
Everything you need to know about a Trump, Putin, Zelensky showdown summit – and who has the upper hand
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
A HISTORIC meeting between Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and maybe Volodymyr Zelensky could finally decide the fate of the war in Ukraine.
With battlefields burning and sanctions ready to bite, this diplomatic showdown could be the start of peace - or another powder keg.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
8
President Donald Trump (L) and Russian President Vladimir Putin are set to meet as early as next week to discuss Ukraine
Credit: Getty
8
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky could also join the historic summit
Credit: AFP
8
This isn't just another summit – it's a historic high-stakes gamble.
Trump is betting big that Putin wants peace, that Zelensky can stomach compromise, and that America's economic firepower can bring the war to an end.
Here is everything you need to know about the major meeting and the men comprising the most explosive political triangle in years.
When and where could the summit take place?
Trump could sit down with Mad Vlad Putin as early as next week, according to the White House.
A trilateral meeting including Zelensky is also on the table - a diplomatic first if it happens.
A top aide to Putin, Yuri Ushakov, announced that 'an agreement was agreed in principle to hold a bilateral summit in the coming days,' following a suggestion from the American side.
All parties are now working on the details, and while the venue has been agreed, it will be revealed later.
The possibility of a trilateral meeting with Zelensky was also raised by US special envoy Steve Witkoff during his talks with Putin yesterday — though Ushakov says Moscow has, for now, left that idea 'without comment.'
Don and Vlad last met in person at the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on June 28, 2019, during Trump's first term as America's leader.
And if Zelensky joins the upcoming meeting, it would mark the first time all three leaders sit at the same table since war erupted in 2022.
Russia and China begin war games in Sea of Japan after Trump nuclear threat
What will be discussed?
One issue dominates: peace in Ukraine.
Trump's administration says it is pushing hard for a deal.
His special envoy, Steve Witkoff, just wrapped up a three-hour meeting with Putin in Moscow this week, which Trump called "highly productive".
But there's a clock ticking.
The Republican strongman slashed his original 50-day deadline for a Ukraine peace deal to just 10 days - and that deadline expires Friday.
If Putin doesn't budge, Trump is poised to hammer Moscow - and its enablers - with crippling secondary sanctions.
India has already been hit with 50 per cent tariffs over its Russian oil purchases - and China could be next.
Trump warned: "We did it with India. We're doing it probably with a couple of others. One of them could be China."
The White House says Trump has made it clear there will be "biting sanctions" if Russia doesn't agree to a ceasefire.
Who has the upper hand?
Right now, everything hangs in the balance - and the power dynamic could shift in a heartbeat.
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, former British Army officer and military analyst, said the fact the summit is even happening is a win in itself.
But as for who's calling the shots? That's where things get complicated.
Noting the Russian leader still believes he's making ground in Ukraine, the expert told The Sun: 'Until fairly recently, it's been pretty clear that President Putin has absolutely no desire for peace.
'His aim at the beginning of his special military operation over three and a half years ago was to subjugate the whole of Ukraine.'
According to de Bretton-Gordon, Trump has only recently woken up to the fact that he's being played.
8
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands during a meeting in 2017
Credit: AFP or licensors
8
Putin greets Trump's Special Envoy Steve Witkoff in Moscow for last-minute talks
Credit: AFP
8
US special envoy Steve Witkoff seen deep in conversation with Russia's Kirill Dmitriev in a park near the Kremlin before his meeting with Putin
Credit: East2West
'It would appear that Trump has had a bit of an epiphany, a bit of a change of mind, and has now realised that Putin has been playing him.'
And now, Don is bringing the businessman in him and threatening to hit Russia where it hurts most: the wallet.
'If Trump follows through with his sanctions and tariffs… then this is the reason I think that Putin has come to the table,' de Bretton-Gordon explained.
'Economic and financial analysts who really know about these things believe that the Russian economy would peter out pretty quickly without the massive amounts of money and resources it gets from oil.'
