2025-09-25 00:00:00 Itu mungkin pertanda yang tidak menyenangkan ketika hal pertama yang dikatakan Presiden Donald Trump dalam pidato Majelis Umum PBB -nya Selasa adalah bahwa teleprompternya rusak.
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Follow It was perhaps an ominous sign when the first thing President Donald Trump said in his United Nations General Assembly speech Tuesday was that his teleprompter was broken.
âI feel very happy to be up here with you nevertheless,â he said, sounding less than happy.
âThat way you speak more from the heart.â What could have been a minor technical snafu â a UN official said it was up to the White House to operate the presidentâs prompter; a White House official said it was the UNâs apparatus â instead foretold a speech that both veered well off-script and questioned the UNâs ability to solve problems much bigger than malfunctioning audio-visual equipment.
Trump used the yearly foreign policy address to castigate foreign allies for supposedly ruining their countries with unchecked migration, fueling foreign conflicts with purchases of Russian energy, and ignoring his own peacemaking efforts.
He addressed the most pressing foreign conflicts â the wars in Ukraine and Gaza â only in passing, instead reserving most of his speech to bemoan efforts to combat climate change, tout his own approach to world issues and take swipes at his predecessor (he used former President Joe Bidenâs name six times in the speech).
âIâm really good at this stuff.
Your countries are going to hell,â he said at one point while talking about migration, a sentiment that neatly summed up the thesis of his speech.
In a sign of just how much the world has changed since he was laughed at from the same podium by delegates in his first term, the audience Tuesday sat mostly silent.
Here are five takeaways from Trumpâs speech at the United Nations.
A lecture on migration Trump spent much of his time in the General Assembly hall offering criticism of other nationsâ immigration policies, accusing the UN of âfunding an assault on Western countriesâ due to insufficient migration controls and warning the fabric of the West was being destroyed.
âIf you donât stop people that youâve never seen before, that you have nothing in common with, your country is going to fail,â he said at one point.
US President Donald Trump addresses the 80th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York City.
Mike Segar/Reuters It essentially amounted to a lecture and a warning to Europe, which has seen waves of migrants from Africa and the Middle East in recent years, that his approach of sharply curbing migrants from entering the United States was the only way to preserve national heritage.
âOnce we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the border â and removing illegal aliens from the United States â they simply stopped coming,â he said.
He said other leaders, particularly in Europe, would be wise to follow his lead.
âYouâre doing it because you want to be nice.
You want to be politically correct, and youâre destroying your heritage,â he said.
Climate change the âgreatest con jobâ Trump scoffed at past predictions warning of global disaster from climate change and urged other nations to scrap green energy initiatives intended to reduce carbon output.
Climate change, he said, was âthe greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world.â The vast majority of climate scientists have concluded climate change is happening, and that it is mainly caused by fossil fuel pollution.
Already, the world is seeing its effects: Floods are becoming more extreme and deadly, droughts are more widespread and severe, and heat waves are more dangerous.
Trump was having none of it.
âAll of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong,â he claimed.
âThey were made by stupid people.â Participants listen as US President Donald Trump addresses the 80th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York City.
Shannon Stapleton/Reuters The president also claimed green energy policies allow countries without such restrictions â particularly in the developing world â to make money while the US lags behind.
âThe primary effect of these brutal green energy policies has not been to help the environment but to redistribute manufacturing and industrial activity from developed countries that follow the insane rules that are put down to polluting countries that break the rules and are making a fortune,â Trump said.
No major shift on Ukraine or Gaza â until after the speech When he was speaking, Trump offered little new information when discussing the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, two conflicts he once said would be easy to resolve but continue to rage eight months into his term.
He lamented the growing momentum for a two-state solution at the United Nations this week as a ârewardâ for Hamas, reaffirming calls for a ceasefire and end to the conflict in Gaza that have so far proved elusive.
He acknowledged ending the war in Ukraine had been more difficult than he expected, saying his good relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin hadnât translated into effective peace negotiations.
U.S.
President Donald Trump addresses the 80th United Nations General Assembly at U.N.
headquarters in New York City, U.S., September 23, 2025.
REUTERS/MIKE SEGAR Mike Segar/Reuters But instead of directing his ire toward Moscow, Trump berated European nations for continuing purchases of Russian energy products.
