logo
How the Trump-Putin talks in Alaska could unfold

How the Trump-Putin talks in Alaska could unfold

First Post2 hours ago
US President Donald Trump will host Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska for a high-stakes meeting to discuss a possible ceasefire between Moscow and Kyiv, without Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy present. Notably, Zelenskyy has already said he will not accept a deal that involves giving away Ukrainian territory, so what could happen during the meeting?
This will be Trump's first face-to-face meeting with Putin in his second term. Reuters/File Photo
If you consider the history of Donald Trump's public relationship with Vladimir Putin, you won't be surprised that there's a fair amount of concern in Ukraine and among Ukraine's European allies at what might happen when the two meet in Alaska today for their summit.
While it'll be their first face-to-face meeting of Trump's second presidency, the pair has met previously on six occasions and, as we know, spoken fairly frequently over the phone.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The first face-to-face meeting was at the G20 summit in Hamburg in 2017, just months into Trump's first term. The pair spent two hours of a scheduled 35-minute meeting talking about all things from Syria to North Korea. It was constructive and cordial, they said. Later they talked during a summit dinner in an exchange that was only witnessed by Putin's interpreter, the nature of which was not reported.
They enjoyed a brief encounter at that year's Apec conference in Vietnam, sharing a handshake but having no formal discussion.
The first face-to-face meeting between Trump and Putin was at the G20 summit in Hamburg in 2017. Reuters/File Photo
The following year they met for the now notorious summit in Helsinki, where Putin denied US intelligence reports that Russia had interfered in the 2016 election and Trump said he had no reason to doubt Putin's word. The two spent two hours closeted with only their interpreters present. Trump's high spirits were exhibited by a couple of winks he gave the Russian president during their public exchanges.
There was a brief exchange at the G20 summit later that year in Buenos Aires, but this was at the height of the justice department's investigation into election meddling into Russian election interference. It was a subject Trump returned to when they met at the 2019 G20 summit in Osaka, where Trump seemed to grin as he told Putin: 'Don't meddle in the election.'
As a result, as Stefan Wolff puts in, 'expectations are low and anxieties are high' in the run-up to the meeting. Wolff, an expert in international security at the University of Birmingham, sees a number of possible pitfalls for Ukraine in the meeting. Trump has billed the summit as 'a feel-out meeting' at which he will get a sense of whether it's possible to agree a ceasefire. But the US president and his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, have reportedly already sketched out scenarios whereby Putin is offered Ukrainian territory in return for a ceasefire.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The Ukrainian president won't be there, of course. But he has already said that he won't accept a deal which imposes a giveaway of Ukrainian territory (which would, in any case, violate his country's constitution). Wolff believes this would give Putin the opportunity to paint Zelensky as the problem – the man denying the US president his Nobel peace prize.
On the other hand is the possibility that Trump will persuade Putin to agree to a three-way with Zelensky but without other European leaders. Wolff believes this brings with it the danger that Putin (who as a longtime Soviet intelligence officer would have plenty of experience at this sort of thing) would be able to manipulate the meeting into the sort of blow-up between Trump and Zelensky we saw in their disastrous meeting at the White House in February.
These are clearly all concerns shared by Ukraine's European allies, so much so that they convened an emergency virtual conference on August 13. Zelensky, German chancellor Friedrich Merz and an array of other European leaders warned Trump and his vice-president, J.D. Vance, that Ukrainian and European interests must be protected at the summit.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The main worry, writes Michelle Bentley, a professor of international relations at Royal Holloway University of London, will be that while Putin's position is clear, Trump's is not. Putin wants a deal that recognises Russian ownership of Crimea and the various provinces in Ukraine's east that his military already occupies, including land it has not managed to take by force. He wants to prevent Ukraine joining Nato and wants the country to demilitarise.
Trump, by contrast, wants to do a deal. Partly because he has said he will do one. And partly because there is economic benefit to be had for the US in repairing relations with Russia. Bentley also worries that the US president has a track record of support for the Russian president and the mere fact that the pair are getting together for a summit on equal terms effectively brings to an end the years of Russia's diplomatic isolation in the west.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
