As with Ukraine, Trump has promised to bring “peace” to the Middle East - implying he would end the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and the Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon - but has not said how.
Zelensky invited Trump to visit Ukraine, and Trump replied: “I will”.The Ukrainian president later posted on his Telegram channel that the pair had a “very meaningful meeting”.
“We have a common view that the war in Ukraine must be stopped. Putin cannot win. Ukrainians must win,” he wrote.Trump, meanwhile, said on his Truth Social account that if he is not elected president, "that war will never end, and will phase into WORLD WAR III".The pair have long had a tumultuous relationship. Trump was impeached in 2019 over accusations that he pressured Zelensky to dig up damaging information on the Biden family.
A rough transcript of the call revealed Trump had urged Zelensky to investigate Joe Biden, as well as Biden's son Hunter.Standing beside Zelensky on Friday, he praised the Ukrainian leader's handling of the issue.
Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Trump has frequently repeated Moscow's talking points about the war. During September's presidential debate, he sidestepped a question on whether he wanted Ukraine to emerge victorious in the conflict.
Ahead of Friday's meeting, Trump repeated his long-standing claim that he would be able to "work out something" to settle the war if he won the presidential election, long before Joe Biden leaves office in January.The community of analogue photography enthusiasts in Central America may be growing quickly, but the challenges are greater than in other places.
"It is really hard to get analogue cameras here and it is even harder to get them in good condition," explains 26-year-old Ronald Ottoniel, who went on the photo walk to buy new rolls of film and turn in others to be developed.And there are other hurdles, too.
Fabriccio and Lucía explain that the process of buying and importing the chemicals needed to develop positive film has been extremely complicated because the import of these chemicals is closely monitored by the state and requires special permits, which has made it a painstakingly long ordeal."Many other labs don't offer the E-6 processing just because it's so complicated to import the chemicals," says Fabriccio.