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Sir Keir Starmer and his allies have no choice but to keep their Trump criticisms implict

Sir Keir Starmer and his allies have no choice but to keep their Trump criticisms implict

Sky News2 days ago
Sir Keir Starmer is straining his diplomatic sinews to simultaneously praise Donald Trump's efforts to end the war in Ukraine, while repeating calls for a completely different approach - one which ends the cosy bonhomie with Vladimir Putin, threatens the Russians with sanctions, and puts the Ukrainians back centre stage.
If that's a message which feels like quite a stretch in writing, in person, during this morning's call of international leaders, it must have been even more awkward.
Donald Trump 's public dismissal of the Europeans' previous calls for a ceasefire - after his tete-a-tete with Putin - has only highlighted divisions.
Of course, the prime minister and his European allies have no choice but to keep their criticism of the Alaskan summit implicit, not explicit.
Even as they attempt to ramp up their own military preparedness to help reinforce any future peace deal, they need President Trump to lead the way in trying to force President Putin to the negotiating table - and to back up any agreement with the threat of American firepower.
For Downing Street, President Trump's new willingness to contribute to any future security guarantee is a significant step, which Starmer claims "will be crucial in deterring Putin from coming back for more".
It's a commitment the prime minister has been campaigning for for months, a caveat to all the grand plans drawn up by the so-called Coalition of the Willing.
While the details are still clearly very much to be confirmed, whatever comments made by Donald Trump about his openness to help police any peace in Ukraine have been loudly welcomed by all those present, a glimmer of progress from the diplomatic mess in Anchorage.
5:08
Of course, the promise of security guarantees only means anything if a peace deal is actually reached.
At the moment, as the European leaders' bluntly put it in repeating Donald Trump's words back to him: "There's no deal until there's a deal."
8:31
Fears of Zelenskyy being painted as warmonger
There is clearly real concern in European capitals following the US president's comments that the onus is now on Volodymyr Zelenskyy to 'do a deal', that the Ukrainians will come under growing pressure to make concessions to the Russians.
As former Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said: "Given that Donald Trump has failed to deliver a deal, his track record would show that Donald Trump then usually tries to seek to blame someone else. I'm worried that next week it could be President Zelenskyy who he will seek to blame.
"He'll paint him as the warmonger, when in fact everybody knows it's President Putin."
The European leaders' robust statements describing the "killing in Ukraine" and Russia's "barbaric assault" are an attempt to try to counter that narrative, resetting the international response to Putin following the warmth of his welcome by President Trump - friendlier by far than that afforded to many of them, and infinitely more than the barracking President Zelenskyy received.
They'll all be hoping to avoid a repeat of that on Monday.
But as in Alaska, the other European leaders won't be there. Despite their long phone calls, the White House doesn't seem to be listening.
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The stakes are high as Zelenskyy and European leaders head to Washington
The stakes are high as Zelenskyy and European leaders head to Washington

The Independent

time10 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The stakes are high as Zelenskyy and European leaders head to Washington

