- 20/6/2025
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00:00¡Gracias!
00:30¡Gracias!
01:00¡Gracias!
01:30Muchas gracias.
01:31Héctor Germany.
01:32I'm honored by that.
01:33As you know, we did a very great job with India and Pakistan.
01:35And we had India in, it looks like we're going to be making a trade deal with India.
01:39And we had Pakistan in, it looks like we're going to be making a trade deal with Pakistan.
01:44And it's a beautiful thing to watch.
01:48Serbia, Kosovo, likewise, they've been fighting for years.
01:52As you know, we brought that one to a conclusion.
01:55And now we have a couple of big ones.
01:58We have Russia-Ukraine, which is making a little bit of progress.
02:02And we have Israel, and nobody really knows what that one is all about.
02:06We're going to find out pretty soon, I guess.
02:09The Iranian foreign, Mr. President, the Iranian foreign minister this afternoon said
02:13if the U.S. is serious about negotiations, that you would call up Israel
02:17and request that they stop their airstrikes.
02:20Will you make that request?
02:21Well, I think it's very hard to make that request right now.
02:24If somebody is winning, it's a little bit harder to do than if somebody is losing.
02:29But we're ready, willing, and able.
02:31And we've been speaking to Iran, and we'll see what happens.
02:34We'll see what happens.
02:35What was the thought process behind two-week time-taking?
02:40Just a time to see whether or not people come to their senses.
02:44Did the Europeans help at all in talking with the Iranians?
02:48No, they didn't help, no.
02:50Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe.
02:52They want to speak to us.
02:54It's not going to be able to help in this one.
02:56Twenty years ago, you were skeptical of a Republican administration
02:59that attacked a Middle East country on the idea of questionable intelligence
03:03of weapons of mass destruction.
03:05How is this moment different with Iran?
03:07Well, there were no weapons of mass destruction.
03:09I never thought there were.
03:11And that was somewhat pre-nuclear.
03:13You know, there was a nuclear age, but nothing like it is today.
03:17And it looked like I'm right about the material that they've gathered already.
03:22It's a tremendous amount of material.
03:24And I think within a matter of weeks, or certainly within a matter of months,
03:28they were going to be able to have a nuclear weapon.
03:30We can't let that happen.
03:32I was very much opposed to Iraq.
03:35I said it loud and clear, but I was a civilian, but I guess I got a lot of publicity.
03:40But I was very much opposed to the Iraq war.
03:43And I actually did say, don't go in, don't go in, don't go in.
03:47But I said, if you're going to go in, keep the oil.
03:50But they didn't do that.
03:51What intelligence do you have that Iran is building a nuclear weapon?
03:53Your intelligence community has said they have no evidence that they are at this point.
03:57Well, then my intelligence community is wrong.
04:00Who in the intelligence community said that?
04:02Your director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard.
04:05She's wrong.
04:06Mr. President, are the Chinese in any way helping Iran at this moment,
04:10clearing reports of serious planes landing in Iran from China?
04:14I don't know.
04:15They say that they're there to take people out, but I can't tell you about that.
04:20I get along very well with China.
04:22I get along very well with President Xi.
04:24I like him.
04:25He likes me.
04:26We have a very good relationship.
04:28We'll see what happens.
04:29I can't imagine them getting involved.
04:31Is there a decision that you need to make on Iran, whether to strike militarily?
04:34Is this the biggest decision you'll have to make as president?
04:38Well, I can't tell you that.
04:40I have to see what happens.
04:41I can't, you know, really say that.
04:43It depends what the decision is.
04:46But I wouldn't really be able to tell you that now.
04:48I'll tell you in about a year from now.
04:50Maybe five years or ten years from now.
04:52You never know about decisions.
04:54You never really know.
04:55Sir, would you support a ceasefire while the negotiations happen?
04:59I might, depending on the circumstances.
05:01Would you?
05:02It's very hard to stop.
05:04I will say this.
05:05It's very hard to stop.
05:07When you look at it, Israel is doing well in terms of war.
05:11And I think you would say that Iran is doing less well.
05:15It's a little bit hard to get somebody to stop.
05:18Sir, Liam Cosgrove with Zero Edge.
05:20Former Congressman Matt Gaetz threw out an interesting idea suggesting that if you were to broker a deal where nuclear inspectors go into both Israel and Iran, that you could win a Nobel Peace Prize.
05:31And they might even rename it the Trump Peace Prize.
05:33Did you hear those?
