not a big auto pen person, fortunately. I’m glad. I’m very glad. It’s an easy way out. But it’s a very bad thing, very dangerous. You know, I sign important documents. Usually, when they put documents in front of you, they’re important. Even if you’re signing ambassadorships or — and I consider that important. I think it’s inappropriate. You have somebody that’s devoting four years of their life or more to being an ambassador. I think you really deserve, that person deserves to get a real signature, not an auto pen signature. And I can tell auto pen easily. I can look at it. Like two little pinholes from pulling the paper, right? You always see the pinholes. It’s real easy to tell about auto pen. I think it’s very disrespectful to people when they get an auto-pen signature. Outside, auto-pens to me are used when thousands of letters come in from young people all over the country and you want to get them back, and you know, people use auto-pens for that, to send a little signature at the bottom of a letter. We have thousands of them. We get thousands of letters a week. And it’s not possible to, you know do — I’d like to do it myself, but you can’t do it. To me, that’s where auto pens start and stop. But I don’t think, I’m sure that he didn’t know many of the things. Look, he was never for open borders. He was never transgender for everybody. He was ever for men playing in women’s sports. I mean, he changed. I mean all of these things that changed so radically. I don’t think he had any idea that what was, frankly, I said it during the debate and I say it now. He didn’t have much of an idea of what was going on. He shouldn’t be — I mean, essentially, whoever used the auto pen was the President. And that is wrong. It’s illegal. It’s so bad, and it’s so disrespectful to our country.

The Press: Mr. President, will you meet the troops in Germany and if I may ask a question to the Chancellor to answer in German for the German audience, how is your first account of it?.

The President: The answer is yes, we’ll talk about that. But if they’d like to have them there, yeah. We have a lot of them, about 45,000. That’s a lot troops. That’s a city, when you think about it. That’s good economic development. They’re highly paid troops and they spend a lot money in Germany. But the relationship with Germany is very important. Yeah, we will be doing that. No problem.

Chancellor Merz: May I say a few words in German? Yes, please. [speaking German].

The President: Mr. President, you speak English because you speak such good English. Is it as good as your German, would you say? Do you feel more comfortable?

Chancellor Merz: No, it’s not my mother tongue, but I try to understand almost everything and to speak as good as I can.

The President: Very good. You know, it is an achievement, actually.

The Press: Mr. President, the criticism that I’ve seen and I’m sure you’ve seen regarding Elon Musk and your big, beautiful bill, what’s your reaction to that? Do you think it in any way hurts passage in the Senate? Of course, what it is your seeking?.

The President: Well, look, you know, I’ve always liked Elon, and it’s always very surprised. You saw the words he had for me. The words are great. And he hasn’t said anything about me that’s bad. I’d rather have him criticize me than the bill, because the bill is incredible. It’s the biggest cut in the history of our country. We’ve never cut — it’s about $1.6 trillion in cuts. It’s biggest tax cut — tax, you would say, people’s taxes will go way down. But it’s the biggest tax cut in history. It’s — we are doing things in that bill that are unbelievable. And when you look at what we’re doing for small businesses, for people, for middle-income people, all of the things that we’re doing, nobody has ever seen anything like it. And, you know, Elon is upset because we took the EV mandate, and — you know — which was a lot of money for electric vehicles. And, they’re having a hard time, the electric vehicles, and they want us to pay billions of dollars in subsidy. And, you know, I — Elon knew this from the beginning. He knew it for a long time ago. That’s been — that’s been, I would say, J.D., that hasn’t changed. That’s right from the beginning. Mr — I think, Mr. Secretary, that hasn’t changed at all, right from the beginning, but I know that it disturbed him. He wanted it rightfully. You know, he recommended somebody from — that he, I guess, knew very well. I’m sure he respected him. To run NASA, and I didn’t think it was appropriate. And he happened to be a Democrat, like, totally Democrat. And I say, you know, look, we won. We get certain privileges, and one of the privileges we don’t have to appoint a Democrat. NASA is very important. We have great people. General Tate is going to be picking somebody with our — we’ll be checking them out and seeing. But he wanted that person, a certain person, and we said no. Yeah, I can understand why he’s upset. Remember, he was here for a long time. You saw a man who was very happy when he stood behind the oval desk, and even with the black eye, I said, do you want a little makeup? We’ll get you a little make-up. But he said, no, I don’t think so, which is interesting and very nice. He wants to be who he is, so you could make that statement, too, I guess. Look, Elon and I had a great relationship. I don’t know if we will anymore. I was surprised because you were here. Everybody in this room, practically, was here as we had a wonderful send-off. He said wonderful things about me. You couldn’t have nicer, said the best thing. He’s worn the hat. Trump was right about everything. And I am right about the great, big, beautiful bill. We call it a great, big, beautiful bill because that’s what it is. And, again, biggest tax cuts in history, biggest economic development moves anywhere. We’ve never done anything like it. Business is spurred. And I don’t know if you’ve seen the numbers, but the numbers came out. Even the CBO, which is run by Democrats, said that we’re going to be doing — you know, I’d like you to discuss it, the $2.8 billion — a trillion — that CBO — this is a group of people that are Democrats. They’re very hostile to us. They just came out with phenomenal numbers, what it does. Do you want to mention that? Okay.

