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Trump says he will meet Putin in Alaska next week in hopes of reaching Ukraine peace deal

Trump says he will meet Putin in Alaska next week in hopes of reaching Ukraine peace deal

ITV Newsa day ago
President Donald Trump has said he'll be meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin next Friday in Alaska.
It comes after the US head of state previewed terms of a potential peace deal to end the war in Ukraine that could include 'some swapping of territories" earlier in the day.
'The highly anticipated meeting between myself, as President of the United States of America, and President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, will take place next Friday, August 15, 2025, in the Great State of Alaska. Further details to follow,' Trump posted on Truth Social on Friday evening.
US officials, including Trump, have briefed leaders in Europe and Ukraine on a plan offered by Putin to halt the war in Ukraine in exchange for significant territorial concessions by Kyiv, according to officials briefed on the matter.
The plan, which Putin presented to Trump's foreign envoy Steve Witkoff in a meeting in Moscow on Wednesday, would require Ukraine to give up the eastern Donbas region — the majority of which is currently occupied by Russia — as well as Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.
It would freeze current battle lines, but other details of the proposal were still unclear.
Some European officials have voiced concern over the plan, saying it was Putin's attempt to avoid Trump's threatened sanctions, which were supposed to come in on Friday, while offering little in return.
Earlier this week, Trump pledged he'd apply new sanctions on Russia if Putin didn't end the war in Ukraine by Friday, but he struck a less hardline tone on Thursday, telling reporters in the Oval Office, 'It's going to be up to (Putin)' if the Friday deadline would hold.
The US president, who has acknowledged frustration with Russia's president in recent months for drawing out the conflict, seemed more optimistic for the prospect of a peace deal on Friday. He signaled he's focused primarily on negotiating an end to the hostilities as soon as possible.
'The European leaders want to see peace,' Trump told reporters at the White House. 'President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace, and Zelensky wants to see peace.'
He later added: 'My instinct really tells me that we have a shot at' peace.
But the prospect of Ukraine giving up any of its territory to Russia could prove a major stumbling block in negotiating an end to the war. Such concessions are against the Ukrainian constitution, meaning Zelensky would need to first get permission from parliament or a national referendum before agreeing to any shift in territory.
Trump on Friday downplayed those concerns, saying he'd urged Zelensky to smooth the path toward an agreement.
'He's going out and getting what he needs,' Trump said. 'He's not authorized to do certain things. I said, 'Well, you're going to have to get it fast, because, you know, we're getting very close to a deal.''
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Are Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin preparing to ‘stitch up' Ukraine?
Are Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin preparing to ‘stitch up' Ukraine?

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Are Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin preparing to ‘stitch up' Ukraine?

