
Native Ukrainian 'speechless' and disappointed after 'no deal' summit
Valchuk, a respiratory therapist who lives in San Rafael, California, said he's "very disappointed" when Trump said "no deal" was reached to end the three-year Ukraine war.
"At least they could've given us a little idea what Putin said the agreement was," Valchuk said about the summit held in Anchorage, Alaska. "Trump said he will talk to NATO and (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelenskyy, but I really don't know what that means?
"Yeah, I'm disappointed," said Valchuk, who came from Ukraine to the US to attend college in 1996. "Very disappointed."
Valchuk, who gained his American citizenship in 2004, said he doesn't know what will happen next for his homeland.
"I just hope it's not going to cost Ukraine some of its land and more lives," Valchuk said. "I hope."
Live updates: Trump, Putin meet in Alaska summit
How the war looks for two Ukrainian teens currently in the US
For two Ukrainian-born teenagers, Taisiia Grygorova and Sofiia Kopytko, who are spending this summer performing across the East Coast in a play titled "Voices from Ukraine: Stories of War and Hope," they told USA TODAY that no matter what outcome comes from the summit in Anchorage, Alaska, the war can't end soon enough.
Grygorova, 19, who lives in Kharkiv, a city near the Ukrainian-Russian border, said despite the constant rocket attacks, drones, air raids, and explosions, her thoughts are always with the people suffering through the continuous combat.
Grygorova, who's studying journalism at Warsaw International University, said she regularly returns to Kharkiv to visit her parents and four younger siblings, despite the dangers.
"And every time I go there I prepare myself, 'Taia, you're going for two weeks, and it's a 100% chance that you will get under a rocket attack at least four times during this time, but you'll be fine, your younger brothers and sisters live in this nightmare every day, you can handle two weeks,'" Grygorova said.
Grygorova said her youngest brother, a six-year-old, is supposed to start school this year, but she wonders how with the threat of bombings.
"You will ask, 'What risk?' Well, there is always a possibility that one of those bombs, which are flying over the city, will hit a school where kids are studying," Grygorova said. "My brother is going to study underground, with no sunlight, with no possibility to play outside, to run freely over a football pitch or hear the birds singing."
Grygorova said her mother keeps all of the family documents near the front door, just in case they need to leave their house forever.
"That's how the war looks for me and my family," Grygorova said.
Sofiia Kopytko, 18, from Chernihiv, Ukraine, said the war has not only been about territory, the lack of resources and weapons, but also the doctors who work in critical conditions, and families like Grygorova's who live in occupied territories and face death daily as a result of random air strikes.
"Human lives are not statistics, but the most valuable thing that each of us has, and we must protect it," Kopytko said. "After all, you never know what tomorrow holds and whether it will come at all."
Grygorova said she desperately wants the war to end so that people can live their lives in peace.
"I hope that when the war is over, I'll be able to visit my family without fear," Grygorova said. "I hope that my city will be renovated. I hope I'll be able to help in the rebuilding of my country, where I want my future kids to grow up."
Kopytko said her wishes are quite simple.
"That there will be no more news of death and destruction, just simple happiness," Kopytko said. "Of course, I can talk about building a career and a family, but for me, these are the components of the happiness I strive for. First and foremost, free people in a free country. In a free Ukraine."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
D-Day at the White House: Starmer, Zelensky and EU leaders are to meet Trump.. but will he listen to a single word they say?
Sir Keir Starmer will join EU and Nato leaders to bolster Volodymyr Zelensky in his crunch White House meeting with Donald Trump on Monday. They will present a united front in the hope of moderating Mr Trump's treatment of the Ukrainian leader, whom he humiliated at the Oval Office in February. European ministers fear that Mr Zelensky is walking into a trap laid by Vladimir Putin. The Ukrainian leader said on Sunday that the 'coalition of the willing' – the UK and other nations that have pledged to support Kyiv – held a 'useful' two-hour video conference on Sunday. He revealed that they had a 'common view on what a peace agreement should be' and insisted it did not include changing state borders by force. In a sign of EU leaders' bullishness, French president Emmanuel Macron said afterwards: 'If we're not strong today, we'll pay dearly tomorrow.' It came after Boris Johnson called on Sir Keir to lead global efforts to protect Ukraine from being carved up following Friday's 'vomit-inducing' meeting between Mr Trump and Putin. Writing in The Mail on Sunday, the former prime minister insisted that although the summit made him 'retch', it was 'justifiable and even essential'. He said it offered hope that 'one day this war will end with a peace that protects Ukrainian freedom' – but to make that happen 'the Europeans, led by Britain, will have to step up'. Sunday's meeting of Europe's heads of state came after Putin was widely regarded to have gained the upper hand at Friday's summit in Anchorage, Alaska. He was welcomed back on to the world stage from pariah status with red carpets and a ride in the US presidential limo before reportedly persuading Mr Trump to drop calls for a ceasefire 'within two hours'. Washington was also said to have agreed to the Kremlin proposition that Kyiv cede the whole Donbas region after Putin presented faked pictures that made it appear Ukrainian lines there were about to collapse. But the President hit back on Sunday, slamming 'fake news' as he described the Alaskan summit as a 'great meeting' and told the world to ' STAY TUNED' for 