Male Speaker: Yes, sir. So what we’ve seen is we keep hearing from the CBO that there’s going to be a large deficit from the bill, which we disagree with. But using the CBO scoring, they came out and scored the tariff revenue. We think it’ll be the minimum of 2.8 trillion over the 10 year window, which actually puts the bill in surplus if you include the tariff revenue, which they won’t do.

The President: It gives you a tremendous surplus, but we’re not allowed to use that. For some reason, they say scoring. Nobody knows what scoring means. Maybe a couple of people, but nobody. Somebody sits in the background, they say, well, we’re going to allow that. They’re not allowing other things that we have that are tremendously profitable for our country. But if you saw the other day CNBC, they came out with numbers, and the people on the show, very good people. I’ve watched them for a long time. They couldn’t believe the numbers, how good they are. The numbers were incredible. That was personal income and also very low inflation. We have very low inflation. We’re down to 2 percent now, and maybe even lower than that. And when I took it over, it was a mess. Remember, we had the worst inflation probably in the history of our country. They say 48 years, but let’s say that’s — I think it’s worse than that — so we had worst inflation in the history of our country under the Biden administration. Now we’re down to a beautiful number, 2 percent. You’d actually like to keep it there. Better than zero is 2 percent. It’s gone down maybe to 1. And 1 percent is like perfect. That’s perfect. You don’t want to have zero for certain reasons that nobody is very interested to listen to. But we have almost perfect inflation. Grocery prices are down. Everything. Remember eggs. Eggs, we weren’t going to buy another egg for the next 20 years. They were so expensive. Right? Remember? You guys all hit me about eggs. Eggs have come down 400 percent. Everybody has eggs now. They’re having eggs for breakfast again. But if you look at gasoline, very important. I think always the most important because you see, energy is the biggest factor. That’s what happened. He screwed up our energy policy and everything went up because energy went up. But now energy is way down and they have states where you’re at $1.98 a gallon for gasoline. So the costs have come way down. One of the things I ran on was that. I ran the border. We have the best border in the history of our country. Ninety-nine point nine nine percent. It was last week, three people came in, two of them for medical reasons. We let them in because one of them had a heart attack. I think it was a nice thing to do. And one of em had something else. So we’ve never had, I had very good numbers for four years, but we really topped it. And I want to thank Christy and Tom Holman. They’ve done a fantastic job. But nobody mentions that anymore. Remember, a few months ago, the border was a total disaster. People were coming in by the hundreds of thousands of people a day, a week, a month. I mean, we had a month, two million people came in in one month. The border was being overrun and a lot of bad people, criminals, murderers, drug dealers. We had some of the worst people in the world coming in from all over the world. It’s totally closed. And you know what, people are coming into our country, but they’re coming in legally. So we’ve done a great job. Elon knew that. Elon endorsed me very strongly. He actually went up and campaigned for me. I think I would have won — Suzie would say I would’ve won Pennsylvania easily anyway, even if the governor ran — the real governor, not the governor from Minnesota, who’s — I mean, he’s a sick puppy, that guy. That poor guy I feel sorry for him. But they made a bad choice with him. But if you pick Shapiro or anybody else, I spoke to him recently about his, you know, his house being set on fire, which was terrible. But if they picked him, I would have won Pennsylvania. I won it by a lot. But I’m very disappointed, because Elon knew the inner workings of this bill better than almost anybody sitting here, better than you people. He knew everything about it. He had no problem with it. All of a sudden, he had a problem. And he only developed the problem when he found out that we’re going to have to cut the EV mandate, because that’s billions and billions of dollars. And it really is unfair. We want to have cars of all types — electric. We want have electric, but we want to a gasoline combustion. We want different. We want hybrids. We want all — we want be able to sell everything. And when that was cut — and Congress wanted to cut it — he became a little bit different. And I can understand that. He knew every aspect of this bill. He knew it better than almost anybody. And he never had a problem until right after he left. And if you saw the statements he made about me, which I’m sure you can get very easily. It’s very fresh on tape. He said the most beautiful things about me. And he hasn’t said bad about me personally, but I’m that’ll be next. But I’m very disappointed in Elon. I’ve helped Elon a lot.