There is a possibility that Trump will persuade Putin to agree to a three-way with Zelensky, but without other European leaders. Reuters/File Photo
What to expect?
What will also be worrying Kyiv and its allies is Trump's singular foreign policy style, which is notably transactional. It may be the US president's background in real estate asserting itself (and it's no coincidence that his envoy to Russia and at times to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Steve Witkoff, is from a similar background).
Just recently, Trump hosted the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Oval Office for a meeting at which they signed a deal to end the decades of conflict between their two countries. Integral to the deal is the development of a new corridor through Armenia to link Azerbaijan with its enclave of Nakhchivan. Previously known as the Zangezur corridor, the link will have the name the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity.
Trump is by no means the first US president to link commerce or economic incentives with diplomacy, writes Patrick Shea, an expert in international relations and global governance at the University of Glasgow. But Trump's style is somewhat different, he writes. The president's deals often skirt dangerously close to the wind in terms of international law, the recent tariff policies being an example.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Foreign governments, meanwhile, are first learning that such sweeteners can be effective in dealing with this administration. As is flattery. So it's notable that, following Trump's warning to Putin to get serious about doing a deal, the Russian president has been fulsome in his praise of Trump's 'sincere efforts' to bring about peace in Ukraine.
Trump has made a big fuss about Putin coming to see him in Alaska, a US state. He sees that as courtesy on the part of the Russian leader. But there are many who think holding the summit in a territory that one belonged to Russia means the whole meeting has a subtext that territorial sovereignty is not absolute and that it does change hands from time to time. Here's a brief history of Alaska from William L. Iggiagruk Hensley of the University of Alaska Anchorage, a former member of the state legislature.
Munich Agreement of 1938
A major international summit, where an aggressor is threatening to invade another country with the prospect of a major European war? We've been here before. The summit was at Munich in September 1938, the aggressor was Germany and the country at threat was Czechoslovakia. And like the impending Alaska summit where Ukraine has not been invited, when the British and French leaders visited Adolf Hitler to talk peace, Czechoslovakia was not in the room.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The example of Munich 1938 doesn't fill one with a great deal of confidence for Ukraine's future security, writes Tim Luckhurst, a historian of the second world war.
Luckhurst recounts the events leading up to Munich, at which British prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, and his French counterpart, Édouard Daladier, agreed that Germany would be allowed to annex the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia, with no involvement of the Czech leader, Edvard Beneš.
It would be 'peace in our time', boasted Chamberlain. It wasn't even peace for a year.
What's happening in Israel?
To Israel, where this weekend there is likely to be one of the biggest mass protests and general strikes in the country's history on Sunday, August 17. Huge numbers of people are expected to turn out in protest at the Netanyahu government's failure to secure the release of the remaining October 7 hostages and the prime minister's plan to launch a fresh offensive to take and occupy Gaza city despite the risk to the remaining hostages' lives.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Benjamin Netanyahu's position as prime minister is looking far from secure. The next election is due in October 2026, but John Strawson – an expert in Israeli politics at the University of East London – believes a new poll may be held much sooner than that.
Netanyahu's parliamentary coalition is becoming more shaky as his ultra-orthodox supporters quit the government in protest at the government's decision to scrap the exemption from conscription enjoyed by orthodox Israeli students.
But whether this will bring any relief to Palestinians is doubtful. Recent polling suggests that while there is huge support for an end to the war, this doesn't translate into public backing for a two-state solution.
Jonathan Este, Senior International Affairs Editor, Associate Editor, The Conversation
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hillary Clinton says she'd nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize on one condition
Hillary Clinton says she'd nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize on one condition