The leader of that third party nation then agrees to meet the leader of the aggressor nation to map out the terms of the ceasefire. This is then duly presented to the invaded nation's leader to sign and ratify. At no point is the leader of the invaded country invited to the initial negotiations. Does that sound like a fair deal to you? Would you imagine that any semblance of a sound and just peace would come of it? Only the very naïve or those suffering from a bout of the most unrealistic optimism would think so. But that is precisely what US President Donald Trump appears to believe will be the outcome of his meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, when the two men get together next Friday in Alaska to discuss an end to the conflict in Ukraine. The fact that Trump - even before the meeting takes place - has already said that Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would need to cede territory for a deal to be reached, only added insult to injury in the eyes of many Ukrainians given that their leader was frozen out of the Alaska talks. (Image: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy) It perhaps came as no real surprise then that yesterday Zelenskyy unequivocally made it clear that Ukraine will not 'gift' land to Russia as part of a ceasefire deal. 'The answer to the Ukrainian territorial question already is in the Constitution of Ukraine,' Zelenskyy said in a social media post. 'No one will deviate from this - and no one will be able to. Ukrainians will not gift their land to the occupier,' he insisted.. Zelenskyy also went on to stress that Ukraine is 'ready to work together with President Trump.' But he said that decisions made without Ukraine are 'unworkable.' The dramatic developments of the last few days coinciding as they did on Friday with Trump's deadline to Putin to stop the fighting or face tough new economic sanctions took many by surprise. They came too just when Ukraine and its European allies thought that Trump was coming round to their view of the war. Now, instead, say critics of the move, Trump has effectively handed Putin a diplomatic coup, while others also see dark historic parallels that subsequently went on to have profound implication for the world at the time in the past. 'It looks like Munich 1938, when great powers decide the fate of the victim of the aggression,' said Oleksandr Merezhko, chair of the foreign affairs committee of the Ukrainian parliament and an MP in Zelenskyy's ruling party. When the idea of a summit was initially suggested Trump said it would only go ahead if Putin agreed to meet with Zelenskyy, something Kyiv has long called for but been resisted by Moscow. Zelenskyy sidelined THEN last Thursday with characteristic unpredictability, Trump announced that a Putin Zelenskyy face-to-face was unnecessary, effectively sidelining the Ukrainian leader and making it a bilateral negotiation between Trump and Putin. Almost immediately the alarm bells went off in Kyiv and in the corridors of power of its European allies. 'The danger for Ukraine is actually quite grave,' said Jonathan Eyal, international director at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), the London-based think tank. 'There will be a sense of alarm in European capitals,' he added in an interview with American broadcaster NBC. 'Trump will be so pleased by what he perceives as the great achievement of getting Putin to the negotiating table, that he grabs any kind of offer that is made,' Eyal said. 'The danger of half-baked compromise, which Trump can claim as his main achievement, is very high.' Also speaking to NBC, Yuriy Boyechko, CEO of the charity Hope for Ukraine, warned that even if there is no truce agreement, 'a meeting with Trump - no matter the outcome - would be a big diplomatic victory for Putin.' 'Putin wants to break his diplomatic isolation' and such a meeting 'will stroke his ego, ' said Boyechko, adding that the 'meeting with Putin is a trap; President Trump must not fall for it.' But many observers are already predicting the scene when Trump with Putin alongside, emerges from the Alaska negotiations and talks up their success. It's a scenario say some commentators, that also helps fulfil Trump's craving for international prestige and his near obsession lately of being nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize he so evidently covets. The obvious danger too note analysts, is that Trump would effectively be helping Putin's gambit of piling domestic pressure on Zelenskyy and his government. Many Ukrainians want the war to end but remain opposed to surrendering swathes of territory. Had Zelenskyy agreed to the ceding of territory, the risk involved was outlined by Oleksandr Merezhko, chair of the foreign affairs committee of the Ukrainian parliament, who told the Financial Times (FT) that it 'might cause a social explosion in Ukraine.' In the event however, Zelenskyy was wise to Putin's ploy and wasted no time in dispelling any notion of ceding territory. (Image: Russian President Vladimir Putin) Donbas on the table EVEN as it stands, Putin's sweeping proposal would require that Ukraine hand over the eastern Ukrainian region of the Donbas, without Russia committing to anything more than stop fighting. The offer, which Putin conveyed Wednesday to US special envoy Steve Witkoff in Moscow, said the Russian leader would agree to a complete cease-fire if Ukraine agreed to withdraw forces from all of Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region. Read more Tears and trauma: David Pratt in Ukraine DAVID PRATT ON THE WORLD: Whatever happens in Brazil's resentful and rancorous election, the result will have major repercussions for us all David Pratt in Ukraine: It's hard to comprehend this level of destruction David Pratt: Kremlin's protestations have a hollow ring as atrocities mount up Russia would then control the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, as well as the Crimea Peninsula which it seized in 2014 and wants recognised as sovereign Russian territory. Currently Russia controls almost all of Luhansk region and a substantial swathe of Donetsk region but has struggled to capture critical Ukrainian strongholds in the latter despite