Chancellor Merz: I just want to clarify, did he raise any of these concerns with you privately before he raised them publicly?. And this is the guy you put in charge of cutting spending. Should people not take him seriously about spending now? Are you saying this is all sour grapes?.

The President: So he worked hard, and he did a good job. And I’ll be honest, I think he misses the place. I think you got out there and all of a sudden he wasn’t in this beautiful Oval Office and he wasn’t in it. He’s got nice offices, too. But there’s something about this. When I was telling the Chancellor, this is where it is. People come in here, even from Germany. They come in and they walk into the Oval Office, and it’s just a special place. It’s like, you know, World War I, it started and it ended here. And World War II, and so many other things. Everything big comes right from this beautiful space. It’s now much more beautiful than it was six months ago. A lot of good things are happening in this room. And I’ll tell you, he’s not the first. People leave my administration and they love us. And then at some point they miss it so badly. And some of them embrace it and some of actually become hostile. I don’t know what it is. It’s sort of Trump derangement syndrome, I guess they call it, but we have it with others too. They leave, and they wake up in the morning, and the glamor is gone, the whole world is different, and then they become hostile. I don’t know what is is. Someday you’ll write a book about it, you’ll let us know. Yes.

Chancellor Merz: Mr. President, speaking of ending wars in the school, you were very critical of Vladimir Putin a couple of days ago. What kind of play is he playing, with respect to [inaudible]?.

The President: Look, he got hit, he’s been doing hitting, so I understand it, but he got hit hard and I don’t think he’s playing games. I think he — I’ve always said he wanted the whole thing. I thought he wanted the entire everything having to do with Ukraine. That’s something that would have never happened if I were president. The election was rigged. I didn’t get to be president, but I got to be President now. And I think it’s a much more important presidency, other than a couple of things like that. The war would have never, would have never happened. The war with Ukraine, with Putin would have never happened, ever, not even a chance. And it didn’t happen for four years. And it wasn’t thought of. I used to talk to him about Ukraine a lot. It was the apple of his eye, but he would have never done what he did. And I thinks mistakes were made by him, but I think mistakes were make by other people. And the President should have never allowed that way. Biden should have never allowed that war to happen. If you had the right guy in here, that war would have never happened. Israel would have ever happened with Hamas. That would have every happened. The attack on Israel would’ve never happened because Iran was broke. They had no money. They had money to give to Hamas or Hezbollah or anybody else. And all of that would’ve ever happened. Inflation wouldn’t have happened. It was caused mostly by energy. And the Biden administration messed up my great energy policy. We were down into the $1.90 a gallon, and it would have never happened. It was caused by energy and their bad spending or the Green New Scam and other things that they spent on. But all of those things would have ever happened. But maybe most importantly, the war, Chancellor, with Russia would never have happened with Ukraine. It was something that would have — you know, I’ve. I dealt with Putin a lot. There was no chance, zero. And, you know, a lot of people say, how do you know? For four years, it didn’t happen. There was never a chance of it happening. And he understood the consequences. Now, it’s a shame. And when you see all of those people, they came out with a report today that millions of people, millions of of people have died much more than people thought. And I’ve been saying that for a long time. The amount of death in that war is far greater than the news has been reporting, or than, frankly, that either side has been reported. It’s a very sad thing. And I can tell you, just speaking for the Chancellor, because we speak about it, he feels the same way. He wants to see it end. Would you like to say something?.

