President Donald Trump praised Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko on Truth Social ahead of his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Lukashenko previously permitted Putin to station forces on Belarusian soil, with troops and military equipment moving across the border into Ukraine. Russia also launched missiles at Ukrainian targets from Belarus, The Guardian reported in 2022.
Trump in his post disclosed that he spoke with Lukashenko Friday ahead of his meeting with Putin in Alaska. (RELATED: Zelenskyy Desperately Trying To Get Trump’s Ear Ahead Of Putin Summit)
“I had a wonderful talk with the highly respected President of Belarus, Aleksandr Lukashenko. The purpose of the call was to thank him for the release of 16 prisoners,” Trump stated.
Trump further indicated the call included diplomatic discussions regarding future prisoner releases.
“We are also discussing the release of 1,300 additional prisoners,” he noted, adding that the conversation went well. Trump said he and Lukashenko “discussed many topics, including President Putin’s visit to Alaska.”
Further hinting at another meeting, he said, “I look forward to meeting President Lukashenko in the future.”
Belarus has provided Russia with a significant strategic advantage in its war against Ukraine and has been a key factor in raising tensions with NATO neighbors such as Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, according to a Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) report.
Belarus largely emerged as the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, which was a part of the Soviet Union from 1920 until 1991, according to the report.
During the Cold War, Belarus hosted Soviet nuclear weapons and military bases, and its leaders — along with those in Russia and Ukraine — played key roles in the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991, the report noted. (RELATED: Putin Reportedly Willing To End War If He Gets Eastern Ukraine)
#Belarus’ President #Lukashenko to @TIME: “Putin is ready for peace.”⁰
A thread of quotes you probably weren’t expecting: 👇
1️⃣ “Russia has long been ready not just for a ceasefire, but real peace.”⁰2️⃣ “You want peace? Sit down and talk. That’s the only way.”⁰3️⃣ “Bring Trump,… pic.twitter.com/PVXrRvAURI— Belarus MFA 🇧🇾 (@BelarusMFA) August 8, 2025
In the years that followed, Belarus and Russia signed agreements aimed at economic, political and military integration, culminating in the symbolic 1999 Union State treaty, while mostly cooperating in the military sphere, according to a Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus report.
Despite this, tensions have persisted over Belarus’s sovereignty, dependence on Russian energy and disputes over territories, according to the CFR report.
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