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Home » Transcript: What Does Trump See in Putin? – Fiona Hill

Transcript: What Does Trump See in Putin? – Fiona Hill

Read the full transcript of a conversation between Foreign Affairs Interview’s Dan Kurtz-Phelan and foreign affairs advisor and author Fiona Hill on “What Does Trump See in Putin?”, Tuesday, March 11, 2025.  

TRANSCRIPT:

Foreign Affairs Interview with Fiona Hill

DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: I’m Dan Kurtz-Phelan, and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.

Not even two months into his second term, Donald Trump is already reshaping U.S.-Russia relations at a critical juncture for the war in Ukraine. As Putin presses his advantage on the battlefield, Trump’s admiration for the Russian leader and his push for warmer relations with Moscow is raising alarms across European capitals and in Kyiv, most of all.

Fiona Hill spent years studying Putin in Russia as a scholar and as a U.S. intelligence official before, in the first Trump administration, becoming senior director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council. She became a household name during Trump’s first impeachment when her testimony provided crucial insights into Trump’s dynamic with Putin and his earlier actions with President Zelensky.

I last had her on the podcast in September of 2022 when it was becoming clear that there would not be a quick end to the conflict in Ukraine. I spoke with her again on the morning of Tuesday, March 11th, about Trump’s relationship with Putin, about the prospects for peace in Ukraine and about European security in an age of American retreat.

Later that afternoon, U.S. and Ukrainian officials unveiled a tentative agreement for a 30-day ceasefire, meaning that the ball is now in Putin’s court.

Fiona, thank you for joining me. It’s really hard to think of anyone we’d rather have on at this particular moment in history, which has brought back so much of what you’ve written in Foreign Affairs over the last few years about Putin, about Ukraine and about Trump and about how the interaction among them is reshaping geopolitics right now.

FIONA HILL: Thanks so much, Dan.