
Starmer to welcome Zelensky to No 10 ahead of Trump meeting with Putin
Meanwhile, Mr Trump threatened Russia with 'severe consequences' if a ceasefire was rejected by its leader.
During a call with the US president and European allies on Wednesday, Sir Keir praised Mr Trump for his work to bring forward a 'viable' chance of an end to the war.
But concerns have been raised over Mr Zelensky's exclusion from the meeting between the Mr Trump and Mr Putin, which is set to take place in Alaska on Friday.
Speaking on Wednesday, Sir Keir said: 'This meeting on Friday that President Trump is attending is hugely important.
'As I've said personally to President Trump for the three-and-a-bit years this conflict has been going on, we haven't got anywhere near a prospect of actually a viable solution, a viable way of bringing it to a ceasefire.
'And now we do have that chance, because of the work of that the president has put in.'
Further sanctions could be imposed on Russia should the Kremlin fail to engage, and the UK is already working on its next package of measures targeting Moscow, he said.
'We're ready to support this, including from the plans we've already drawn up to deploy a reassurance force once hostilities have ceased,' he told allies.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer co-chairs a virtual meeting with pro-Ukraine allies from Downing Street (Jack Taylor/PA)
'It is important to remind colleagues that we do stand ready also to increase pressure on Russia, particularly the economy, with sanctions and wider measures as may be necessary.'
Sir Keir and European leaders have repeatedly said discussions about Ukraine should not happen without it, amid concerns the country is being sidelined in negotiations about its own future.
Asked if it was his decision to not invite Mr Zelensky to the meeting, Mr Trump said 'no just the opposite', before adding that a second meeting with the Ukrainian president could take place afterwards.
'We had a very good call, he was on the call, President Zelensky was on the call. I would rate it a 10, you know, very, very friendly,' he told reporters in Washington.
He added: 'There's a very good chance that we're going to have a second meeting which will be more productive than the first, because the first is I'm going to find out where we are and what we're doing.'
The US president has previously suggested a truce could involve some 'swapping' of land.
It is believed one of the Russian leader's demands is for Ukraine to cede parts of the Donbas region which it still controls.
But Mr Zelensky has already rejected any proposal that would compromise Ukraine's territorial integrity, something that is forbidden by the country's constitution.
A joint statement from the Coalition of the Willing, which is co-chaired by Sir Keir, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, said 'international borders must not be changed by force'.
It added: 'Sanctions and wider economic measures to put pressure on Russia's war economy should be strengthened if Russia does not agree to a ceasefire in Alaska.'
The Coalition of the Willing is a European-led effort to send a peacekeeping force to Ukraine in the event of truce.
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Trump hand-delivered Putin a letter from First Lady Melania on ‘plight of children in Ukraine and Russia': White House
President Donald Trump hand-delivered Russian President Vladimir Putin a letter from First Lady Melania Trump on the 'plight of children in Ukraine and Russia,' according to a new report that cites White House officials. Trump met with Putin for nearly three hours on Friday at a U.S. military base in Anchorage, Alaska. In their first meeting in six years the two leaders discussed the war in Ukraine. Trump has pushed for peace in the region but no ceasefire deal came out of the talks. Melania Trump, who was born in Slovenia, wrote Putin a letter that mentioned the abductions of children in the over three-year war, which Trump gave to Putin at the summit, two White House officials told Reuters. The Independent has reached out to the White House for comment. While the exact number of missing children remains unclear, the Institute for the Study of War reported in March Ukraine verified nearly 19,500 children have been deported by Russia. But the research non-profit said, 'The true figure is likely to be much higher because Russia frequently targets vulnerable children without anyone to speak for them.' In March 2023, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Putin, accusing him of the war crimes of unlawfully deporting children and unlawfully transferring them from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the questions raised by the ICC 'outrageous and unacceptable,' Reuters reported at the time. He also mentioned Russia does not recognize the jurisdiction of the court, so 'any decisions of this kind are null and void' for the country. Prior to Friday's summit, Trump had spoken on the phone with Putin on several occasions, but it didn't seem to move the needle on the war in Ukraine. In recent months, Trump grew more frustrated with the Russian leader, as he continued his military campaign in Ukraine. Last month, Trump talked about Melania reminding him of the deadly toll of Russia's bombardments on Ukraine. 'I go home, I tell the first lady, 'I spoke to Vladimir today, we had a wonderful conversation.' And she says, 'Oh really, another city was just hit,' he said from the Oval Office. During a joint speech to reporters Friday, where neither leader took questions, Trump called his meeting with Putin 'very productive.'