Chancellor Merz: I’m here, Mr. President, to talk with you later on on how we could contribute to that goal. We all are looking for measures and for instruments to bring this terrible war to an end. And may I remind you that we are having June 6th tomorrow. This is the D-Day, anniversary, when the Americans once ended a war in Europe. And I think this is in your hand, in specific, in ours.

The President: It’s not a pleasant day for you.

Chancellor Merz: No, that was not a pleasant — well, int the long run, Mr. President, this was the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship.

The President: That’s true, that’s true.

Chancellor Merz: And we know what we owe you. But this is the reason why I’m saying that America is, again, in a very strong position to do something on this war and ending this war. So let’s talk about what we can do jointly, and we are ready to do what we can, and you know that we gave support to Ukraine. And that we are looking for more pressure on Russia, the European Union did, and we should talk about that.

The President: We will talk about it. And, you know, it’s good timing. The numbers for our country are through the roof, the economic numbers, because of the election and because of tariffs and other things, a lot of things. But we’ve had some of the best numbers we’ve ever had. They were reported yesterday, the day before, and even today. The country is doing really well. I think that one of the things you’d be most interested in is that six months ago, we were having a hard time getting anybody to join our military. I mean, they just couldn’t do it. The numbers were record low. We couldn’t get people to join the military. It wasn’t me. It was before I got there. The past administration. But six months ago, a year ago, the numbers were record low, and you couldn’t them to join. That included the police, and you could get them to do it now. We just hit the highest number in the history of our country, we think, but very close. But the highest in the history of our county, recruitment. Joining the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, police forces all over the country.

Chancellor Merz: What did you do for them?. What was the reason?.

The President: Spirit. They love our country again. You’re going to do the same thing. Spirit. We have great spirits back in our country. And it’s very simple. You know, it was only, Susie, six months ago, right? That you got reports. You’re the one that released them, that you couldn’t get anybody to join the military. And now we’re stocked. Every service now is packed And we have waiting lists of people trying to get in, as good as we’ve ever had in the history of our country. So that’s an honor. That’s a great honor.

The Press: Mr. President, so would you consider to put more sanctions on Russia, because this discussion is going on now for weeks and months, and you tweeted about it once, but then nothing happens. What would you do?.

The President: Yeah, when I see the moment when we’re not going to make a deal, when this thing won’t stop.

The Press: Is there a deadline for it?.

The President: At that moment, yeah, it’s in my brain, the deadline. When I see a moment where it’s not going stop, and I’m sure you’re going to do the same thing, it will be very, very tough. And it could be on both countries, to be honest, you know, it takes two to tango. But we’re going be very tough, whether it’s Russia or anybody else, we’re gonna be very tough. That’s a bloodbath that’s going on over there. And when I see the moment where I say, well, they’re going to just keep fighting. You know, I gave the analogy yesterday when I spoke to President Putin. I had a two-hour, 15-minute call with him. Sometimes — and this is me speaking, maybe in a negative sense — but sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy. They hate each other, and they’re fighting in a park. And you try and pull them apart. They don’t want to be pulled. Sometimes you’re better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart, and I gave that analogy to Putin yesterday. I said, President, maybe you’re going to have to keep fighting and suffering a lot because both sides are suffering before you pull them up apart, before they’re able to be pulled apart, but it’s a pretty known analogy. You have two kids. They fight, fight, fight. Sometimes you let them fight for a little while. You see it in hockey. You see in sports. The referees let them go for a couple of seconds. Let them go a little for a while before you pull them apart. And maybe, and I said it, and maybe that’s a negative because we’re saying go, but a lot of bad blood. There’s some bad blood between the two. I have to deal with it, and the Chancellor has to deal it. It’s incredible the level of — there’s a great hatred between those two. Between those two men, but between the warring parties. Great hatred.

The Press: (inaudible) say and believe apparently that there is no immediate peace.

The President: What?.

