The inauguration of a new U.S. president presents an inflection point, a moment of possibility just before a candidate’s election promises meet the realities of governing. As the United States enters the second Trump administration, SFS faculty offer their thoughts on how the 47th president’s statements during the campaign, policies during his first term and nominations and appointments announced thus far might impact different regions and issue areas around the world. The views expressed are the views of individual SFS faculty and not the views of SFS.
In conversation with SFS Professor Michael David-Fox, director of the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies (CERES), we dive into key issues to watch for in the Trump administration’s possible policies and actions toward Russia, especially as related to the war in Ukraine.
What did Donald Trump, the candidate, promise regarding Russia?
Russia has elicited some of Trump’s most flamboyant claims before, during and after the campaign, in part because of the political fallout from the 2016 election interference charges that Trump called the “Russia hoax,” as well as his December 2019 impeachment over allegations he pressured Ukraine to come up with kompromat (as the Russians call it) on his political rival.
Immediately after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, arguably the single most damaging act for the Russian Federation’s national interests since the country emerged in 1991, Trump termed it an act of “genius.” Early on in the campaign, in February 2024, he stated that he would encourage Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” to any NATO member country that did not meet spending guidelines on defense. During the campaign, he said repeatedly that he could end Russia’s war in Ukraine within 24 hours if he were elected—a timeline that was immediately rolled back once the election was over.
The incoming president is not known as a policy wonk. His immediate rollback of a number of campaign rally staples after the election indicate he did not, in fact, promise anything. That said, of all the strongmen around the world of whom Trump has spoken approvingly, Putin appears to occupy a special place, and his behavior over a long period of time seems to show a genuine undercurrent of admiration for Putin’s autocratic image.
But there are many divisions and disagreements among those who will surround Trump, and figures such as Marco Rubio and J.D. Vance have sounded rather different from him on Russia, Putin and Ukraine. Anyone looking at the situation must acknowledge a great deal of incoherence and uncertainty.