Zelenskiy thanks Europe for its support as Kyiv seeks place at table with Trump and Putin
A serviceman of the 115th Separate Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces attends a training between combat missions at a training ground, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Sofiia Gatilova
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy thanked European leaders on Sunday for backing his demand for a seat at the table as Russia and the United States prepare for a summit this week where Kyiv fears they could seek to dictate terms to it for ending the 3-1/2-year war.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who for weeks had been threatening new sanctions against Russia for failing to halt the conflict, announced instead last Friday that he would hold an August 15 summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska.
A White House official said on Saturday that Trump was open to Zelenskiy attending, but that preparations currently were for a bilateral meeting with Putin.
The Kremlin leader last week ruled out meeting Zelenskiy at this point, saying the conditions for such an encounter were "unfortunately still far" from being met.
Trump said a potential deal would involve "some swapping of territories to the betterment of both (sides)", a statement that compounded Ukrainian alarm that it may face pressure to surrender more land.
Zelenskiy says any decisions taken without Ukraine will be "stillborn" and unworkable. On Saturday the leaders of Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Finland and the European Commission said in a joint statement that any diplomatic solution must protect the vital security interests of Ukraine and Europe.
"The path to peace cannot be decided without Ukraine," they said, demanding "robust and credible security guarantees" to allow Ukraine to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore 55,000 BTO units to be launched from 2025 to 2027, will help moderate HDB resale prices: Minister
Singapore First voluntary redevelopment projects for HDB flats likely to be launched in first half of 2030s
Singapore Over 118,000 speeding violations in first half of 2025; situation shows no signs of improvement: TP
Singapore Israel's plan to step up Gaza offensive dangerous and unacceptable: MFA
Singapore Four men arrested in Bukit Timah believed to be linked to housebreaking syndicates
Singapore Criminal trial of Hyflux founder Olivia Lum and five others starts Aug 11
Singapore 'We could feel the heat from our house': Car catches fire in Bidadari area
Singapore Why some teens cook despite Singapore's da bao culture
Zelenskiy said on Sunday: "The end of the war must be fair, and I am grateful to everyone who stands with Ukraine and our people today for the sake of peace in Ukraine, which is defending the vital security interests of our European nations."
A European official said Europe had come up with a counter-proposal to Trump's, but declined to provide details. Russian officials accused Europe of trying to thwart Trump's efforts to end the war.
"The Euro-imbeciles are trying to prevent American efforts to help resolve the Ukrainian conflict," former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev posted on social media on Sunday.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a vituperative statement that the relationship between Ukraine and the European Union resembled "necrophilia".
Roman Alekhin, a Russian war blogger, said Europe had been reduced to the role of a spectator.
"If Putin and Trump reach an agreement directly, Europe will be faced with a fait accompli. Kyiv - even more so," he said.
CAPTURED TERRITORY
No details of the proposed territorial swap that Trump alluded to have been officially announced.
Russia, which mounted a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, holds about a fifth of the country and has claimed the regions of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia as its own, although it controls only about 70% of the last three.
Russia has also taken pockets of territory in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions and said in recent weeks it has captured villages in the Dnipropetrovsk region. Ukraine says it holds a sliver of the Kursk region in western Russia.
Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin analyst, said a swap could entail Russia handing over 1,500 sq km to Ukraine and obtaining 7,000 sq km, which he said Russia would capture anyway within about six months.
He provided no evidence to back any of those figures. Russia took only about 500 sq km of territory in July, according to Western military analysts who say its grinding advances have come at the cost of very high casualties.
Ukraine and its European allies have been haunted for months by the fear that Trump, keen to claim credit for making peace and hoping to seal lucrative joint business deals between the U.S. and Russia, could align with Putin to cut a deal that would be deeply disadvantageous to Kyiv.
They had drawn some encouragement lately as Trump, having piled heavy pressure on Zelenskiy and berated him publicly in the Oval Office in February, began criticising Putin and expressing disgust as Russia pounded Kyiv and other cities with its heaviest air attacks of the war.