The Press: That there is not immediate peace, there will be no –.

The President: Well, I can’t. I’d love to have immediate if I could. But we don’t have immediate. You know, it’s like I’d love to have that. I like it to start right now. We would leave a room if we knew the war could end that everyone would say forget about you guys, forget about trade, right? We’d say, let’s go settle it. There’s some additional fighting that’s going to go on. You know, he was — he attacked and they attacked pretty harshly. They went deep into Russia, and he actually told me. I mean, I made it very clear. He said, we have no choice but to attack based on that, and it’s probably not going to be pretty. I don’t like it. I said, don’t do it. You shouldn’t do it. You should stop it. But again, there’s a lot of hatred. And I’m very proud of the fact that with India and Pakistan, I was able to stop that. And those are nuclear powers, and that would have really — that was getting close to being out of hand. And I spoke to some very talented people on both sides, very good people on both sides. And I said, You know, we’re dealing with you on trade — Pakistan and India — right now. I said we’re not going to deal with you in trade if you’re going to go shooting each other and whipping out nuclear weapons that maybe even affect us. Because, you know, that nuclear dust blows across oceans very quickly. It affects us. And I said, If you’re going to do that, we’re not going to do any trade deals. And you know what? I got that war stopped. Now, I hope we don’t go back and we find out that they restarted, but I don’t think they will. They were both good. They were well represented. I want to congratulate both countries, because, as you know, the leader of India, who’s a great guy, was here a few weeks ago. We had some great talks. We’re doing a trade deal. And Pakistan, likewise, they’re very, very strong leadership. Some people won’t like when I say that, but, you know, it is what it is. And they stopped that war. Now, am I going to get credit?. I’m not going to get credit for anything. They don’t give me credit for anything. But nobody else could have done it. I stopped it. I was very proud of that. I wish we could do the same thing with Ukraine and Russia. And at some point, it will happen. I believe that. And if it doesn’t happen or if I see somebody is out of line, if Russia’s out of line, we’ll be — you’ll be amazed how tough. Remember this, they like to say that I’m friends with — I’m not friends with anybody. I’m friends with you. I want the right thing to happen for our country for everybody, for humanity. But I’m the one that stopped the pipeline. It’s called Nord Stream 2. Until I came along nobody ever heard not one person in this room ever heard of Nord Stream 2. You probably did, because it went to Germany. He’s the only one that heard of it. But I stopped him. I stopped it. Yeah. And you’ve said that openly. It was a mistake because — and I used to go with Angela. I’d say, well, wait a minute. We’re spending all this money to defend you against Russia, and then you’re giving Russia billions of dollars a month. What kind of a deal is that? You know, which was — but you said it better than anybody else. I appreciate it. But I’m the one that stopped it, and that was the biggest economic development job if you want to call it that, in the history. Think of it, in the history of Russia, that was a massive — it’s the biggest pipeline in the world. Going to go all over Europe, not only to Germany — you know, they’re Germany — but then they were branching off all over to Europe. Nobody ever heard of — not one person of you heard of it. And I stopped it. It was dead. And then they say, I’m friends with Putin. I get along with him. He respected me. I respected him. It would have never happened. But I stopped Nord Stream 2. When Biden came in, almost the first week — he approved it. He let it be built. And then they say that I wasn’t tough on Russia. Putin said to me, you know, you’re not tough on Russia. You stopped the biggest, most important job we’ve ever done. You’ve stopped it. And Biden came in and he let it be built. And I’ll tell you what, I will never forget the day. I had it totally stopped. They weren’t building. They gave up on it. They weren’t able to. And then Biden came and he let it build. I couldn’t believe it. Okay, one or two questions more, please. Any questions for the Chancellor? Go ahead, for the chancellor. I like his answers much better.

The Press: Would you continue to support Ukraine?.