'BIG PROGRESS ON RUSSIA '. His special envoy, Steve Witkoff, also said the US delegation had forced Putin to accept 'robust', US backed, Nato-like security guarantees for Ukraine for the first time, which he described as 'game-changing '. Mr Zelensky has appealed to Sir Keir and other European leaders to join him for 'moral support and solidarity'. Those answering the call include Mr Macron, Italian PM Giorgia Meloni, German chancellor Friedrich Merz, Finnish president Alexander Stubb, Nato secretary general Mark Rutte, and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen. Sunday's meeting of Europe's heads of state came after Putin was widely regarded to have gained the upper hand at Friday's summit in Anchorage, Alaska. He was welcomed back on to the world stage from pariah status with red carpets and a ride in the US presidential limo But the President hit back on Sunday, slamming 'fake news' as he described the Alaskan summit as a 'great meeting' and told the world to 'STAY TUNED' for 'BIG PROGRESS ON RUSSIA' Ahead of another dramatic day of global diplomacy over the future of Europe, No 10 said on Sunday that the PM 'stands ready to support this next phase of further talks'. Sir Keir will 'reaffirm his backing for Ukraine will continue as long as it takes', and 'the path to peace cannot be decided without president Zelensky'. Keen to keep Washington onside, Sir Keir also commended 'President Trump's efforts to end Russia's illegal war in Ukraine'. On Sunday, Mr Trump's former vice-president, Mike Pence, insisted that Putin was 'the bad guy' and should be treated as such during negotiations. He said he knew Mr Trump liked to use a 'velvet glove' style in dealing with dictators, but he added: 'The hammer needs to come and it needs to come immediately.' Mr Pence told CNN that as well as meeting Mr Zelensky, Mr Trump should call for another sanctions bill against Russia to be passed 'immediately' in the Senate. He also gave Mr Trump credit for pursuing his earlier ceasefire deal despite 'many voices in and around the administration that would have cut Ukraine loose months ago'. All eyes will be on the Oval Office on Monday where Mr Trump will try to persuade Mr Zelensky to agree to meet Putin and 'make a deal '. Sir Keir will 'reaffirm his backing for Ukraine will continue as long as it takes', and 'the path to peace cannot be decided without president Zelensky'. Keen to keep Washington onside, Sir Keir also commended 'President Trump's efforts to end Russia's illegal war in Ukraine'. Pictured: Sir Keir and Zelensky at No 10 on August 17 In a worrying development, Putin reportedly convinced Washington that Ukraine must cede the Donbas – the collective name for Donetsk and Luhansk – as a condition for peace. While Russia has taken most of Luhansk, it only holds about 75 per cent of Donetsk, which is both vital for the nation's defence and also home to many of the rare-earth minerals Putin craves. He has also taken about 74 per cent of the neighbouring Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions. It is feared Mr Zelensky could be strong-armed by the President on Monday into accepting these terms or risk losing American support. As he attempted to sidestep Moscow's ambush, Mr Zelensky said on Sunday that the territorial issue 'should be discussed only by the leaders of Ukraine and Russia'. Flanked by Ms von der Leyen in Brussels, he said that 'real negotiations' must 'start where the front line is now'. He pointed out that Putin had been unable to take Donetsk 'for 12 years'. Mr Zelensky also sought to bring back calls for a ceasefire at the outset of negotiations – a subject Russia apparently succeeded in removing from the summit on Friday. He said: 'We see that Russia rebuffs numerous calls for a ceasefire and has not yet determined when it will stop the killing. This complicates the situation.' Before going to Anchorage, Mr Trump said forcing Russia to agree to a ceasefire was his priority, but he dropped the demand 'two hours into his meeting', the New York Post reported. 'Figuratively, the President sort of threw up his hands and said, 'I'm not interested in a ceasefire any more',' a source told the paper. In exchange, Mr Trump allegedly got Putin to say: 'I will not attack a European country.' On social media on Sundayty, Mr Trump said he 'had a great meeting in Alaska' and complained that 'if I got Russia to give up Moscow as part of the Deal, the Fake News and their PARTNER, the Radical Left Democrats, would say I made a terrible mistake '. Mr Witkoff, the US special envoy who has flitted between Moscow and Washington for months to pave the way for the current talks without once visiting Kyiv, defended the Trump administration's performance on Friday. He told CNN on Sunday: 'We were able to win the following concession – that the US could offer Article 5-like protection, which is one of the real reasons why Ukraine wants to be in Nato'. Nato's Article 5 states that an armed attack on one member country would be considered an attack on all members. Mr Zelensky described the US commitment to a security guarantee as 'a historic decision' but called on it to be 'very practical' in 'delivering protection on land, in the air, and at sea'. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said ideas were discussed in Alaska that 'we know the Ukrainians could be very supportive of'. But he warned it may be that 'peace is not going to be possible' Mr Witkoff added that Russia said it would make a legislative commitment not to go after any additional territory in Ukraine. He said: 'There is an important discussion with regard to Donetsk and what would happen there.' Secretary of State Marco Rubio said ideas were discussed in Alaska that 'we know the Ukrainians could be very supportive of'. But he warned it may be that 'peace is not going to be possible'. Mr Zelensky said on Sunday night that if talks fail 'then new sanctions must follow', which Mr Rubio agreed with. On Sunday night, the UK and the rest of the coalition of the willing 're-emphasised the readiness to deploy a reassurance force once hostilities have ceased'.