But the impending Putin-Trump summit, agreed during a trip to Moscow by Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff last week, has revived fears that Kyiv and Europe could be sidelined.
"What we will see emerge from Alaska will almost certainly be a catastrophe for Ukraine and Europe," wrote Phillips P. O'Brien, professor of strategic studies at the University of St Andrews in Scotland.
"And Ukraine will face the most terrible dilemma. Do they accept this humiliating and destructive deal? Or do they go it alone, unsure of the backing of European states?" REUTERS

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

Straits Times
11 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Nvidia, AMD agree to pay 15% of China chip sale revenues to US: Sources
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The agreements by Nvidia and AMD are part of a deal with the Trump administration to secure export licences. Washington – Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) agreed to pay 15 per cent of their revenues from chip sales to China to the US government as part of a deal with the Trump administration to secure export licences, according to a person familiar with the matter. Nvidia plans to share 15 per cent of the revenue from sales of its H20 chip in China and AMD will deliver the same share from MI308 revenues, added the person, who asked for anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. The Financial Times earlier reported the development. It followed a separate report from the Financial Times that the US Commerce Department started issuing H20 licenses on Aug 8, two days after Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang met President Donald Trump. The Trump administration had frozen the sale of some advanced chips to China earlier in 2025 as trade tensions spiked between the world's two largest economies. An Nvidia spokesperson said the company follows US export rules, adding that while it hasn't shipped H20 chips to China for months, it hopes the rules will allow US companies to compete in China. AMD didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Business Times
31 minutes ago
- Business Times
Nvidia, AMD agree to pay US 15% of China chip sale revenue
[WASHINGTON] Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) agreed to pay 15 per cent of their revenues from chip sales to China to the US government as part of a deal with the Trump administration to secure export licenses, according to a source familiar with the matter. Nvidia plans to share 15 per cent of the revenue from sales of its H20 chip in China and AMD will deliver the same share from MI308 revenues, added the source, who asked for anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. The Financial Times earlier reported the development. It followed a separate report from the Financial Times that the US Commerce Department started issuing H20 licenses on Friday, two days after Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang met US President Donald Trump. The Trump administration had frozen the sale of some advanced chips to China earlier this year as trade tensions spiked between the world's two largest economies. An Nvidia spokesperson said that the company follows US export rules, adding that while it has not shipped H20 chips to China for months, it hopes the rules will allow US companies to compete in China. AMD did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Separately, Intel chief executive officer Tan Lip-Bu is expected to visit the White House on Monday after Trump called for his dismissal last week over his ties to Chinese businesses, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. BLOOMBERG

Straits Times
41 minutes ago
- Straits Times
In a Trump-Putin summit, Ukraine fears losing say over its future
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Ukrainian rescuers and policemen work at the site of the Russian strike on a bus station in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on Aug 10. WASHINGTON – 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 US President Donald Trump meets President Vladimir Putin of Russia in Alaska on Aug 15, the Ukrainians will not be there, barring any last-minute invitation. And Kyiv's swift rejection of Mr Trump's declaration that he is already negotiating with Russia over what he vaguely called 'land swaps,' with no mention of security guarantees or arms for Ukraine, underscores the risks for the Ukrainians It also carries 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, Josef 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. Ukraine's president, Mr Volodymyr Zelensky, himself invited such comparisons in a speech to his people hours after Mr Trump raised the spectre of deciding Ukraine's fate in a one-on-one meeting in Alaska, territory that was once part of the Russian empire. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore BTO income ceiling, age floor for singles being reviewed: Chee Hong Tat World Netanyahu says Israel's new Gaza offensive will start soon Singapore 'It's so close': Crowds turn up for Red Lions, mobile column at National Day heartland celebrations Business Singapore can deliver and thrive in a fragmented global economy: Morgan Stanley analysts Asia As global supply chains shift, China's exports of factory robots see a sharp rise Singapore askST Jobs: How to deal with the dread of returning to work after a holiday? Singapore Man's claim amid divorce that his mother is true owner of 3 properties cuts no ice with judge Opinion Anwar's government: Full house but plenty of empty offices (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 US$7.2 million (S$9.25 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. Then, in what sounded like a direct warning to Mr Trump, he added: 'Any solutions that are against us, any solutions that are without Ukraine, are simultaneously solutions against peace. They will not bring anything. These are dead solutions.' Mr Zelensky is the one with the most on the line in the summit. After his bitter Oval Office encounter with Mr Trump in February, which ended in Mr Trump's declaration that 'you don't have the cards right now,' he has every reason to fear Mr Trump is at best an unreliable partner. At worst, Mr Trump is susceptible to being flattered and played by Mr Putin, for whom he has often expressed admiration. But there are also considerable political risks for Mr Trump. Those would be especially acute if he is viewed as forcing millions of Ukrainians into territorial concessions, with few compensating guarantees that Mr Putin would not, after taking a breather of a few years, seize the rest of the country. 'President Trump still seems to be going into this conversation as if Putin is negotiating as a partner or friend,' said Ms Tressa Guenov, director for programmes and operations at the Scowcroft Centre for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council. 'That will continue to make these discussions difficult if Ukraine isn't involved.' Mr Trump's personal envoy, Mr Steve Witkoff, raised the possibility of a meeting of Mr Trump, Mr Zelensky and Mr Putin, and in the past week, it looked like that might be a precondition for the session in Alaska. But Mr Trump waved away the notion when asked about it by reporters on Aug 8. A senior administration official said on Aug 9 that the president remained open to a trilateral meeting with Mr Putin and Mr Zelensky, but that the meeting between Mr Trump and Mr Putin was set to go ahead as scheduled. Yet the gap in how Mr Trump approaches these negotiations and how the United States' allies in Europe approach them became all the more vivid on Aug 9. After a meeting of European national security advisers and Ukrainian officials with Vice-President J.D. Vance, who is on a visit to Britain, leaders of the European Union's executive branch and nations including France, Britain, Italy and Germany called in a statement for 'active diplomacy, support to Ukraine and pressure on the Russian Federation to end their illegal war.' They added that any agreement needed to include 'robust and credible security guarantees that enable Ukraine to effectively defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity,' phrases Mr Trump has avoided. 'The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine,' the leaders said. Mr Trump has long sought a direct meeting with Mr Putin, declaring publicly that a problem like Ukraine could only be resolved with a meeting between the two top leaders. He also said last week that he expects to see President Xi Jinping of China before the end of the year. And he seems reluctant to impose more tariffs or sanctions ahead of those meetings. In fact, his deadline for Mr Putin to declare a ceasefire or face crushing 'secondary sanctions' melted away on Aug 8 without a mention from Mr Trump, other than that people should wait for his meeting with Mr Putin. The fact that Mr Trump is even meeting with Mr Putin represents a small victory for the Russian president, Ms Guenov said. 'Trump still has given Putin the benefit of the doubt, and that dynamic is one Putin will attempt to exploit even beyond this meeting,' she added. While Mr Trump has insisted that an understanding between himself and the Russian president is crucial to a broader peace, Mr Putin, Ms Guenov said, would certainly welcome any land concessions Mr Trump is willing to grant. Already the president has signalled that is where these talks are headed. Mr Trump on Aug 8 suggested that a peace deal between the two countries could include 'some swapping of territories,' signalling that the United States may join Russia in trying to compel Ukraine to permanently cede some of its land – the suggestion flatly rejected by Mr Zelensky . 'We're going to get some back, and we're going to get some switched,' said Mr Trump, leaving unclear who the 'we' in that statement was. 'There'll be some swapping of territories to the betterment of both, but we'll be talking about that either later, or tomorrow.' Russian officials have demanded that Ukraine cede the four regions that Moscow claimed to have 'annexed' from Ukraine in late 2022, even as some of that land remains under Ukrainian control. And Russia is seeking a formal declaration that the Crimean Peninsula is once again its territory. (Yalta, where the meeting of three great powers was held 80 years ago, is a resort city on the southern coast of Crimea.) NYTIMES