In other words, Trump holds the economic sledgehammer — if he's willing to swing it.
But Putin isn't out of the game. His forces are still advancing, still hammering Ukrainian cities, and still killing civilians.
'Russia seems to be moving forward slowly,' de Bretton-Gordon warned.
'Attacking civilian targets in Ukraine at an unbelievable scale.'
Zelensky, meanwhile, remains the wild card.
'The people who are most important here are the Ukrainians,' he said.
'A bad deal for Ukraine is worse than no deal at all.'
And that's the real risk. Trump might be chasing headlines, not justice.
'I think Trump probably just wants to get a deal of some description,' the former army officer said.
'One just hopes that Trump doesn't try and do some sort of backhand deal with Putin, just so that he can claim that there is now peace in Ukraine, because the short-term peace is no good to anybody.'
So who has the upper hand? Right now, it's still up for grabs.
But if Trump sticks to his economic guns, and if Putin starts to feel the heat on the home front, the balance might just tip.
Will Trump be able to make a deal?
That's the trillion-dollar question.
Trump insists he's serious.
He's been increasingly frustrated with Putin, telling reporters: "Can't answer the question yet. I'll tell you in a matter of weeks, maybe less. But we made a lot of progress."
Zelensky says the pressure is working.
"It seems that Russia is now more inclined to a ceasefire," he said, but warned, "The main thing is that they do not deceive us in the details – neither us nor the US."
Putin, for his part, has not ruled out a meeting with Zelensky – a U-turn after rejecting talks for nearly five years.
But the Kremlin remains cagey.
Aides say they're open to a summit "after preparatory work is done at the expert level."
Still, Russia continues to play the long game.
Putin's demands for peace remain unchanged, and behind the scenes, Moscow is preparing for no limits on nuclear deployments – a chilling echo of Cold War escalation.
If talks fail, Trump's next move could ignite a global trade war.
A 100 per cent tariff on all Russian goods and those of its allies is on the table. His message to Moscow? Deal or suffer.
8
An explosion of a drone lights up the sky over the city during a Russian drone strike
Credit: Reuters
8
Ukrainian soldiers of 43rd artillery brigade fire self-propelled howitzer towards Russian positions
Credit: AP
What is the situation on the frontline?
While diplomats talk, Putin bombs.
Russia has escalated its attacks in Ukraine in recent days - in what some see as a final show of force ahead of the talks.
Kyiv, Kherson, Nikopol, Dnipropetrovsk - all hit.
One missile slammed into a residential tower, killing 31 people, including five children.
In Nikopol, a 23-year-old first responder was among the dead.
Putin's war machine has launched hundreds of drones and missiles overnight in a relentless blitz.
Even as Moscow talks ceasefire, its rockets keep flying.
Ukrainian forces, meanwhile, have not backed down - striking deep into Russian territory with precision attacks on refineries, rail hubs, air defences and even military units inside Russia.
The Afipsky Refinery in southern Russia went up in flames after a massive Ukrainian strike – a clear message that Kyiv can hit back hard.
Just days ago, Russia declared there are now no limits on its deployment of nuclear missiles in a chilling warning to the West.
Throwing off its gloves and restraints, Moscow vowed to match US and Nato moves with force, reigniting fears of a Cold War-style arms race.
The Russian Foreign Ministry accused America and its allies of creating a "direct threat to the security of our country" by preparing to deploy intermediate-range weapons in Europe.
Saying Moscow now has a free hand to respond, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: "Russia no longer considers itself to be constrained by anything.
"Therefore Russia believes it has the right to take respective steps if necessary."
The trigger, according to Russia, is the planned US deployment of Typhoon and Dark Eagle missiles in Germany starting next year.
The Kremlin said the move shattered what remained of strategic stability, accusing Donald Trump's USA of risking "a dangerous escalation of tensions between nuclear powers."