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on the Alaska summit: there must be no more gifts to Vladimir Putin
Hours after Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin departed from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska on Friday, Moscow officials reported that two more villages in Ukraine's east had been seized by Russian forces. It was a grimly apt postscript to a 'peace summit' that allowed a pariah leader to posture on the world stage, but signally failed to achieve the outcome that its host claimed to desire. Mr Trump had suggested that he would be 'unhappy' if a ceasefire were not agreed during discussions with Mr Putin. There would, he warned, be 'severe consequences' if his guest proved unwilling to end the war. Predictably, no ceasefire announcement was forthcoming, and the sanctions Mr Trump has repeatedly threatened, but never imposed, have been kicked into the long grass. Instead, the US president offered a crucial concession to Mr Putin, concurring that a cessation of hostilities should come only after a 'comprehensive' peace agreement. This was a betrayal of hollow assurances given to Kyiv and European allies by Mr Trump before the summit, and a gift to the Kremlin. As Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, prepares to meet the US president in Washington on Monday, he consequently finds himself in a deeply invidious position. According to reports, Mr Putin's core demand is that Ukraine surrenders all unoccupied territory in the Donbas region, in exchange for a supposedly permanent ceasefire. There are, of course, no good grounds to take the Russian president at his word. His references in Alaska to the 'root causes' of the war indicate that he remains determined to force Ukraine back into Moscow's orbit, and restrict its capacity to act as an independent state. A 'deal' on anything like those terms would amount to precisely the carve-up feared by Kyiv. Mr Zelenskyy cannot, should not and will not acquiesce. But having retreated from his threats to make life tougher for Mr Putin, the US president is returning to his default bullying stance towards Mr Zelenskyy. Asked what advice he would offer the Ukrainian leader, Mr Trump responded: 'Make a deal. Gotta make a deal.' The peremptory tone is worryingly reminiscent of February's notorious Oval Office meeting, when Mr Zelenskyy was told: 'You don't have the cards.' In vague terms, Mr Trump has alluded to a future US role in security guarantees following a deal. But as Ukraine fights for a viable future, he appears impatient to move on to doing lucrative future business with Moscow, and angling for a Nobel peace prize. Given that ominous backdrop, the presence of Sir Keir Starmer and other European leaders in Washington on Monday will represent a crucial counterweight. Mr Putin will attempt to force Ukraine's negotiating hand by taking more territory in the east, where Russian forces have been advancing at the fastest rate for months. Europe must ensure that, as Kyiv battles for a just peace, Mr Zelenskyy does have enough cards to play. As well as displaying solidarity in the White House, that means upping the economic pressure and military support, and urging Mr Trump to do the same. Ukraine must remain in control of the future of its own territory, and the use of force must not be rewarded by the summary redrawing of borders. With enormous bravery and skill, and at immense cost, Ukraine has resisted an illegal invasion for more than three years. There must be no sellout. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.


Sky News
30 minutes ago
- Sky News
How a chaotic 24 hours unfolded ahead of Trump and Zelenskyy's crunch White House talks
If there's one thing the past 24 hours has confirmed, it's that it's still Donald Trump's world, and we're all just living in it. In the aftermath of the Alaska meeting, the US president's deal-making skills came under question when he seemingly walked away empty-handed. But it was clear he had retained his ability to catch everyone off guard, as a meeting between him and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy unexpectedly became a last-minute White House peace summit. 0:56 The invitation to European leaders drifted out, and within hours, the cast list had grown to include six more, as world leaders dropped everything to fit in with Mr Trump's unpredictable timetable. There were signs of disorganisation behind the scenes. When the British Prime Minister's spokesman was asked who the invite had come from - the White House or the Ukrainian president - they replied: "A bit of both." 2:09 Meanwhile, the meeting of the coalition of the willing - a Starmer and Macron-led group of Ukraine's European allies - had a nervous feel to it as members resolved to stand firm with Ukraine - even if it puts them at odds with the US. At times, it sounded like they were trying to convince themselves they could do it. And as all of this frantic diplomatic reaction played out, the man in the middle of it all headed to the golf course - calm at the centre of the diplomatic storm he created as his allies swirl around him.