
Trump says he will meet Putin next Friday in Alaska to discuss ending the Ukraine war
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Trump said his meeting with Putin would come before any sit-down discussion involving Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Trump also previously agreed to meet with Putin even if the Russian leader would not meet with Zelenskyy. That stoked fears in Europe that Ukraine could be sidelined in efforts to stop the continent's biggest conflict since World War II.
Advertisement
Trump's announcement that he planned to host one of America's adversaries on U.S. soil broke with expectations that they'd meet in a third country. The gesture gives Putin validation after the U.S. and its allies had long sought to make him a pariah over his war against Ukraine.
Advertisement
Early in Putin's tenure, he regularly met with his U.S. counterparts. That dropped off and the tone became icier as tensions mounted between Russia and the West after Moscow illegally annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and faced allegations of meddling in the 2016 U.S. elections.
Putin's last visit to the U.S. was in 2015, when he attended the U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York. The meeting in Alaska would be the first U.S.-Russia summit since 2021, when former President Joe Biden met Putin in Geneva.
After announcing Friday a framework aimed at ending decades of conflict elsewhere in the world — between Armenia and Azerbaijan — Trump said he would meet with Putin 'very shortly.' His subsequent post said 'the highly anticipated meeting' would happen Aug. 15 in Alaska and more details would follow.
Ukrainian servicemen of the 148th artillery brigade loaded ammunition into a M777 howitzer before firing towards Russian positions at the frontline in Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine, on Thursday.
Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press
'Swapping territories'
Trump had told reporters that the summit would have been sooner, 'but I guess there's security arrangements that unfortunately people have to make.'
Trump said, 'President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace, and Zelenskyy wants to see peace.' He said that, 'In all fairness to President Zelenskyy, he's getting everything he needs to, assuming we get something done.'
Trump said a peace deal would likely mean Ukraine and Russia would swap some territory they each control.
'Nothing easy,' the president said. 'But we're gonna get some back. We're gonna get some switched. There'll be some swapping of territories, to the betterment of both.'
Pressed on if this was the last chance to make a major peace deal, Trump said, 'I don't like using the term last chance,' and said that, 'When those guns start going off, it's awfully tough to get 'em to stop.'
Advertisement
Exasperated that Putin did not heed his calls to stop bombing Ukrainian cities, Trump almost two weeks ago moved up his ultimatum to impose additional sanctions on Russia and introduce secondary tariffs targeting countries that buy Russian oil if the Kremlin did not move toward a settlement.
The deadline was Friday. But the White House did not answer questions that evening about the state of possible sanctions after Trump's announcement of an upcoming meeting with Putin.
Prior to Trump announcing the meeting with Putin, his efforts to pressure Russia into stopping the fighting had delivered no progress. The Kremlin's bigger army is slowly advancing deeper into Ukraine at great cost in troops and armor while it relentlessly bombards Ukrainian cities. Russia and Ukraine are far apart on their terms for peace.
Ukrainian troops say they are ready to keep fighting
Ukrainian forces are locked in intense battles along the 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line that snakes from northeast to southeast Ukraine. The Pokrovsk area of the eastern Donetsk region is taking the brunt of the punishment as Russia seeks to break out into the neighboring Dnipropetrovsk region. Ukraine has significant manpower shortages.
Intense fighting is also taking place in Ukraine's northern Sumy border region, where Ukrainian forces are engaging Russian soldiers to prevent reinforcements being sent from there to Donetsk.
In the Pokrovsk area of Donetsk, a commander said he believes Moscow isn't interested in peace.
'It is impossible to negotiate with them. The only option is to defeat them,' Buda, a commander of a drone unit in the Spartan Brigade, told The Associated Press. He used only his call sign, in keeping with the rules of the Ukrainian military.
Advertisement
'I would like them to agree and for all this to stop, but Russia will not agree to that. It does not want to negotiate. So the only option is to defeat them,' he said.
In the southern Zaporizhzhia region, a howitzer commander using the call sign Warsaw said troops are determined to thwart Russia's invasion.
'We are on our land, we have no way out,' he said. 'So we stand our ground, we have no choice.'
Russian President Vladimir Putin chaired the Security Council meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, on Friday.
Mikhail Metzel/Associated Press
Putin makes a flurry of phone calls
The Kremlin said Friday that Putin had a phone call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, during which he informed Xi about the results of his meeting earlier this week with Trump envoy Steve Witkoff. Kremlin officials said Xi 'expressed support for the settlement of the Ukrainian crisis on a long-term basis.'
Putin is due to visit China next month. China, along with North Korea and Iran, have provided military support for Russia's war effort, the U.S. says.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on X that he also had a call with Putin to speak about the latest Ukraine developments. Trump signed an executive order Wednesday to place an additional 25% tariff on India for its purchases of Russian oil, which the American president says is helping to finance Russia's war.
Putin's calls followed his phone conversations with the leaders of South Africa, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Belarus, the Kremlin said.
The calls suggested to at least one analyst that Putin perhaps wanted to brief Russia's most important allies about a potential settlement that could be reached at a summit with Trump.
Advertisement
'It means that some sort of real peace agreement has been reached for the first time,' said Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin Moscow-based analyst.
Analysts say Putin is aiming to outlast the West
Putin said in a previous statement that he hoped to meet with Trump as early as next week, possibly in the United Arab Emirates.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think tank, said in an assessment Thursday that 'Putin remains uninterested in ending his war and is attempting to extract bilateral concessions from the United States without meaningfully engaging in a peace process.'
'Putin continues to believe that time is on Russia's side and that Russia can outlast Ukraine and the West,' it said.
Stepanenko reported from the Dnipropetrovsk region of Ukraine. Associated Press writers Samya Kullab in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Michelle L. Price in Washington contributed to this report.
Hashtags

