
Putin's biggest demand involves Ukraine surrendering Donetsk, its most fortified region
But the Donestk oblast — which is smaller than Massachusetts and home to about 4 million people — has been at the center of some of the most brutal fighting of the war, and the Kremlin has not been able to take the entire region after more than three and a half years.
A source familiar with Friday's meeting between Putin and President Trump described negotiations over the fate of Donetsk as 'the ball game.'
'Every issue is an ancillary issue, except Donetsk,' the source previously told The Post.
Ukrainian officials and western observers say giving up the territory without a fight should be a nonstarter.
George Barros, the Russian team head for the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War think tank, said conceding the land would be playing right into Putin's hands and leave Ukraine susceptible for a future assault.
He called such a move a 'foolish proposition.'
4 Russian leader Vladimir Putin reportedly told President Trump he was open to a cease-fire with Ukraine so long as Kyiv gives up the entire Donbas region.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images
4 Donbas harbors Donetsk, Ukraine's most heavily fortified region that has repelled Russia's forces for more than a decade.
Getty Images
Russia has been desperate for full control of the coal and mineral-rich Donetsk border region since Moscow backed a rebellion by Moscow-friendly leaders in the oblast in 2014.
The Kremlin's troops currently occupy about 70% of Donetsk.
Russian control of other contested regions, including Luhansk, is more complete.
Moscow had previously recognized the regions as the 'Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republic' before launching the 2022 invasion.
4 Russia has mounted several assaults to try and conquer all of Donetsk, which has seen some of the most intense fighting of the war.
REUTERS
Despite its advancements in the frontlines, Russia has found it increasingly difficult to take all of Donetsk, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky asserting that his forces still hold the strategic cities of Sloviansk and Kramators, which have served as a 'fortress belt' guarding against Moscow's fighters.
Moscow's inability to make proper advances and maintain the territory it's taken so far in Donetsk has revealed clear weaknesses in Putin's army, leading the Russian strongman to wager the whole region for the West's desire for a cease-fire, Barros said.
'Putin wants the territory that he hasn't been able to get in more than three years of fighting, land that would take more than a year of fighting and suffering more losses to get,' he said. 'It makes sense for him to demand something like this.'
4 Russia continues to struggle to keep all the land it has taken in Donetsk, with Ukraine's army regularly pushing back the invaders in a months-long quagmire.
REUTERS
Putin reportedly told Trump his forces could conquer Donetsk by October if Ukraine didn't give up the land as part of a peace deal — but Kyiv and US observers point out that the Kremlin has failed to take it for more than a decade.
'Even if we're being generous to the Russians and say they can maintain their current advance, which we know they can't keep up and have been pushed back from… It would take about 475 days for Russia to take the entirety of Donetsk, that's December 2026,' Barros said.
One American veteran serving in the Ukrainian Armed Services scoffed, 'Donetsk by October? They've been saying that since February of '22.'
Not only would conceding Donetsk give Putin the win he's desired for years, but it would also remove Ukraine's critical defense from the battlefield.
If Russia's invading army is allowed to stroll through Donetsk, Ukraine would have to 'urgently build up massive defensive fortifications along the Kharkiv and Dnipropetrovsk Oblast border areas, whose terrain is poorly suited to act as a defensive line,' the ISW warned.
The think tank ultimately concluded that if Donetsk is lost, Russia would have the perfect launching point to mount its next attack from.
Hashtags

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

NBC News
30 minutes ago
- NBC News
Trump says the Smithsonian focuses too much on 'how bad slavery was'
President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he has ordered his attorneys to conduct a review of Smithsonian museums, calling their portrayal of U.S. history too negative and focused too much on 'how bad Slavery was.' The president said he would subject the museums to 'the exact same process' his administration has conducted of universities, with the goal of making the Smithsonian less 'woke.' A White House official told NBC News Tuesday night that Trump plans to extend his review of museums beyond the Washington-based institution, saying he will start to 'get the woke out of the Smithsonian' and then go from there. 'The Smithsonian is OUT OF CONTROL, where everything discussed is how horrible our Country is, how bad Slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been — Nothing about Success, nothing about Brightness, nothing about the Future,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'We are not going to allow this to happen, and I have instructed my attorneys to go through the Museums, and start the exact same process that has been done with Colleges and Universities where tremendous progress has been made,' he added. The Smithsonian did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The White House has waged war on several colleges and universities, pulling millions in federal funding from schools like Harvard, Columbia and Brown alleging the schools fostered antisemitic climates and lowering the hammer on their diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Some of the schools have reached agreements with the administration walking back some of their DEI efforts, pledging to comply with federal policies and in some cases paying the government hundreds of millions of dollars. Trump's post comes a week after his administration began conducting an unprecedented review of exhibits at the Smithsonian ahead of the country's 250th anniversary, in an effort to make sure they comply with Trump's vision of history. The Smithsonian received a letter signed by White House Office of Management and Budget director Russ Vought last week instructing officials at eight of its museums to turn over information about exhibits and plans to commemorate the country's 250th within 30 days. It instructed the officials to implement 'content corrections' where necessary, including replacing 'divisive' language. NBC News found in May that at least 32 artifacts once on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall were removed, prompting questions from historical leaders. One artifact included a book belonging to Harriet Tubman, which was filled with hymns she was believed to have sung when leading enslaved people to freedom. The Smithsonian, which comprises 21 museums, 14 education and research centers and a zoo, is the world's largest complex of its kind. The bulk of its funding comes from Congress, but its curatorial process is independent.