U.S. President Donald Trump is set to host Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders at the White House on Monday to discuss how to end Russia 's three-year war in Ukraine. Months of U.S.-led diplomatic efforts to stop the fighting haven't made headway, but the stakes have risen since Trump met with with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday. After that summit, Trump abandoned the requirement of reaching a ceasefire in order to hold further talks and aligned with Putin's position that negotiations should focus on a long-term settlement instead. The presence of several European leaders at the talks in Washington shows how central the conflict — and any settlement — is to wider security questions on the continent. They are looking to safeguard Ukraine and Europe more broadly from any further aggression from Moscow — but also are providing a show of support for Zelenskyy after his last visit to the White House led to an angry confrontation. The American and Ukrainian leaders are scheduled to first meet privately, without the Europeans. Here's what to know about the Washington meeting. The talks could be a pivotal moment in the war After meeting Putin in Alaska, Trump is making a big push for a breakthrough. A lot of issues need to be resolved, however, and the two sides have previously established red lines that are incompatible, including questions of whether Ukraine will cede any land to Russia, the future of Ukraine's army and whether the country will have any guarantee against further Russian aggression. In a post on social media Sunday night, Trump appeared to shift the burden for ending the war to Zelenskyy, whose country was invaded in February 2022. 'President Zelenskyy of Ukraine can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight,' he wrote. A comprehensive peace deal could still be a long way off. Putin wants Donbas As a condition for peace, the Russian leader wants Kyiv to give up Donbas, the industrial region in eastern Ukraine that has seen some of the most intense fighting but that Russian forces have failed to capture completely. In his Sunday night post, Trump wrote that Zelenskyy should also accept Russia's illegal 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region. As part of a deal, Putin has said the United States and its European allies can provide Ukraine with a security guarantee resembling NATO's collective defense pledge, according to a senior U.S. official. Trump envoy Steve Witkoff called that Russian concession 'game-changing' though he offered few details on how it would work. Ukraine has long pressed for some kind of guarantee that would prevent Russia from invading again. Ukraine won't surrender land to Russia Zelenskyy has rejected Putin's demand that Ukraine surrender the Donbas region, made up of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, since the Ukrainian Constitution forbids giving up territory or trading land. That also means he can't cede Crimea either. Instead, freezing the front line — which snakes roughly 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from northeastern to southeastern Ukraine — seems to be the most the Ukrainian people might accept. Russia currently holds about 20% of Ukrainian territory. Europe's security is also at stake in the talks European leaders see Ukraine's fight as a bulwark against any Kremlin ambitions to threaten other countries in eastern Europe and beyond. French President Emmanuel Macron described Ukraine as an 'outpost of our collective defense if Russia wanted to advance again.' 'If we are weak with Russia today, we'll be preparing the conflicts of tomorrow and they will impact the Ukrainians and — make no mistake — they can impact us, too.' Macron said Sunday. The European political heavyweights expected in Washington are Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, Finnish President Alexander Stubb, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Civilians are killed as the fighting continues Ukraine has in recent months been losing more territory against Russia's bigger army, and Moscow's forces breached Ukrainian lines in a series of minor infiltrations in the Donetsk region ahead of the Alaska summit. But there is no sign of a looming, major Russian breakthrough on the front line. Both sides have also kept up their daily long-range strikes behind the front line. A Russian drone strike on Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, killed six people late Sunday, including an 18-month-old and a 16-year-old, according to regional head Oleh Syniehubov. The attack on the northeastern city injured 20 others, including six children, he said. Russia's Defense Ministry on Monday reported intercepting 23 Ukrainian drones over Russian regions and the annexed Crimean peninsula overnight. ___

A timeline of territorial shifts in Russia's war on Ukraine
A timeline of territorial shifts in Russia's war on Ukraine

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  • The Independent

A timeline of territorial shifts in Russia's war on Ukraine

Russia's troops are continuing their slow war of attrition in eastern and northern Ukraine, even as the conflict enters a pivotal phase with a series of high-level meetings that are part of U.S. President Donald Trump 's push for peace. In the three-and-a-half years since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the front line has continued to move slowly with some unexpected strikes also redrawing the map. Here is a look at some of the main events in the conflict. Feb. 24, 2022 — Russian President Vladimir Putin launches an invasion of Ukraine from the north, east and south. Russian troops quickly reach Kyiv's outskirts, but their attempts to capture the capital and other cities in the northeast meet stiff resistance. March 5, 2022 — Russian advances toward Kyiv and Kherson reach their height. The port city of Mariupol is surrounded. April 2, 2022 — Ukraine defeats Russian forces in Kyiv after throwing them back in Chernihiv. Aug. 29, 2022 — Ukraine's first counteroffensive starts in the east and south. Sept. 30, 2022 — Russia illegally annexes Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions of Ukraine, even though it doesn't fully control either of the four. September to November 2022 — Ukrainian forces reclaim vast parts of the Kharkiv, Mykolaiv and Kherson regions in the first counteroffensive, including the city of Kherson itself. May 22, 2023 — Russia claims control of Bakhmut after months of fighting. June 6, 2023 — As Ukraine's long-anticipated second counteroffensive starts, the Russian-controlled Kakhovka Dam explodes, sending a wall of water into southern Ukraine and upending Ukrainian battle plans. Fall 2023 — The second Ukrainian counteroffensive ends, with little change to the front line. Feb. 18, 2024 — Russian forces take complete control of the eastern city of Avdiivka after months of combat. April 19, 2024 — The U.S. House of Representatives approves $61 billion package for Ukraine after months of delay. May 10, 2024 — Russia launches a new offensive in the northeastern region of Kharkiv, capturing a string of villages and opening a new front in the war. Aug. 6, 2024 — Ukraine launches a lightning incursion into Russia's Kursk region, holding territory along the border in an unexpected and embarrassing episode for the Kremlin. Jan. 20, 2025 — Trump is inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States. His election raises uncertainty as to whether Washington will continue to support Ukraine. April 26, 2025 — Moscow says all Ukrainian troops have been forced out from Russia's Kursk region. Several weeks later, Putin visits the area in a show of strength and is filmed speaking with local volunteers. June 1, 2025 — Ukraine strikes airfields deep inside Russia by launching drones that have been secretly stored and transported across the country on the back of trucks. The attack is codenamed Operation Spider Web. Summer 2025 — Russia and Ukraine both step up drone strikes with the ability to strike deep into each other's territory. June 30, 2025 — Russia says it has taken full control of Ukraine's Luhansk, one of four regions that Moscow illegally annexed in September 2022. July 31, 2025 — Russia says it has taken full control of the strategically important Ukrainian city of Chasiv Yar after a grinding, months-long assault. August 2025 — Russian forces continue their push in the Donetsk region, where the Kremlin has focused the bulk of military efforts, capturing small villages and closing in on Pokrovsk, a strategically important city. Aug. 15, 2025 — Putin meets Trump in Alaska for the first Russia-U.S. summit in four years to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. Zelenskyy and European officials say Putin wants Ukraine to withdraw from the remaining 30% of the Donetsk region that it controls as part of a deal. Follow The Associated Press for full coverage of the war.

