Trump declared he didn’t like it, but how does he feel about the Ukrainian-orchestrated assassination attempts on him?

From John Helmer at unz.com:

Either President Donald Trump (lead image, bottom) cannot comprehend the sequence of cause and effect. Or he cannot control his own military and intelligence operations in the war against Russia. Or Trump thinks he can deceive President Vladimir Putin (lead image, top), authorize an attack on him personally, and later, when the attack failed, and Putin retaliated with a counter-attack on Kiev, Trump is pretending “I don’t know what the hell happened to Putin…he’s sending rockets into Kiev and other cities and killing people, and I don’t like it at all.”

Trump then threatened Putin directly. “We’ll see what we’re going to do.”

Follow the sequence and decide what’s cause, what’s effect.

On the morning of 20 May, President Putin arrived in Kursk by helicopter; the Kremlin announced the visit the next day. Five days later, on 25 May, it was revealed by the state news agency RIA-Novosti, that a drone attack had been launched from the Ukraine at targets in Kursk, including Putin’s helicopter.

Source: https://ria.ru/20250525/vertolet-2018957379.html

The targeting of the Ukrainian attack was aided by US satellite, drone, and fixed wing aircraft “aimed at gathering electronic intelligence and high-definition imagery”, transmitting Russian target and attack guidance data to Ukrainian operators.

In the five days from 20-25 May they fired the largest barrage of drones and missiles recorded so far. Russian reports indicate that “in total, our air defence units shot down more than 1104 UAVs. The most effective in the downing of enemy drones was the Oryol region, where 221 UAVs were destroyed on the flight route to the Moscow region. According to tradition, many drones were shot down in the border over the Bryansk, Kursk and Belgorod regions.”

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