its summer offensive. Reports also indicated that the southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions where Russian forces have been stuck on the south-eastern side of the Dnipro river would also be up for discussion, as would small areas of Kharkiv and Sumy regions that are controlled by Russian military. Moscow could withdraw forces from those regions. According to senior Ukrainian officials cited by the FT, Putin also demanded Nato membership for Ukraine be taken off the table, although EU membership would still be allowed. The officials also said Moscow insisted that Ukraine's military would be limited in size, and Russia would demand Western allies not provide Kyiv with long-range weapons. Against this backdrop of sweeping proposals that will feature in the Alaska talks this week, the war on the ground meanwhile grinds on. What began as a broad Russian push all along the 600-mile front in eastern and southern Ukraine now appears to be narrowing into three axes of attack - in the northeastern Sumy region and in the eastern Donetsk Oblast cities of Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka, two important logistical hubs for Ukraine. There is growing alarm over Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka, which are at risk of being surrounded in the coming months. Russia has been struggling to take Pokrovsk for more than a year, but recently has managed to advance on the city's flanks. This means Russian forces are increasingly threatening Ukraine's supply lines, in part by intensively targeting them with drones. Ukrainian soldiers say the Russian Army uses two main tactics to advance on the battlefield: pinning down Ukrainian troops with drones, shells and glide bombs before attacking enemy lines with relentless squad assaults on foot or by motorbike. 'In general, the basic tactics are relying even more on the manpower advantage and using those small infantry attacks in combination with heavy usage of firepower,' said Pasi Paroinen, an analyst at the Finland-based Black Bird Group that monitors conflict and intelligence analyses. 'They intensified their attacks pretty much almost all across the front line around May and towards June,' Paroinen added, speaking to ABC News. Some analysts maintain though that Russia is not only seeking to win new territory in Ukraine. 'Its goal is to destroy Ukraine's military potential, its army,' Valery Shiryaev, an independent Russian military analyst, said in a recent interview with Redaktsiya, an independent Russian news channel. 'If there is no army - the state would be defenceless.' (Image: US President Donald Trump) Exploding drones AWAY from the front lines, Russia has been increasing the toll it inflicts on the Ukrainian population and economy at large by escalating attacks on the country with mass-produced exploding drones. According to Ukraine's military intelligence service and cited by the Economist magazine, Russia has improved both the quantity and quality of its drones. Since last summer it has raised monthly production of the Geran-2 drone, Russia's version of the Iranian Shahed kamikaze drone five-fold. Last month on July 9th over 700 drones 60% of them carrying warheads and the rest cheap decoys, attacked Kyiv and other targets. Until March this year, only about 3-5% of the Gerans were getting through. Last month that rose to some 15% of a significantly higher number. The Economist also pointed to the increasing supplies of Chinese dual-use components that have helped Russia's increase in production. Military analysts insist the most promising solution in tackling the rise in Geran and other drone attacks is cheap interceptor drones. According to data from The Economist, at least four Ukrainian firms, including Wild Hornets and Besomar, are producing different models. So are Tytan, a Germany company, and Frankenberg, an Estonian one. General Oleksandr Syrskyi, Ukraine's commander-in-chief, says that interceptor drones have a success rate of 70% against Gerans. But as the ground and air war continues to gruesomely play out, all eyes this week will be on that meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska. Should the talks turn against Trump's hopes and he has to get tough with Putin then the sanctions and tariffs leverage might come into play. After imposing 50 % tariffs on India for purchasing Russian oil, Trump could also resort to imposing additional sanctions on Russia's 'shadow fleet' of oil tankers . The term 'shadow fleet' refers to vessels whose ownership is hidden and which avoid using services from Western companies Russia has used a shadow fleet of largely ageing tankers to ship oil around the world in an attempt to evade western restrictions imposed in the wake of Moscow's 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The substantial petrodollars from these help fill Putin's war chest. Most observers however belief it will not come to that and that the meeting will be far more convivial much to the alarm of Kyiv and its European allies. Trump has long been a believer that the crux of foreign policy is two leaders in a room making historic deals, but without Zelenskyy at the table it's not so much a long shot as nigh on impossible say analysts. (Image: Efrem Lukatsky) Low expectations EVEN among Russia's pro-war Z-bloggers there seems to be limited expectation from the planned meeting. The hawkish Telegram channel Military Informant described it as 'likely the last attempt to buy time.' While the post predicted the meeting would be 'epochal,' it warned against expecting any 'major breakthrough' on the war in Ukraine. 'So far, Zelenskyy's strategy of going along with every US idea has won the sympathy of the American president for Ukraine, so the upcoming Putin-Trump meeting may be the last chance to shift the situation,' the channel wrote. It's precisely such a shift however that both Ukraine its European and other allies will be dreading. While one White House official said that planning for the meeting remains fluid and Zelenskyy could still be involved in some way, few are holding their breath. This Friday in Alaska could yet prove a significant moment indeed for both the outcome of the war and Ukraine's future.