NBC News
30 minutes ago
- NBC News
Trump and Zelenskyy's meeting with European leaders marks a historic moment
WASHINGTON — Seven European leaders joined Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Washington on Monday in a rare display of trans-Atlantic unity. The gathering marked the first time in decades that such a broad delegation of allies had assembled at the White House under such pressing circumstances. Shortly after noon, one by one, the heads of state and NATO partners passed the White House gates, where they were met by President Donald Trump's chief of protocol, and in Zelenskyy's case, by Trump himself. Some met with Trump's special envoy for Ukraine and other officials that morning. Others made their way to the White House directly from Dulles and other airports. They were there to bolster Zelenskyy after a disastrous White House visit in February, when he clashed with Trump and Vice President JD Vance — and after Trump held a nearly three-hour one-on-one with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week. The show of support for Zelenskyy involved French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Finnish President Alexander Stubb, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who pivoted from their own national agendas to present a united front as Trump seeks an urgent end to Russia's war in Ukraine. The display took place within days of Trump's meeting with Putin in Alaska and ahead of a possible Trump-brokered meeting between Putin and Zelenskyy as Trump casts himself as a potential peace broker. Inside the Oval Office on Monday, evoking a boardroom scene, Trump sat behind the Resolute desk, military flags at his back, as Zelenskyy and the European delegation faced him, as reflected in a photo shared by the White House. Made of oak timbers taken from a British ship, the desk is a hulking 19th century reminder of goodwill between important allies, a gift from Britain's Queen Victoria to the United States. Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent are seen orbiting in the background, along with senior White House staff members. There are few precedents for the gathering, which merged diplomacy with Trump's usual verve. In 1941, Franklin Roosevelt hosted Winston Churchill off the coast of Newfoundland to sign the Atlantic Charter, laying out the Allied aims for the end of World War II and meetings that would decide the fate of Europe and Asia. During the Cold War, summits in Washington helped decide the terms of German reunification. They included meetings with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev amid a key question over whether Germany would join NATO. And in 1950, the British prime minister rushed to Washington to consult Harry Truman over fears of the possible use of nuclear weapons during the Korean War. 'Washington has often been the scene of these great moments of diplomacy. But it was the speed with which this came together that was so striking and sets this apart,' said Marc Selverstone, director of presidential studies at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs. 'Everyone realized this was a crisis moment.' The urgency was reflected in how quickly the past few days' events came together: Trump's talks with Putin on Friday were followed by the leaders' arrival in Washington on Monday morning. 'Every single one of them got on a plane 48 hours later and flew to the United States of America,' said White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, rushing to Washington in a bid to keep momentum toward peace in Ukraine alive. The day also offered other made-for-TV moments, as Trump escorted the leaders to a gift shop of sorts, which he dubbed the 'Monica Lewinsky room' in reference to a former president's trysts, where he showed off rows of fire engine red hats emblazoned with his campaign slogans, including one for 2028. At another point, Trump deflected a question to Zelenskyy about Ukraine's elections to joke about serving a third term himself. Told through photos shared online by his team, Trump presented a towering figure in Monday's meetings. In a picture posted by deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino, Zelenskyy stood before a map of Ukraine as Trump looked down at him. Another image posted by the White House showed Trump seated behind his historic desk, this time with Vance and Rubio before him, the phone handset resting on the desk as he talked with Putin. For Zelenskyy, Monday also offered a reset. After a tense Oval Office meeting this year, he struck a more diplomatic tone Monday, offering Trump and others his thanks more than a dozen times, including for the invitation, for Trump's efforts 'to stop killings and stop this war,' for Melania Trump's letter to Putin asking him to protect children, for a program to purchase American weapons and to the European partners for their support. On his X account, he offered profuse, continued thanks well into Tuesday. Wearing a suit instead of his usual military fatigues, he told Trump as he greeted him that the attire was 'the best I had.' 'I love it,' Trump said, ultimately sharing a video of the warm exchange on his social media platform, Truth Social. Asked what his message to the people of Ukraine was, Trump told a reporter, 'We love them.' Vance, who had publicly clashed with Zelenskyy in their last White House meeting, also sought to smooth relations, posting a photo of their handshake. Finland's participation carried its own symbolic weight, with one reminder of a path out of a seemingly intractable conflict with a nuclear-powered Soviet Union, which Stubb referred to directly. 'We, of course, have our own historical experience with Russia from World War II, the Winter War and the War of Continuation,' Stubb said. 'And if I look at the silver lining of where we stand right now, we found a solution in 1944, and I'm sure we'll be able to find a solution in 2025.'
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US treasury chief says status quo with China 'working pretty well'
By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that the status quo situation with China was "working pretty well" as the world's two biggest economies have in recent days extended a truce in their bitter trade dispute surrounding tariffs. KEY QUOTES "China is right now the biggest revenue line in the tariff income," Bessent said in an interview on Fox News' "The Ingraham Angle" show. "We have had very good talks with China, I imagine we will be seeing them again before November," he added. "I think right now the status quo is working pretty well." WHY IT'S IMPORTANT Last week, Washington and Beijing extended a tariff truce for another 90 days to November, staving off triple-digit duties on each other's goods. The two sides initially announced a truce in their trade dispute in May after talks in Geneva, agreeing to a 90-day period to allow further talks. They met again in Sweden in late July after which U.S. negotiators returned to Washington with a recommendation that President Donald Trump extend the deadline. CONTEXT Washington has also been urging Beijing to stop buying Russian oil to pressure Moscow over its war in Ukraine, but Trump said on Friday there were no imminent plans to impose retaliatory tariffs on China, in light of talks on ending the war. Trump held a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday and a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, as well as NATO and European leaders, at the White House on Monday. After those meetings, he said Zelenskiy and Putin will hold a bilateral meeting before a trilateral meeting that would also include Trump. Bessent was asked on Fox News about reporting that Budapest could be a possible city for the three-way talks. He said that "could be" the case but that the bilateral meeting needed to happen first. Sign in to access your portfolio