India Today

time15 minutes ago

  • India Today

Hillary Clinton says she'd nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize on one condition

Donald Trump's former presidential rival Hillary Clinton has said she would nominate Donald Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize if he succeeds in ending the war in Ukraine without conceding territory to Russia, as reported by the New York made the remark during the 'Raging Moderates' podcast, telling interviewer Jessica Tarlov, 'Honestly, if he could bring about the end to this terrible war, if he could end it without putting Ukraine in a position where it had to concede its territory to the aggressor, could really stand up to Putin, something we haven't seen, but maybe this is the opportunity if President Trump were the architect of that, I'd nominate him for a Nobel Peace Prize.'She added, 'Because my goal here is to not allow capitulation to Putin.'Clinton's statement came as Trump was travelling to Alaska for landmark talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, aimed at ending the three-year conflict. Trump has said he believes Putin wants to make a deal, estimating the chance of failure at just 25 defeated Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election. During that campaign, she called his supporters a 'basket of deplorables' and described him as 'not just unprepared – he's temperamentally unfit' to be president. She also condemned his praise for Putin, years before Russia's invasion of attacks then included his praise of his counterpart Putin, before the Russian leader invaded Ukraine.- Ends advertisementIN THIS STORY#Donald Trump

Trump-Putin Alaska Summit LIVE Updates: Trump and Putin to hold crucial talks on Ukraine conflict in Alaska
Trump-Putin Alaska Summit LIVE Updates: Trump and Putin to hold crucial talks on Ukraine conflict in Alaska

First Post

time15 minutes ago

  • First Post

Trump-Putin Alaska Summit LIVE Updates: Trump and Putin to hold crucial talks on Ukraine conflict in Alaska

Trump-Putin Alaska Summit Live Updates: Trump on Thursday said there was a 25% chance that the summit would fail, but he also floated the idea that if the meeting succeeds he could bring Zelenskyy to Alaska for a subsequent, three-way meeting, a possibility that Russia hasn't agreed to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are among the Trump administration officials joining the president for his flight to Alaska. US President Donald Trump departed for Alaska on Thursday ahead of a closely watched meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a high-stakes encounter that could prove decisive for the future of European security and influence the course of the war in Ukraine. While it'll be their first face-to-face meeting of Trump's second presidency, the pair has met previously on six occasions and, as we know, spoken fairly frequently over the phone. If you consider the history of Donald Trump's public relationship with Vladimir Putin, you won't be surprised that there's a fair amount of concern in Ukraine and among Ukraine's European allies at what might happen when the two meet in Alaska today for their summit. On Friday, US President Donald Trump will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska for a high-stakes summit that may determine not just the course of the Ukrainian conflict, but also Europe's security. The meeting allows Trump to demonstrate to the world that he is both a skilled negotiator and a global peacemaker. He and his allies have portrayed him as a heavyweight negotiator capable of bringing the killing to an end, something he once boasted of doing rapidly. For Putin, a summit with Trump offers a long-sought opportunity to try to negotiate a deal that would cement Russia's gains, block Kyiv's bid to join the NATO military alliance and eventually pull Ukraine back into Moscow's orbit. Trump faces tremendous dangers. By allowing Putin into US land, the president is providing Russia's leader with the recognition he seeks after being ostracised during his invasion of Ukraine three and a half years earlier. The absence of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy from the meeting also strikes a major blow to the West's stance of 'nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine' and raises the prospect that Trump may agree to a settlement that Ukraine does not want. Any success is far from guaranteed, especially as Russia and Ukraine continue to hold opposing positions on peace. Putin has consistently opposed any interim truce, citing a halt in Western weaponry supply and a freeze on Ukraine's mobilisation efforts as criteria, both of which Kyiv and its Western backers have refused.

