Early on in Donald Trump’s first term, one of the president’s top priorities was repealing the Affordable Care Act and replacing it with a Republican alternative. As he and his party struggled mightily, he eventually declared, “Nobody knew that health care could be so complicated.”
It was amusing, of course, because literally everyone who’s familiarized themselves with the governing details of health care policymaking was well aware of the issue’s complexity. But Trump, upon arriving in the White House, was gobsmacked: He apparently assumed he’d take power, scrap “Obamacare,” tell Congress to give everyone better health care coverage at a lower cost and — voila! — he’d “repeal and replace” the ACA.
When the rookie president actually confronted reality, however, he found himself frustrated by the fact that health care “could be so complicated.”
This came to mind anew watching Trump, eight years later, express similar frustrations about Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Reporter: “You once said you would end the Ukraine war in 24 hours… You’ve now been in office for five months and five days. Why have you not been able to end the Ukraine war?”Trump: “Because it’s more difficult than people would have any idea.”
— The Bulwark (@thebulwark.com) 2025-06-25T15:07:53.870Z
Austrian reporter Johannes Petrov reminded the president, “You once said that you would end the Ukraine war in 24 hours,” at which point Trump interjected, “Of course I said that sarcastically.”
Undeterred, the reporter asked, “But you’ve been in office for five months and five days. Why have you not been able to end the Ukraine war?”
The Republican responded, “Because it’s more difficult than people would have any idea.”
The first part of the exchange as notable in its own right. As a candidate, Trump repeatedly promised American voters that he’d end Russia’s devastating war in Ukraine before he was sworn in for a second term. He failed.
Trump similarly promised the public that he’d resolve the crisis “within 24 hours” of returning to the White House — and he failed on that front, too. In fact, by some accounts, Trump barely tried to keep his promise.
The idea that he was being “sarcastic” when he repeatedly vowed to end the conflict in a day is both absurd and at odds with the overwhelming evidence.
But doesn’t Trump have a bit of a point? Given the geopolitical conditions and relevant players’ motivations, isn’t it true that resolving the conflict is “difficult”?