Donald Trump 'considering' inviting Zelenskyy to peace summit meeting, sources say
Donald Trump 'considering' inviting Zelenskyy to peace summit meeting, sources say

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Donald Trump 'considering' inviting Zelenskyy to peace summit meeting, sources say

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are set to meet for a summit in Alaska next Friday to discuss the war in Ukraine - but it has not yet been officially confirmed if Volodymyr Zelenskyy will be invited Donald Trump is reportedly "considering" inviting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the summit meeting with Vladimr Putin in Alaska next Friday. ‌ Trump and Putin are set to meet to discuss the war in Ukraine and an invitation for the Ukrainian leader is 'being discussed,' according to NBC News, citing three people briefed on internal conversations about the meeting. ‌ A senior U.S. official reportedly told NBC News that Zelensky's attendance is 'absolutely' possible, but it is believed that no official invite has been talked about with Kyiv as of yet. It comes after NATO scrambled warplanes as Russia shoots down West's F-16 fighter jet in Ukraine onslaught. ‌ ‌ When quizzed over an official invite, a senior White House official told NBC: 'The President remains open to a trilateral summit with both leaders. Right now, the White House is focusing on planning the bilateral meeting requested by President Putin.' Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has cast doubt over the upcoming summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, cautioning that any peace agreement which sidelines Kyiv is doomed to fail. The meeting, set for Friday in Alaska, is being seen as a potentially pivotal moment. Zelenskyy, who voiced his concerns via a Telegram post on Saturday, warned that shutting Ukraine out of peace talks would only result in "dead solutions." ‌ Zelenskyy's remarks highlight fears that direct dialogue between Trump and Putin could undermine both Kyiv's and Europe's interests, emphasising that "Any solutions that are without Ukraine, are at the same time, solutions against peace. They will not bring anything. These are dead solutions, they will never work." This meeting could be a turning point in a conflict that started over three years ago when Russia invaded its western neighbour, leading to tens of thousands of casualties. However, there is no guarantee it will end the violence as Moscow and Kyiv are still at odds over their peace terms. ‌ In a joint statement last night, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and the leaders of France, Italy, Germany, Poland, Finland and the European Commission said Ukraine's future cannot be decided without Kyiv. It said: "Ukraine has the freedom of choice over its own destiny. Meaningful negotiations can only take place in the context of a ceasefire or reduction of hostilities. "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."

Trump envoy 'misunderstood' Putin's demands for ending Ukraine war, insiders say - as president mulls inviting Zelensky to Alaska summit
Trump envoy 'misunderstood' Putin's demands for ending Ukraine war, insiders say - as president mulls inviting Zelensky to Alaska summit

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump envoy 'misunderstood' Putin's demands for ending Ukraine war, insiders say - as president mulls inviting Zelensky to Alaska summit

Steve Witkoff, US special envoy to the Middle East, may have misinterpreted Vladimir Putin 's terms for ending Russia 's war in Ukraine as he worked to set up a face-to-face with President Trump, per a new report. On Wednesday, Witkoff spoke with the Russian president at the Kremlin for about three hours, after which Trump praised his negotiator for making 'great progress'. However, a report from BILD, a German outlet, suggested that Witkoff was under the impression that when Putin demanded a 'peaceful withdrawal' from Kherson and Zaporizhia, he meant that he wanted Russian soldiers to withdraw. But according to insiders, Putin actually meant he wanted Ukrainian forces to give up these tactically-important cities. 'Witkoff doesn't know what he's talking about,' a Ukrainian official told BILD. Russia reportedly still isn't budging on its demand to control the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhia, Kherson and Crimea. This comes as Trump officially set Friday, August 15, as the day he and Putin will meet in Alaska to discuss a negotiated settlement to the war, which has stretched on for over three-and-a-half years. 'It's complicated, nothing easy,' Trump told reporters ahead of the announcement. 'It's very complicated but we're going to get some back and we're going to get some switched.' On the day Trump confirmed he and Putin would be meeting, two people were killed in a Russian strike on a civilian bus in Kherson and two others were killed in a Russian FPV drone strike on a car. Once news of Trump-Putin summit emerged, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned that 'decisions without Ukraine' would not bring peace to the region. Writing on social media, the Ukrainian President said: 'Any decisions against us, any decisions without Ukraine, are also decisions against peace. They will achieve nothing. 'Ukrainians will not give their land to the occupier.' He said Ukraine was 'ready for real decisions that can bring peace' but said it should be a 'dignified peace', without giving details. Following Zelensky's comments, it has now come out that the White House is considering inviting him to Alaska. A senior US official told NBC News that an invite to Zelensky is 'being discussed'. His presence hasn't been finalized, but the prospect of him showing up is 'absolutely' possible, the official said. 'The President remains open to a trilateral summit with both leaders. Right now, the White House is focusing on planning the bilateral meeting requested by President Putin, the White House said in a statement to NBC. Trump has long wanted to end the war in Ukraine, often promising on the campaign trail last year that he would end the conflict on day one of his presidency if he were elected. Trump's frustration with Putin has grown as the fighting has worn on months into his second term. In late July, he began to turn the heat up on Russia, saying he was giving the country 10 or 12 days to restart peace talks with Ukraine. If that wasn't met, he said he was prepared to hit Russia with economic sanctions. Originally, Trump gave Putin a 50-day deadline and threatened to bring stiff economic penalties on Russia if it did not end hostilities with Ukraine. That would've meant a target date of early September for Putin to make a decision.

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