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Trump has just discovered he isn't as powerful as he thought he was
On his way to Alaska to meet Vladimir Putin, president Trump told Fox News's Brett Baier that he wouldn't be happy if he left the summit without a ceasefire in Ukraine. 'Now, I say this, and I have said it from the beginning: This is really setting the table today,' Trump said. 'We're going to have another meeting, if things work out, which will be very soon, or we're not going to have any more meetings at all, maybe ever.' In short, Trump was well aware that anything could have happened in Alaska on Friday. In the event, after nearly three hours of talks, Trump and Putin stepped up to their lecterns touting unspecified progress and calling their discussions very productive. Putin, in his typical monotone, referred to the meeting with the US president as 'long overdue', cast blame on the Biden administration for allowing US-Russia relations to deteriorate, and credited Trump for at least being willing to meet face-to-face. Putin laid it on thick, going so far as to confirm Trump's repeated assertions that the war in Ukraine would never have happened if he had still been holding court in the White House in February 2022. Trump, a man who likes to hear himself talk, was noticeably subdued at the press conference and said very little. He consistently claimed progress on the major topics of discussion without telling us what those topics were. Ever the gracious host (unless your name is Volodymyr Zelensky), Trump returned Putin's flattery; the Russian leader, he commented, wanted peace in Ukraine as much as he did. Of course, there's very little evidence supporting that statement. When all was said and done, there was no peace deal in Ukraine. Nothing on the conflict was settled. The immediate ceasefire that Trump, Zelensky and the Europeans hoped to squeeze out of the Russian strongman was nowhere to be found. On the big items, the summit failed. But none of this should have been a surprise. Anybody who has been monitoring the three-and-a-half year war will tell you that neither Putin nor Zelensky is prepared to cede their maximum negotiating positions. The differences between Moscow and Kyiv remain unbridgeable at this point in time, so much so that many foreign policy analysts in the West were wondering why Trump even bothered to fly to Alaska in the first place. Zelensky wants a ceasefire before real negotiations begin; Putin wants to fight and talk simultaneously. Zelensky doesn't want to cede any Ukrainian territory that Russia doesn't already occupy, and he most certainly won't recognise Russia's territorial gains; Putin wants Ukrainian forces to lay down their arms, withdraw and gift the entire Donbas region, as well as Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, to him on a silver platter. Zelensky wants Western security guarantees; Putin doesn't want any Western involvement in Ukraine's future defence at all. The divergences go on and on, and a single high-level meeting, particularly one to which Zelensky wasn't invited, was never going to resolve them. As we await the readouts from the White House and anticipate what agreements, if any, were actually reached, Trump will be returning to Washington with mixed feelings. On the one hand, he can talk solace in the fact that his talks with Putin didn't break down, like the top-level diplomacy he instigated with North Korea's Kim Jong-un more than six years before. He may even be able to call this entire endeavour a win if further talks are scheduled in the future. Meanwhile, the nervous nellies in Europe will be relieved that Trump didn't negotiate swaths of Ukraine away to the Russians, a concern that nagged Sir Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron and Friedrich Merz to such an extent that an emergency summit with Trump was put in the calendar last Wednesday to talk him out of any moves he may have up his sleeve. Trump, however, is probably also a bit peeved by the outcome. Although the Trump administration tried to set the bar low, the president himself also outlined his expectations for the summit: a ceasefire and, if all goes well, another meeting, this time with Zelensky in the room. Instead, he's leaving Alaska without the first item on his list and the second still up in the air. The fighting will go on as fiercely tomorrow as it did today. The bottom line here is simple: Trump may aggrandise and boast about his remarkable dealmaking abilities, but on the war in Ukraine, he isn't the most important protagonist in the story. Trump can push, pressure, cajole and sweet-talk, but it's Zelensky and Putin who will determine when the killing stops. As the US intelligence community wrote in a threat assessment earlier this year, 'both leaders for now probably still see the risks of a longer war as less than those of an unsatisfying settlement.' Plenty has changed in the months since those words were published. But Trump's big attempt at peacemaking notwithstanding, that conclusion still holds true. Daniel DePetris is a fellow at Defense Priorities


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
New 129-day cruise launched from Sydney to London with 'unlimited food and drink'
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