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Trump to Meet Putin at U.S. Military Base in Anchorage

The American and Russian presidents will meet face to face at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska on Friday, according to a White House official.

Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in 2020.Credit...Ash Adams for The New York Times

Katie Rogers

Aug. 12, 2025, 10:58 p.m. ET

President Trump will meet President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage on Friday, according to a White House official familiar with the planning.

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reveal internal planning, said that Mr. Trump was expected to make what amounted to a day trip to Alaska to meet with Mr. Putin, who has continued to push Russian troops into Ukrainian territory in hopes of a battlefield advantage.

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, told reporters during a news briefing on Tuesday that the two men were expected to meet one on one. She described the meeting as a “listening exercise” for Mr. Trump, and said that seeing Mr. Putin would give him a better idea of the Russian leader’s plans.

“The president is agreeing to this meeting at the request of President Putin,” she said. “And the goal of this meeting for the president is to walk away with a better understanding of how we can end this war.”

Mr. Trump has visited the Anchorage base several times since he first took office in 2017; Friday’s meeting will be his first stop in Alaska since returning to office in January. Meeting on the base would make it easier for Mr. Trump to make a short trip, the official said, adding that an American military base offered extra security.

In 2018, Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin met alone, save for interpreters, for more than two hours during a summit held in Helsinki, Finland. CNN earlier reported the location of Friday’s meeting.

For over three years, Russian and Ukrainian forces have been engaged in a grinding battle for Ukrainian territory. Mr. Trump had recently grown more irritated with Mr. Putin over what he called “meaningless” gestures of peace. This week, though, Mr. Trump has expressed an openness to meeting with the Russian leader to “see what he has in mind” about bringing an end to the fighting.

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, is part of a chorus of voices warning the president that Mr. Putin may try to deceive him. Mr. Trump has all but waved away those concerns, reiterating that he planned to negotiate what he called “land swaps” between Russia and Ukraine, a proposal the Ukrainians have already rejected.

In rambling remarks to reporters on Monday in which he described his coming trip to “Russia,” Mr. Trump said that he would know within minutes if Mr. Putin was serious about striking a deal to end the war. “Because that’s what I do,” he said. “I make deals.”

Mr. Trump has so far evaded questions about what he expected to get from the meeting. “I may leave and say, ‘Good luck,’ and that’ll be the end,” he said on Monday. But the president signaled that he would be willing to discuss other topics with Mr. Putin, including trade opportunities.

Economic sanctions put in place by President Joseph R. Biden Jr. have been a major tool of deterrence against Mr. Putin and his government. But since taking office in January, Mr. Trump has let many of those sanctions weaken.

Mr. Trump has also said little about continued attempts by Russian intelligence officials and cybercriminals to infiltrate American infrastructure systems. He has instead repeatedly disparaged reports that the Russians had favored his candidacy in 2016 and had sought to improve his chances of winning. He has railed against a wide-ranging investigation into his campaign’s ties to the Russians during his first term.

The New York Times reported Tuesday that investigators linked Russia to a recent hack of the computer system that manages federal court documents.

Katie Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President Trump.

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