Russian troops troll Zelensky by flying US flag on captured American armoured vehicle during frontline assault ahead of Ukrainian leader's crunch talks with Trump today
Russian troops troll Zelensky by flying US flag on captured American armoured vehicle during frontline assault ahead of Ukrainian leader's crunch talks with Trump today

Daily Mail​

time11 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Russian troops troll Zelensky by flying US flag on captured American armoured vehicle during frontline assault ahead of Ukrainian leader's crunch talks with Trump today

Swaggering Russian troops have trolled Ukraine by flying an American flag on a captured US armoured vehicle ahead of Donald Trump 's meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky today. They were filmed waving the US flag alongside the Russian tricolour in a captured American M113 armoured personnel carrier captured from Volodymyr Zelensky's forces. The Russians were storming Mala Tokmachka in the Zaporizhzhia region. The bizarre scene came on the day Zelensky is set to meet with Trump to talk about Putin 's demands for peace, which involve ceding huge swathes of territory to the dictator. The head of the Centre for the Study of the Occupation, Petr Andryushchenko, said: 'The Russians have already declared the United States an ally and are storming Mala Tokmachka in M113 armoured personnel carriers….with Russian and American flags. 'This is the logical conclusion to all of Trump's absurdity. And all of this is on the official propaganda channel of Russia Today. There are no words.' Another Ukrainian outlet said: 'The Russians put American flags on their armoured vehicles next to the tricolour and are driving around the occupied Ukrainian land. 'This is all you need to know about the result of the negotiations in Alaska.' It comes after Trump's summit with Putin, where the two men were unable to reach a deal on how to stop the war in Ukraine. Some critics have pointed out that the meeting was a success for Putin as it welcomed him back onto the world stage, amid the growing backlash of his military activity in Ukraine. Later today, Zelensky is set for another showdown with Trump after their infamous clash in February ended in what many Trump detractors called an 'ambush '. This time, the Ukrainian leader will have some of Europe's leaders to back him up. The UK's prime minister, Keir Starmer, France's president Emmanuel Macron, and Germany's chancellor Friedrich Merz, who have all supported Zelensky, will join him in Washington, DC, for the meeting. They will be joined by other EU figures. After Trump's social media posts last night which he appeared to demand that Ukraine make a deal with Russia by giving up Crimea and hopes of joining NATO, observers have been left to question what the outcome of the meeting will be. Separately, Vladimir Putin was shown forcing his troops to invade Zaporizhzhia region on potential death missions. A Russian tank hit Ukrainian observation posts while on a dangerous mine-trawling mission, continuing despite 24 drones attacking it before it was blown up by a mine. It survived the UAV attacks thanks to drone protection - cage armour and electronic warfare jammers. The Russians claim that the three servicemen in the tank survived the explosion. 'The crew, led by the commander with the call sign Surgut, survived,' said a state media outlet. 'The fire was directed by the gunner-operator with the call sign Kvadrat, and the vehicle was controlled by a soldier with the call sign Tsygan.' The Russians claim the tank crew were 'superheroes' for their bravado, but the footage appears to highlight Putin's manic drive for a few extra yards of Ukraine before a peace agreement to halt the fighting brokered by Trump.

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