Republican front-runner and former President Donald Trump took to Truth Social on Tuesday to mock President Joe Biden's "surrender" speech before the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
"Biden just finished his surrender ('speech') at the United Nations, and nobody, despite all we give them, showed up. No respect for America any longer!" Trump posted.
Doctor: These 4 Things Happen Right Before a Heart Attack, See Them
Indeed, French President Emmanuel Macron and U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak skipped the assembly, leaving the U.S. as the sole member out of five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council to attend.
"While Sunak and Macron have an excuse, I do think it is telling that they are absent," Richard Gowan, U.N. director for the International Crisis Group, told CBS News.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi also did not attend.
Alert: These 7 Things Activate Alzheimer’s in Your Brain, See More
Chinese President Xi Jinping also skipped, as he did last week's G-20 in India. Russian President Vladimir Putin didn't attend either.
In his speech, Biden appealed to the world leaders who did attend — including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Russian ambassador to the U.N. — to stand with Ukraine against Russia's invasion.
"Russia believes that the world will grow weary and allow it to brutalize Ukraine without consequence," Biden said. "If we allow Ukraine to be carved up, is the independence of any nation secure?"
The Biden administration is working with Congress to provide another $24 billion to bolster Ukraine. Trump has said he will not commit to funding for Ukraine if he's elected in 2024, adding that he would end the war in 24 hours.
Zelenskyy, who gave a speech later Tuesday, will visit the White House on Thursday and is expected to meet with congressional leaders.
More Weakness?
Even as he takes flak from Trump over perceived weakness in his U.N. address, Biden is under fire over yet another element of his foreign policy: a prisoner swap deal recently struck with Iran.
Indeed Republicans including Trump have expressed outrage over the deal, which comes even as Iran has seemed to defy other nations in advancing a nuclear weapons program.
The administration notified Congress last week that it was proceeding with the agreement, which involved issuing a waiver that will let Tehran tap into some $6 billion in oil revenue that the U.S. had frozen through sanctions.
Under the agreement, the administration also agreed to free five Iranians under detention in the U.S., in exchange for a release of five detained Americans.
Trump, who lost to Biden in 2020 and now looks to challenge him again for the White House in 2024, sounded a similar theme of Biden administration weakness in his responses to news of that deal. Trump said it set a terrible precedent in a post on Truth Social.
"So, lets get this straight! We did a hostage TRADE with Iran. We gave them 5 very tough, smart people that they desperately wanted. We likewise got back 5 people BUT, we also gave them 6 BILLION DOLLARS! How much of a kickback does Crooked Joe Biden get? Does anyone realize how much money 6 Billion Dollars is?"
The White House denied this constituted a surrender, and that it was paying Iran with American taxpayer dollars. Rather, it insisted, it was just allowing Iran access to its own money, money it said the Trump administration allowed it to make. The money would be closely monitored and can be used only for humanitarian purposes, the administration said.
Other Republicans have, like Trump, questioned elements of the deal as projecting a weakness that might embolden other rogue nations.