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


Boston Globe
8 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
A brief history of Trump pretending not to know things
Less than a week after the Justice Department took the highly unusual step of sending Todd Blanche, deputy attorney general and Trump's former personal lawyer, to interview Maxwell for more than nine hours over two days, she was quietly moved from a federal minimum-security prison in Florida to a less-restrictive facility in Texas. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up But according to Trump, that decision was news to him. Advertisement Perhaps the president really has no clue as to what's happening in his administration. But Trump's pleas of ignorance are an escape hatch he has deployed for years. Here's a brief history of notable moments in Trump's performative ignorance. The David Duke endorsement (2016): After Trump launched his first presidential campaign by excoriating Mexican immigrants and later promising to enact a Advertisement James Comey's firing (2017): Months into his first term, Trump dumped James Comey as FBI director. At the time, White House officials claimed that Trump fired Comey solely on the recommendation of deputy attorney general Hush money paid to Stormy Daniels (2018): Trump Advertisement Project 2025 (2024): At a Heritage Foundation event in 2022, Trump said the conservative group 'would lay the groundwork and detail plans for exactly what our movement will do and what your movement will do when the American people give us a colossal mandate to save America.' Two years later, Trump Trump seems to treat ignorance — saying 'I don't know' or 'I didn't know'— as evidence of his innocence. He's testing that theory again as his self-inflicted Epstein scandal refuses to go away. But whether this tactic will allow him to dodge accountability this time, no one knows. Advertisement Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at


New York Times
9 minutes ago
- New York Times
In a Trump-Putin Summit, Ukraine Fears Losing Say Over Its Future
For nearly three years of the war in Ukraine, Washington's rallying cry in backing a fight against a Russian invasion was 'no negotiations about Ukraine without Ukraine.' But when President Trump meets President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Alaska on Friday, the Ukrainians will not be there, barring any last-minute invitation. And Kyiv's swift rejection of Mr. Trump's declaration to reporters that he is already negotiating with the Russian leadership over what he vaguely called 'land swaps,' with no mention of the security guarantees or arms supplies for Ukraine, underscores the enormous risks for the Ukrainians — and the political perils for Mr. Trump. Ukraine's fear for these past six months has been that Mr. Trump's image of a 'peace accord' is a deal struck directly between him and Mr. Putin — much as Franklin Roosevelt, Joseph Stalin and Winston Churchill divided up Europe at the Yalta conference in 1945. That meeting has become synonymous with historical debates over what can go wrong when great powers carve up the world, smaller powers suffer the consequences and free people find themselves cast under authoritarian rule. Mr. Zelensky himself invited such comparisons in a speech to his people hours after Mr. Trump raised the specter of deciding Ukraine's fate in a one-on-one meeting in Alaska, territory that was once part of the Russian empire. (While Mr. Putin has made clear that he regards Ukraine as rightful Russian territory dating back to the days of Peter the Great, the Russian leader has not called for the reversal of the $7.2 million sale of Alaska to the United States in 1867, during a period of financial distress for the empire.) 'Ukrainians will not give their land to the occupier,' Mr. Zelensky said, noting that the Ukrainian constitution prohibits such a deal. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
White House weighs inviting Zelensky to Trump–Putin Alaska summit
The White House is reportedly weighing whether to invite Volodymyr Zelensky to join Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin at their upcoming Alaska summit. Trump and Putin are set to hold high-stakes talks on Friday aimed at ending the war in Ukraine, with US officials said to be 'very hopeful' the Ukrainian president could also attend. A senior administration official told NBC News a three-way meeting remains 'absolutely' possible, while another official confirmed: 'It's being discussed.' However, no formal invitation has yet been extended to Kyiv. One senior White House source stressed: 'Right now, the White House is focusing on planning the bilateral meeting requested by President Putin.' Zelensky has insisted he must be included in any peace negotiations that directly affect his country, warning that any deal struck without Kyiv would be 'stillborn decisions against peace' and doomed to fail. 'Any decisions that are against us, any decisions that are without Ukraine, are at the same time decisions against peace,' he said. 'They will not achieve anything.' His position has been echoed by European leaders including Sir Keir Starmer and the heads of France, Italy, Poland, Finland and the EU, who issued a joint statement warning there can be 'no peace without Ukraine.' 'We share the conviction that a diplomatic solution must protect Ukraine's and Europe's vital security interests,' it read. 'The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine. We remain committed to the principle that international borders must not be changed by force. The current line of contact should be the starting point of negotiations. We are united as Europeans and determined to jointly promote our interests.' European officials have also proposed an alternative peace plan, The Wall Street Journal reports, amid speculation Washington and Moscow are considering a territorial 'swap' deal. Such an agreement would see each side give up territory, something Russia is expected to present as a victory. Zelensky has vowed never to concede Ukrainian land to Moscow, while Europe has argued territorial changes should only be permitted if Ukraine is given security guarantees — and if any Ukrainian withdrawal is matched by a Russian pullback. Moscow would also need to agree to a ceasefire before further steps. If it goes ahead, a potential trilateral meeting would be the first time Zelensky and Putin have met since the war began. The Ukrainian leader has long sought a face-to-face encounter with the Russian president to confront him over alleged atrocities, but Putin has signalled reluctance. 'I have nothing against it in general… But certain conditions must be created for this,' Putin recently said. 'Unfortunately, we are still far from creating such conditions.' Trump has dismissed suggestions that next week's summit hinges on Zelensky's attendance, telling reporters: 'No, he doesn't,' when asked if Putin would need to meet Zelensky in order to meet him. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said preparations are continuing for either a bilateral or trilateral meeting: 'The White House is working through the details of these potential meetings… details will be provided at the appropriate time.'