Politics

Fox Host Humiliates Trump With Savage Take on Putin Summit

STINGING VERDICT

Howard Kurtz said “it was clear not much was accomplished” at the summit.

Fox News host Howard Kurtz has delivered a brutal assessment of President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Media Buzz host said Sunday that “despite some upbeat talk” after Friday’s summit on ending Russia’s war in Ukraine, “it was clear not much was accomplished.”

“No ceasefire, no details, no questions from the press, just vague assurances that some progress was made without explaining what that was,” he continued.

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ALASKA, UNITED STATES - AUGUST 15 : (----EDITORIAL USE ONLY - MANDATORY CREDIT - ' KREMLIN PRESS OFFICE / HANDOUT' - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS----) The first round of negotiations between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump in the US state of Alaska concludes in Anchorage, Alaska, United States on August 15, 2025.
President Donald Trump walked away from his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin with no deal in place for peace in Ukraine. Kremlin Press Office/Anadolu via Getty Images

Trump remained ambiguous at a joint presser with Putin following the meeting in Anchorage, Alaska, saying that “many points were agreed to.” He conceded that he “didn’t get there” on the peace deal he’s been pushing for Russia and Ukraine.

While the presser had initially been billed as a news conference, the two leaders did not take questions from journalists.

“President Trump, to his credit, didn’t oversell what happened, or more precisely, what didn’t happen,” Kurtz said.

He noted that the meeting, which did not include Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, had been preceded by a White House effort to dramatically lower expectations as it became clear in the days before the summit that Trump would not be able negotiate a deal both Russia and Ukraine would agree to.

Trump welcomes Putin on a red carpet upon his arrival
Trump welcomed Putin on a red carpet upon his arrival, which marked the first time the Russian dictator had set foot on U.S. soil in a decade. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

“The media reaction to the Alaska session varied sharply, but much of it was negative,” Kurtz observed, before asking guest Rich Lowry, the editor-in-chief of the conservative National Review, if he saw the summit as a “setback” for Trump.

“Putin moved the ball a little bit in his direction,” Lowry said, “putting off the talk of the ceasefire, at least for now, and getting Trump to stop threatening secondary sanctions and harsher measures.”

However, he said, “You can’t be premature on these things, you can’t judge them too quickly,” adding that he remains in “wait-and-see mode.”

IN FLIGHT - AUGUST 15: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media aboard Air Force One on August 15, 2025, in flight. President Trump is traveling to Anchorage, Alaska, for peace talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the war with Ukraine. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Trump insists that he had a "great meeting" with Putin and lashed out at the negative press coverage in furious Truth Social posts. Andrew Harnik/Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Kurtz then highlighted Trump’s outburst on Truth Social Sunday morning, when the president raged against negative coverage of the summit in a series of posts, writing, “Fake News violently distorts the TRUTH when it comes to me.”

“So [Trump] sees this as a success, obviously, and [believes that] the coverage is not going along,” Kurtz said, before noting that Fox News had confirmed that “Trump is going along with a Putin plan” that includes several costly concessions, including abandoning a ceasefire and ceding the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

Lowry admitted, “It’s going to be a hard pill to swallow.”

However, Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back Sunday on reports that Trump supports such a plan, saying, “These are things that the Ukrainian side is going to have to agree to.”

Meanwhile, another guest, former Biden aide Meghan Hays, blasted Trump for letting Putin “have the red carpet” both “metaphorically and actually.”

Trump welcomed Putin on a red carpet upon his arrival, which marked the first time the Russian dictator had set foot on U.S. soil in a decade.

Hays argued that the U.S. had, in effect, “validated” Putin, and made it an “ally of Russia, rather than an ally of Ukraine and our NATO allies.”

Putin left the summit, which ended earlier than planned, with no new sanctions on his country, despite Trump having threatened them for months before chickening out.

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