US President Donald Trump suggested he could allow Kyiv to receive long-range Tomahawk missiles if Russia doesn’t end its war on Ukraine -- a move Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin has warned would represent a major escalation.
“[Ukraine] would like to have Tomahawks. That's a step up," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on October 12 en route to the Middle East for a Gaza peace conference.
"Yeah, I might tell him [Putin] if the war is not settled, we may very well do it,” he said.
SEE ALSO: Zelenskyy Calls For More Pressure On Russia As Moscow Intensifies Attacks On Ukraine’s Energy Infrastructure"We may not, but we may do it.…Do they want to have Tomahawks going in their direction? I don’t think so," Trump added.
Washington would not sell the missiles directly to Kyiv, but instead would offer them to NATO, which could pay for and send them on to Ukraine, as part of an earlier announced program.
Tomahawk missiles have a range of 2,500 kilometers, capable of hitting deep inside Russia, including the capital, Moscow.
Putin on October 2 warned that delivery of Tomahawks would represent a “completely new stage of escalation” between Washington and Moscow.
Still, he claimed they would not pose a major threat to the country.
“Can Tomahawks harm us? They can. But we will shoot them down and improve our air defense system,” Putin said.
Trump confirmed that he discussed the missiles in a second call in two days with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on October 12.
Here Is What Tomahawk Missiles Could Do For Ukraine
Zelenskyy said "signals" from Moscow indicated fear among the Russian leadership and that Tomahawks could strengthen Kyiv's position in peace talks.
Trump last week said he was waiting to hear what Ukraine would do with such long-range missiles before making a decision.
The Ukrainian leader said his forces would only target military assets should it be supplied with Tomahawks and not strike civilian sites inside Russia.
"We've never attacked their civilians. This is the big difference between Ukraine and Russia," Zelenskyy said in an interview broadcast on Fox News.
"That's why, if we speak about long-range [missiles], we speak only about military goals."
SEE ALSO: Europe Needs Defenses That Can 'Deal With Drones,' Zelenskyy Tells SummitZelenskyy renewed calls on the international community to put more pressure on Moscow, as Russia carried out a new wave of attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, cutting power to hundreds of thousands of households.
Zelenskyy on October 12 said Russia had intensified its "aerial terror against our cities and communities, intensifying strikes on our energy infrastructure."
In the past week alone, Moscow had used more than 3,100 drones, 92 missiles, and about 1,360 glide bombs to attack Ukraine, Zelenskyy wrote on the social media platform X.
Moscow denies targeting civilians and claims that Ukraine uses the energy sites to supply power to its military sector. Russia’s Defense Ministry on October 12 claimed its forces carried out strikes against Ukrainian energy infrastructure facilities that it said are part of Kyiv’s military-industrial complex.
In his nightly video address, Zelenskyy on October 12 said Ukrainian forces had made gains in the Zaporizhzhya and Donetsk regions, sites of recent heavy fighting.
"Ukrainian units are continuing our counteroffensive operations in the Dobropillya area and elsewhere -- notably in the Zaporizhzhya sector, near Orikhiv, where our troops have advanced more than 3 kilometers to date," he said.
Separately, Russia's TASS news agency reported that Ukrainian drones had again hit a large oil depot in the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.
TASS said the strike in the city of Feodosia set the site on fire, although there was no immediate information on possible casualties. Ukraine on October 6 also hit the site, which provides fuel to the Russian military.
The reports could not immediately be verified.