
'Russia has no reason to scale back its ambitions in Ukraine and beyond'
The answer remains unclear. Despite all parties praising the quality of the discussions, no specific details of a possible settlement, its terms or its timeline have been revealed to date. Meanwhile, the idea of an unconditional ceasefire has dropped from the agenda, and Russia has continued bombing Ukraine without losing favor with the American president.
In Alaska, Putin emerged as the main political beneficiary of the meeting. Welcomed with unprecedented honors by Trump, he scored a symbolic victory: To both his electorate and the international community, he did not appear as a pariah but as an indispensable peacemaker.
Beyond the staging, the Russian president largely imposed his approach. Now, Trump no longer supports an immediate ceasefire, as Kyiv and Brussels had demanded, but instead a "comprehensive agreement" with vague terms that would include recognition of Crimea as part of Russia, as well as the four regions in eastern Ukraine; the exclusion of Ukraine from membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO); the recognition of Russian as a second official language in certain regions; and the return to favor of the Orthodox Church under the Moscow Patriarchate. In exchange, Putin now appears to grudgingly accept the principle of Western security guarantees for Ukraine. Whether this major shift is genuine, however, remains to be seen.
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