âItâs embarrassing to them, and it was very embarrassing to them when I found out about it,â Trump said.
âThey have to immediately cease all energy purchases from Russia.
Otherwise, weâre all wasting a lot of time.â European nations have dramatically reduced their oil purchases from Russia since its invasion of Ukraine, but continue to purchase natural gas.
Two countries, Hungary and Slovakia, make up the bulk of European purchases of Russian oil.
Trump did identify China and India as the âprimary funders of the ongoing war by continuing to purchase Russian oil,â but accused European nations of also contributing.
The US president also suggested he might speak to his âfriend,â Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, about stopping purchases of Russian oil.
After the speech, though, Trump notably shifted his rhetoric on Russia â without a firm commitment to specific US action.
First, in a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on the sidelines of UNGA, Trump said he believes NATO countries should shoot down Russian aircraft if they enter their airspace.
The comment is notable as the defense alliance confronts the potential for an expansion of the war, although Trump stopped short of saying the United States would join in the effort.
Then, Trump posted on Truth social that he believed Ukraine could continue to fight and âWIN all of Ukraine back in its original form.â âWith time, patience, and the financial support of Europe and, in particular, NATO, the original Borders from where this War started, is very much an option.
Why not?â Trump wrote in a lengthy post, adding, âUkraine would be able to take back their Country in its original form and, who knows, maybe even go further than that!
Putin and Russia are in BIG Economic trouble, and this is the time for Ukraine to act.â His comments represent the first time since taking office that heâs suggested the nation could win back all of the territory that Russia has taken since 2014.
He had previously suggested Ukraine would need to give up some of its territory in order to secure a peace deal.
Broken equipment â and a broken institution Trump used a broken escalator and his inoperable teleprompter to underscore his deeper complaints about the United Nations.
âThese are the two things I got from the United Nations: a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter,â he said.
(When he was arriving to the UN building on New Yorkâs East River earlier, the escalator stopped as he was riding up.) A United Nations spokesperson said that âa built-in safety mechanismâ on the escalator was triggered, causing it to stop when Trump attempted to use it.
In a lengthy note Tuesday evening, UN Secretary General spokesperson Stephane Dujarric explained that the mechanism may have been triggered by a videographer in the US delegation.
But Trumpâs gripes with the UN went well beyond its malfunctioning equipment.
âWhat is the purpose of the United Nations?â he asked during his speech.
And he added later: âFor the most part, at least for now, all they seem to do is write a really strongly worded letter and then never follow that letter up.
Itâs empty words, and empty words donât solve war.â US President Donald Trump speaks during the 80th session of the UN General Assembly on September 23 in New York City.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images Trump is hardly the only one who has questioned the efficacy of the UN, which has seen its relevance wane dramatically over the last decade.
A gridlocked Security Council and layers of rigid bureaucracy have made it difficult for the body to live up to its objective of promoting global peace and stability.
Trump, however, has gone further in eroding its stature, slashing the money the US spends on the institution and cutting funding for foreign humanitarian aid and peacekeeping operations.
Heâs also withdrawn from the UNâs cultural, health and human rights arms.
On Tuesday, he also seemed irked that the UN had ignored his efforts to end global conflicts.
âI ended seven wars, dealt with the leaders of each and every one of these countries, and never even received a phone call from the United Nations offering to help in finalizing the deal,â he said.
âAll I got from the United Nations was an escalator, that on the way up, stopped right in the middle.â Veering off-script Trumpâs speech began without a teleprompter, but as he meandered into various tangents, it seemed like he didnât really need one.
He went into digressions about his crime reduction efforts in US cities, Barack Obamaâs carbon footprint, his own stymied efforts to renovate the UNâs headquarters, and the efficacy of windmills.
âWe donât want cows anymore.
I guess they want to kill all the cows,â he said at one point, without explanation.
If there was a through line, it was his criticism of how most of the world â and the UN itself â is handling matters, and an accounting of how his approach is better.
Even for Trump, however, the detours were striking.
âIn Asia, they dump much of their garbage right into the ocean,â he intoned at another point.
His audience of global delegates didnât offer any audible reaction, beyond laughing at his description of meeting Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva backstage.
He went well beyond the 15-minute limit for leadersâ speeches, though he would hardly be the only world leader to extend past his slotted time.
This story has been updated with additional details.
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