05:34What do you think of that?
05:35Well, they should give me the Nobel Prize for Rwanda and, if you look, the Congo or you could say Serbia, Kosovo.
05:43You could say a lot of them.
05:44You could say, I mean, the big one is India and Pakistan.
05:49I should have gotten it four or five times.
05:52I should get it for the, I would think the Abraham Accords would be a good one, too.
05:57They won't give me a Nobel Peace Prize because they only give it to liberals.
06:01Would you support Iran being able to have nuclear or would you support Iran being able to have civilian nuclear energy capabilities up to 3.76 percent?
06:10You know, they're sitting on the top of one of the largest piles of oil in the world.
06:14I just don't know why they need that for civilian work.
06:17You know, it's one thing for certain countries to say, hey, I want to have a certain amount where I could go nuclear a little bit because we need it for electricity.
06:26We need it for air conditioners, et cetera.
06:29But when you're sitting on one of the largest oil piles anywhere in the world, it's a little bit hard to see why you need that.
06:36Yeah.
06:37The Press, President, are you concerned that Obonors and proxies would wage terror attacks against American targets abroad if you order military action?
06:45We're always concerned about that and we have to take them out and be very strong.
06:49You're even in danger talking to me right now.
06:52Do you know that?
06:53You are in danger talking to me right now.
06:56So I should probably get out of here.
06:58But you guys are actually in danger.
07:00Can you believe it?
07:01One more question, Mr. President.
07:02Is it still your expectation that NATO countries spent 5 percent of their GDP on defense spending?
07:08The President, I think they should do that.
07:10I don't think we should, but I think they should.
07:12We've been spending, we've been supporting NATO so long.
07:16In many cases, I believe paying almost 100 percent the cost.
07:20So I don't think we should, but I think that the NATO countries should.
07:23Absolutely.
07:24What?
07:25Like Spain decides not to?
07:26Well, NATO is going to have to deal with Spain.
07:29Spain has been a very low payer.
07:31They were always a very low payer.
07:33They were either good negotiators or they weren't doing the right thing.
07:38I mean, I think Spain has to pay what everybody else has to pay.
07:41Spain has been notorious for low pay.
07:44You know who else was a low payer, just about the lowest?
07:47A place called Canada.
07:49Because Canada said, why should we pay when the United States will protect us free?
07:54And they've been right about that.
07:56I see.
07:57Ukraine, you've been making progress towards a peace deal.
08:00But I don't know if you know this, but Lindsey Graham and Mike Pompeo were there on the ground in Ukraine,
08:04seemingly doing the opposite, trying to provoke the Ukrainians to keep fighting.
08:08What do you think of that?
08:09Well, we're going to see.
08:10And people have to be very careful with what they say.
08:13They've got to be very careful with their mouth, because their mouth can get them into a lot of trouble.
08:18One more.
08:19ICE.
08:20ICE has said that they're trying to arrest up to 3,000 individuals a day.
08:24There are some communities that are saying they are fearful of being wrongfully detained or separating some families, even if they are undocumented.
08:31Is the fear in some of these communities worth the deportations of these undocumented individuals, a mass deportation program?
08:38Always a tough subject because, look, we have farmers.
08:41I love farmers.
08:42I want 80 percent, 85 percent of the farmers.
08:45And I love them.
08:46And I'm never going to do anything to hurt our farmers.
08:48And you could also say the leisure business, et cetera.
08:51There are some businesses where you have a disproportionate amount of people that are the people that you're talking about.
08:58At the same time, we have to get the criminals out of our country.
09:01And we're looking at doing something where, in the case of good, reputable farmers, they can take responsibility for the people that they hire.
09:10And let them have responsibility, because we can't put the farms out of business.
09:14And at the same time, we don't want to hurt people that aren't criminals.
09:19Most of the people that came in over the last three years under Biden, I would say probably three and a half to four years.
09:26Those people, you have a lot of criminals.
09:28You have a lot of — I mean, we're looking at that very closely.
09:31You've had people that have worked on farms for 20 years.
09:34It's very hard to go in there and say, you know, you're coming out.
09:38But we're going to let the farmers take responsibility.
09:41They're great people.
09:42They'll do it.
09:43They know the good and the bad.
09:45So the hard part about this is that it's not like a normal war where people wear uniforms.
09:49They don't wear uniforms.
09:50But we have murderers that came out of the last four years.
09:54We have murderers.
09:55We have drug lords.