Washington DC sues to block Trump's federal takeover of its police department
Washington DC sues to block Trump's federal takeover of its police department

The Hindu

time15 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Washington DC sues to block Trump's federal takeover of its police department

The nation's capital challenged President Donald Trump's takeover of its police department in court on Friday (August 15, 2025), hours after his administration stepped up its crackdown on policing by naming a federal official as the new emergency head of the department, with all the powers of a police chief. District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb said in a new lawsuit that Mr. Trump is going far beyond his power under the law. Mr. Schwalb asked a judge to find that control of the department remains in district hands. 'The administration's unlawful actions are an affront to the dignity and autonomy of the 700,000 Americans who call DC home. This is the gravest threat to Home Rule that the District has ever faced, and we are fighting to stop it," Mr. Schwalb said. The lawsuit comes after Trump Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Thursday night that Drug Enforcement Administration boss Terry Cole will assume 'powers and duties vested in the District of Columbia Chief of Police.' The Metropolitan Police Department 'must receive approval from Commissioner Cole' before issuing any orders, Ms. Bondi said. It was unclear where the move left the city's current police chief, Pamela Smith, who works for the Mayor. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser pushed back, writing on social media that 'there is no statute that conveys the District's personnel authority to a federal official.' Chief had agreed to share immigration information Mr. Schwalb had said late on Thursday that Ms. Bondi's directive was 'unlawful,' arguing it could not be followed by the city's police force. He wrote in a memo to Smith that 'members of MPD must continue to follow your orders and not the orders of any official not appointed by the Mayor,' setting up the legal clash between the heavily Democratic district and the Republican administration. Ms. Bondi's directive came even after Smith had told MPD officers hours earlier to share information with immigration agencies regarding people not in custody, such as someone involved in a traffic stop or checkpoint. The Justice Department, said Ms. Bondi, disagreed with the police chief's directive because it allowed for continued enforcement of 'sanctuary policies,' which generally limit cooperation by local law enforcement with federal immigration officers. Ms. Bondi said she was rescinding that order as well as other MPD policies limiting inquires into immigration status and preventing arrests based solely on federal immigration warrants. All new directives must now receive approval from Cole, the Attorney General said. The police takeover is the latest move by Mr. Trump to test the limits of his legal authorities to carry out his agenda, relying on obscure statutes and a supposed state of emergency to bolster his tough-on-crime message and his plans to speed up the mass deportation of people in the U.S. illegally. It also marks one of the most sweeping assertions of federal authority over a local government in modern times. While Washington has grappled with spikes in violence and visible homelessness, the city's homicide rate ranks below those of several other major U.S. cities and the capital is not in the throes of the public safety collapse the administration has portrayed. Residents are seeing a significant show of force A population already tense from days of ramp-up has begun seeing more significant shows of force across the city. National Guard troops watched over some of the world's most renowned landmarks and Humvees took position in front of the busy main train station. Volunteers helped homeless people leave long-standing encampments — to where was often unclear. Department of Homeland Security police stood outside Nationals Park during a game on Thursday between the Washington Nationals and the Philadelphia Phillies. DEA agents patrolled The Wharf, a popular nightlife area, while Secret Service officers were seen in the Foggy Bottom neighbourhood. Mr. Bowser, walking a tightrope between the Republican White House and the constituency of her largely Democratic city, was out of town Thursday for a family commitment in Martha's Vineyard but would be back Friday, her office said. The uptick in visibility of federal forces around the city, including in many high-traffic areas, has been striking to residents going about their lives. Mr. Trump has the power to take over federal law enforcement for 30 days before his actions must be reviewed by Congress, though he has said he'll re-evaluate as that deadline approaches. Officers set up a checkpoint in one of DC's popular nightlife areas, drawing protests. Troops were stationed outside the Union Station transportation hub as the 800 Guard members who have been activated by Mr. Trump started in on missions that include monument security, community safety patrols and beautification efforts, the Pentagon said. Troops will assist law enforcement in a variety of roles, including traffic control posts and crowd control, National Guard Major Micah Maxwell said. The Guard members have been trained in de-escalation tactics and crowd control equipment, Maxwell said. National Guard troops are a semi-regular presence in DC, typically being used during mass public events like the annual July 4 celebration. They have regularly been used in the past for crowd control in and around Metro stations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store