logo
Hardening lines signal Ukraine peace process collapse

Hardening lines signal Ukraine peace process collapse

AllAfrica10-05-2025

US President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance's latest comments on talks with Russia show that the US's negotiating stance has toughened.
The first comment echoed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky by calling for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire and threatened to impose sanctions if it's violated. The second revealed that Russia's demand for Ukraine to withdraw from the entirety of the disputed regions is 'asking for too much.'
Together, they confirm growing US impatience with the Ukraine peace process, which began in late March. Back then, Trump threatened to impose strictly enforced secondary sanctions against those who purchase Russia's oil if he determined the transactions are responsible for the peace talks' potential failure.
One month later, he speculated that Russian President Vladimir Putin is 'just tapping me along', during which time he reaffirmed the secondary sanctions threat. Shortly after, the US and Ukraine signed their long-awaited minerals deal, which this analysis here correctly predicted would be followed by more American weapons packages.
Although it was planned far in advance of said developments, Putin's latest meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Moscow arguably took the form of Russia's response considering the two spent a whopping seven hours together in talks.
It was foreseen before their meeting that 'Putin & Xi Might Hash Out A Grand Deal That Would Enter Into Force If The Ukraine Talks Collapse', which appears to have been exactly what happened and could have provoked Trump's latest post.
The US already knows that Russia is against an unconditional 30-day ceasefire because it rightly fears, per the precedent of prior ceasefires during the Minsk Accords era, that this could be exploited to give Ukraine time to rotate its troops and rearm ahead of reinitiating hostilities.
It's also important for Russia to obtain full control over the entirety of the disputed regions as part of a peace deal in order to fully incorporate and 'denazify' those territories that it now considers to be its own.
Vance's comments make it clear that the US considers this to be 'asking too much' and therefore won't coerce Ukraine into withdrawing from them, thus suggesting that Trump's subsequent call for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire is meant to indefinitely freeze the Line of Contact against Russia's wishes.
Threatening strictly enforced secondary sanctions for lack of compliance, presumably against those who purchase Russia's oil is meant to simultaneously pressure Putin and his country's top oil clients, including China.
Trump's disclosure that he discussed joint efforts to end the Ukrainian conflict in his latest call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his recent remark about how 'I think it's a natural thing to ask' China to assist with this suggest that he envisages Erdogan and Xi pressuring Putin.
They would be incentivized to do so for fear of the US enforcing Trump's threatened secondary sanctions against their countries if they refuse or fail after trying. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi could be roped into this, too, since India is another top buyer of Russian oil.
Unless there's a breakthrough, such as Russia steamrolling across the Line of Contact or conceding to freeze it in exchange for something significant from the US (which the public might not be privy to), this sequence of events suggests that the peace process might soon collapse.
The US is preparing for that scenario by signaling why it might happen from its perspective and hinting at what it'll do in that case (i.e. more anti-Russian sanctions and arms for Ukraine) so its proxy war with Russia might soon escalate.
This article was first published on Andrew Korybko's Substack and is republished with kind permission. Become an Andrew Korybko Newsletter subscriber here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japanese angered by Trump's Iran strike comparison to atomic bombings
Japanese angered by Trump's Iran strike comparison to atomic bombings

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Japanese angered by Trump's Iran strike comparison to atomic bombings

Japanese leaders and survivors of the atomic bombings have denounced President Donald Trump 's comparison of the US strike on Iran 's nuclear facilities to the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, describing his remarks as deeply inappropriate and historically insensitive. Advertisement Speaking at a press conference on Thursday, Nagasaki Mayor Shiro Suzuki condemned Trump's comments, saying the use of nuclear weapons was 'unacceptable' no matter the circumstances – a lesson that should be self-evident from the devastating toll of the US bombing of his city on August 9, 1945. The initial explosion from the 'Fat Man' plutonium bomb killed as many as 80,000 people in Nagasaki, while many tens of thousands more died before the end of 1945 from radiation poisoning. Suzuki said he did not understand what Trump meant in his comments. If they were designed to justify the nuclear attacks on Japan , Nagasaki and its people would express 'profound regret', he added. Trump's comments, delivered during a joint press conference with Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte in The Hague on Wednesday, have drawn confusion and criticism for their ambiguity. Advertisement 'The damage to Iran's nuclear facilities is extremely serious. That attack ended the war. I don't want to use Hiroshima as an example. I don't want to use Nagasaki as an example. But essentially it's the same. It ended the war,' Trump said.

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution
Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution

RTHK

time3 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution US President Donald Trump said the prosecution was interfering with his ability to conduct talks with both Hamas and Iran. File photo: AFP US President Donald Trump on Saturday criticised Israel's prosecutors over an ongoing corruption trial against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying it was interfering with his ability to conduct talks with both Hamas and Iran. In a post on Truth Social, Trump also suggested that given the billions of dollars worth of military aid Washington was providing to Israel, the US was not going to "stand for this." (Reuters)

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution
Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution

RTHK

time4 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution

Trump hits out at continued Netanyahu prosecution US President Donald Trump said the prosecution was interfering with his ability to conduct talks with both Hamas and Iran. File photo: AFP US President Donald Trump on Saturday criticised Israel's prosecutors over an ongoing corruption trial against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying it was interfering with his ability to conduct talks with both Hamas and Iran. In a post on Truth Social, Trump also suggested that given the billions of dollars worth of military aid Washington was providing to Israel, the US was not going to "stand for this." (Reuters)

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