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17-Aug-2025
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Melania Trump’s Letter to Putin

AUTHOR: M.J. GDNUS

FOX NEWS has published a letter from U.S. First Lady Melania Trump, which President Donald Trump personally handed to Vladimir Putin during their meeting in Alaska.

We bring the full content of the letter:

“Dear President Putin,

Every child carries the same quiet dreams in their heart, whether born in a modest rural setting or a magnificent city center. They dream of love, opportunity, and safety from harm.

As parents, it is our duty to nurture the hopes of the next generation. As leaders, our responsibility for the future of children goes beyond the comfort of the few. It is undeniable that we must strive to shape a world filled with dignity for all—so that every soul may awaken in peace and the future itself may be perfectly protected.

A simple but profound truth, Mr. Putin, which I’m certain you agree with, is that the descendants of each generation begin their lives with purity—an innocence that stands above geography, authority, and ideology.

And yet, in today’s world, some children are forced to wear quiet smiles, untouched by the darkness around them—a silent gesture of defiance against the forces that may take their future away.
Mr. Putin, you alone can return their melodic laughter.

By protecting the innocence of those children, you do more than serve Russia—you serve humanity itself.

Such a bold idea transcends all human divisions, and you, Mr. Putin, are a man capable of realizing that vision with a single stroke of the pen—even today.

The time is now,”

concludes Melania Trump in her letter to the Russian president.

Child abductions one of the most difficult points of the conflict

As reported by Reuters yesterday, Trump personally handed his wife’s letter to Putin during the summit. Melania Trump, who was born in Slovenia, did not travel with the U.S. president to Alaska.

Ukraine has long claimed that the abduction of tens of thousands of its children—taken to Russia or occupied territories without consent from their families or guardians—is a war crime that meets the conditions for genocide under the UN Convention.

Moscow, however, claims it is “protecting vulnerable children” from the war zone—an assertion that Kyiv and Western governments dismiss as propaganda.

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