The President: Yeah, I’m with Ukraine. We just signed a big deal on rare earth with Ukraine, and we want it. I want to — you know what? I’m for stopping killing, really. That’s what I’m, for. Again, a war that would have never started, should have never starting. I want see the killing stop. We spent $350 billion, much more than Europe, but Europe spent a lot also, and they spent way over $100 billion. So, you’re talking about close to $500 billion went into that whole thing. And it’s not even the money. I know with you, too, it’s a lot of money. But it’s the death that’s being caused. We went to the Middle East. I went, last week, to the Middle East. We took in $5.1 trillion. That’s many, many times. It’s 30, 40 times, 50 times more than what we’re talking about. It’s five point — think of that. $5.1 trillion of investment with one trip that lasted four days. So it’s just not the money, It’s a little bit money, but not the money, the big thing. The big thing is the death. The death of — and really the decimation. You’ve lost the whole culture. You know, Ukraine had the most beautiful turrets. They call them turrets, little towers, beautiful towers. The most beautiful in the world. They’re all now laying on their side, blown to smithereens. It’ll never happen again. They’ve taken away the culture of a country. They’ve taken away the heritage of a country. It’s a terrible thing. But most importantly, again, is the death. 5,000-plus people a week, soldiers, are being killed. He doesn’t want that, and I don’t want.

The Press: Mr. President, do you support the [inaudible] bill for putting high tariffs –.

The President: I have not looked at it, but they’ll be guided by me. That’s the way it’s supposed to be. They’re going to be guided my me. No, I haven’t looked at. It’s a bill on sanctions, et cetera. When it — I’m a very quick study. At the right time, I’ll do what I want to do. But it could very well be okay. I’ll have to see. But they’re waiting for me to decide on what to do, and I’ll — I’ll know. Maybe very soon. It’s a harsh bill. Yeah, very harsh.

The Press: Do you agree with the analogy the President made on the war between Russia and Ukraine as being a fight between two kids? Is that how you view that as well? And what do you actually want the U.S. Government to do?.

Chancellor Merz: I think we both agree on this war and how terrible this war is going on. We are both looking for ways to stop it very soon. I told the President before we came in that he is the key person in the world (inaudible) can really do that. Now by putting pressure on Russia and we will have this debate later on again how we can proceed jointly between the Europeans and the Americans and I think we are all in — we are having the duty to do something on that now to stop it after three and a half years which is really terrible. Look at the kids. The kids which were kidnapped from Ukraine to Russia. This is this is all terrible. And so we are talking about instruments, measures what we can do and my personal view is clear on that we are on the side of Ukraine and we are trying to get them stronger and stronger just to make Putin stop this war. This is (inaudible).

The President: We get satellite pictures of the war field, and you don’t even like to look at them, right?.

Chancellor Merz: It’s terrible.

The President: So, bodies, arms, heads, legs, all over the place. You’ve never seen anything like it. It’s so ridiculous.

Chancellor Merz: And this is only by Russian weapons against Ukraine. This had never happened with Ukraine weapons against Russia. Never. Ukraine is only targeting military targets. Not civilians, not private, not energy infrastructure. So this is the difference, and that’s the reason why we are trying to do more on Russia. How to stop this war.

The President: Well, in this case, I’m talking about the battlefield. You know, the soldiers on soldiers. But you could also say that, too, with the cities. The cities are being hit, also. So it’s a terrible, terrible thing, right? One — somebody said auto pen because I think it’s the biggest scandal maybe in the last hundred years in this country. So when I hear that word, I think it has to be discussed, because the fake news will try and, you know, hide it. And we can’t do that.

The Press: Have you uncovered any evidence that anything specific was signed without President Biden’s knowledge or by other people in the administration acting illegally?.

The President: Well, I don’t think Biden would know whether or not he signed it.

The Press: I’m asking if you’ve uncovered any of that information.

The President: No, but I’ve uncovered, you know, the human mind. I was in a debate with the human mind, and I didn’t think he knew what the hell he was doing. So, you know it’s just one of those things, one of these problems. We can’t ever allow that to happen to our country. The danger our country was in. And I know some of the people that worked with him. Radical, left, horrible people. And I could give you the name of some of people that used the auto pen, because I’m here. And I asked questions about people that were here also. There are a lot of people that were here when that happened, and they’re here right now. And they’ll answer your question very accurately. But I know some of the people that use that auto pen, and those are not the people that had the same ideology as Joe Biden. These were radical-left lunatics that used that. And they didn’t get elected. He didn’t get elected either, actually. Thank you very much, everybody.

Source(s)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmD3sN-XWHU