09:56We have people that we don't want to — we have prisoners.
09:59They emptied out Venezuela and many countries.
10:01They emptied out their prisons into the United States.
10:04We have to get those people out.
10:06But we have stone-cold murders.
10:0811,888 murders.
10:11We've already gotten a lot of them out of here.
10:14But we don't want them.
10:15So we have to be careful.
10:16But I never want to hurt our farmers.
10:18Our farmers are great people.
10:20They keep us happy and healthy and fat.
10:22Are there other cities that you're going to try to replicate what you've done in Los Angeles?
10:25Well, I mean, we had a big victory last night in the court, Court of Appeals, with respect to Los Angeles, but really the country, where Gavin Newsom, who's really an incompetent governor, he's just doing a terrible job between his fires, between all the houses burning down, his forest fires, and now Los Angeles.
10:46If we didn't go to Los Angeles — and the sheriff admitted it — he had no control.
10:51He would have lost control.
10:53We saved Los Angeles by having the military go in.
10:57And the second night was much better.
11:00The third night was nothing much.
11:02And the fourth night, nobody bothered even coming.
11:05We put out that fire, and we did a great job of it.
11:08He sued us for going in and for helping him.
11:11We went and helped him.
11:12Right now, you'd have Los Angeles burning to the ground.
11:15Largely, it would have already been destroyed.
11:17So do you think he would take since —
11:18Do you want your legacy, Mr. President, to be that of a peacemaker?
11:21Do you worry that striking Iran would change that?
11:23Always a peacemaker.
11:24Always a peacemaker.
11:25That doesn't mean sometimes you need some toughness to make peace, but always a peacemaker.
11:30Can you win in Iran without ground forces?
11:34Say it.
11:35Is an aerial campaign in Iran enough, or do you need ground forces?
11:39Well, I'm not going to talk about ground forces.
11:41The last thing you want to do is ground forces.
11:43Does Iran have two weeks, or could you strike before that?
11:46Are you essentially giving them a two-week timeline?
11:48I'm giving them a period of time.
11:49We're going to see what that period of time is.
11:50But I'm giving them a period of time.
11:52And I would say two weeks would be the maximum.
11:56Mr. President, do you think deportations should focus on criminals or all people who are here illegally?
12:02Should start focusing on criminals.
12:04And that's what we've been focused on.
12:06Very bad criminals.
12:07Dangerous criminals.
12:08But Stephen Miller said to go out and arrest every person who's here illegally.
12:12He's told ICE to arrest everyone who's here illegally.
12:14Do you agree with that?
12:15Stephen and I have a very good understanding.
12:17He's a terrific person.
12:18We have a great understanding of him.
12:20Mr. President, if there is an attack on U.S. assets, will you promise to conduct a full investigation
12:26and make it transparent with the American people before blaming Iran for such an attack?
12:31Well, if there's an attack, we'll know almost immediately with modern equipment who made the attack.
12:36And those people will be very, very unhappy.
12:39I want to get you people out of danger.
12:42You're in danger standing with me.
12:44One more.
12:45Prime Minister Netanyahu said that they had the capacity to take out all of Iran's nuclear facilities.
12:50So what role would the U.S. be able to play and why would they if Israel says that they have all of the abilities?
12:56Well, I'm not sure he said that, but they really have a very limited capacity.
13:01They could break through a little section, but they can't go down very deep.
13:05They don't have that capacity.
13:07And we'll have to see what happens.
13:09Maybe it won't be necessary.
13:11Maybe it won't be necessary.
13:12Mr. President, would you like to see Congress pass a bill that bans child transgender surgeries?
13:17Well, I know they're talking about it, aren't they?
13:20We're going to have to see how it comes to me in what form.
13:23Certainly, it's been something I've been talking about also.
13:26Okay?
13:27Thank you.
13:28Thank you, Mr. President.
13:29Appreciate it.
13:30Great luck.
13:31Thank you, everybody.
13:32Thank you.
13:33Thank you, Mr. President.
13:34Good enough, Mr. President.
13:35Thank you, Mr. President.
13:36Thank you.
13:37Thank you, Your doorbell is back.
13:38Here he is.
13:39Thank you, Mr. President.
13:40Thank you for your desire to come to us.
13:41Thank you for your opportunity to professionals.
13:42Has a noise geek!
13:43This morning of the, may I stand up right now.
13:45It has a sound Gabi.
13:46Like a stereotype Speicher.
13:47Gracias.
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