It was the clearest warning yet that Vladimir Putin is prepared to redraw the red lines of nuclear deterrence — and challenge the West head-on.

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


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Another week, another deadline: Timeline of Trump's promises to end Russia's war on Ukraine
Donald Trump has claimed the end of the Ukraine war could come in weeks, despite his latest deadline for Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire expiring in a matter of hours. Last Monday, Trump dramatically shortened his previous 50-day ultimatum, giving Russia '10 to 12 days' to make progress toward peace or face tougher sanctions. Sources close to the Kremlin say Putin is unlikely to bow to Trump's threats, believing Russia holds the upper hand in the war and that the potential benefits of improved ties with Washington do not outweigh his military aims. Still, an agreement has been reached for Putin and Trump to meet 'in the coming days' to discuss a ceasefire - a first since Joe Biden met with Putin in Geneva in 2021. The talks follow a three-hour meeting between Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and Putin in Moscow. Trump has made a meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky - which would be a first since the invasion began in February 2022 - a condition of a US-Russia meeting. So far, Putin has not conceded. Having repeatedly vowed to end the war 'within 24 hours' of taking up office, Trump now faces mounting pressure as his deadlines slip and Putin shows no sign of backing down. But his growing 'disappointment' in Putin and sanction threats suggest his patience is wearing thin. Here, The Independent looks at the times Trump has set deadlines for Russia: On the campaign trail While campaigning for a second term in office, Trump said dozens of times he would end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours of returning to the White House. He repeatedly asserted he would have the war 'settled' if he became president again, including at both presidential debates of 2024. CNN has counted at least 53 occasions between March 2023 and October 2024 that Trump made such comments. 20 January, Inauguration Day Trump reiterated his desire to end the war when he was inaugurated, although no explicit deadline was given. 'Our power will stop all wars and bring a new spirit of unity to a world that has been angry, violent, and totally unpredictable,' the US President said in his Inaugural Address. Later that day, he discussed Putin to reporters: 'I mean, he's grinding it out, but most people thought that war would have been over in one week, and now we're into three years. So he can't be thrilled, [it's] not making him look very good.' 22 January, the first 48 hours By 22 January, Trump had not spoken to Putin since he was sworn in but he said his aides were working to arrange a conversation. He threatened unspecified sanctions on Moscow if Putin didn't come to the negotiating table 'soon'. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said he was 'not looking to hurt Russia' and expressed 'love' for the Russian people. The president boasted of his 'very good relationship' with Putin – who in 2016 ordered what the Department of Justice called a 'sweeping and systematic' effort to interfere in the presidential election on Trump's behalf. Trump has repeatedly claims that interference in the election is a 'hoax'. 'All of that being said, I'm going to do Russia, whose Economy is failing, and President Putin, a very big FAVOR. Settle now, and STOP this ridiculous War! IT'S ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE,' Trump said. Russia's deputy UN ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy said Moscow would need to see what Trump's definition of a 'deal' would look like before coming to the negotiating table. 12 February, Putin-Trump call Trump said he spoke to Putin and agreed to 'immediately' start talks on ending Ukraine war in the two leaders' first direct exchange since the invasion. He claimed Putin agreed to closely cooperate and host official visits, and that their teams would begin negotiations right away. The call marked a break-away from the Biden administration policy to not discuss Ukraine without Kyiv's presence. He said he later spoke with Zelensky but did not commit to making Ukraine an equal participant to US negotiations with Russia. It came as his defence secretary announced an end to longstanding US policy supporting Ukrainian membership in NATO. In response, Zelensky maintained a brave face, saying he had a 'meaningful conversation' with Trump and that Kyiv was ready to 'work together at a team level'. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin emphasised the need to remove the war's 'root causes' but that settlement could be reached through peace talks. 28 February, The Oval Office meeting By month's end and moments after saying he wished to be remembered as a 'peacekeeper,' Trump berated Zelensky in the tense Oval Office meeting, as press and stunned diplomats looked on. With support from his deputy, JD Vance - who repeatedly pressed Zelensky on whether he'd ever said 'thank you' for US military assistance - Trump condemned the Ukrainian leader as 'disrespectful' and called off a minerals deal he had touted as a step toward peace. Claiming to be 'caught in the middle', he cited Zelensky's 'hatred' for Putin as a major obstacle to ending the war. Trump suspended military aid to Ukraine on 3 March. The next day, Zelensky extended an olive branch to Trump and said the showdown was 'regrettable' and remained committed to cooperating over a peace deal. 14 March, '24-hour promise was sarcastic' Trump claimed he was 'being a little bit sarcastic' when he repeatedly said as a candidate that he would end the war within 24 hours. In the following days he spoke with both Zelensky and Putin on successive days. In one call on 18 March, Putin refused to back Trump's suggested full 30-day ceasefire but agreed not to target Ukraine's energy infrastructure. The next day, Trump proposed that Zelensky consider handing over ownership of Ukraine's power plants to the U.S. for security - an idea Zelensky strongly rebutted. 14 April, Trump blames everyone for no deal By 14 April, Trump blamed everyone: Zelensky, Putin and Biden. 'That's a war that should have never been allowed to start and Biden could have stopped it and Zelensky could have stopped it and Putin should have never started it,' Trump said. He proceeded to alternate blame between Zelensky and Putin. On 23 April, Trump said Zelensky was prolonging the 'killing field' after pushing back on ceding Crimea to Russia as part of a potential peace plan. He added that Zelensky's stance was 'very harmful' to talks and that a deal had been close. The next day, he urged Putin to stop after Russia's deadly barrage of assaults on Kyiv - at the time it was the biggest attack since the summer before. 'I am not happy with the Russian strikes on KYIV. Not necessary, and very bad timing. Vladimir, STOP! 5000 soldiers a week are dying,' Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform. 'Lets get the Peace Deal DONE!' Rubio warned the US may abandon Ukraine peace talks if progress was not made in the coming days. 28 May, two-week deadline Asked about Russia's escalating violence in Ukraine, Trump appeared to issue a two-week deadline for Vladimir Putin to demonstrate he actually wants to end the war. Pressed on whether he thought Putin wanted to end the war, Trump said: 'I can't tell you that, but I'll let you know in about two weeks.' 'Within two weeks. We're gonna find out whether or not (Putin is) tapping us along or not. And if he is, we'll respond a little bit differently.' The comments came as the Kremlin ramped up its attacks on Ukraine, including some of the deadliest attacks of the war and were a sign of Trump's growing frustration at the lack of efforts to achieve peace. 14 July, 50-day deadline Trump announced the US could impose 'very severe' secondary tariffs, potentially 100 per cent, on Russia if the war in Ukraine is not concluded within 50 days. He expressed strong disappointment with Russian President Putin, accusing him of being 'all talk' and condemning Russia's attacks on Ukrainian civilian targets. While the US does not have a current trade relationship with Russia, following Biden's sanctions, secondary tariffs aimed to punish countries buying Russian oil. China and India are among the biggest purchasers and refine the oil for export elsewhere. But rather than be spooked, the Russian stock market rose by 2.7 per cent as the country had expected tougher sanctions. 28 July, shortens deadline 10-12 days Trump again said he is 'very disappointed' in Putin and that he's cutting Moscow's 50-day deadline to avoid secondary sanctions on Russian oil to between 10 and 12 days from then, unless Putin ends the war. Speaking alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on the steps of his Turnberry golf resort in Scotland, Trump complained that Putin had too often talked a good game about wanting to reach a ceasefire in the conflict only to resume bombing civilian targets in short order. As Trump grew significantly frustrated with Putin in recent weeks, he gave him until Friday 8 August to make progress toward peace in Ukraine or face tougher sanctions. However, the day before the deadline the Kremlin said Putin would be meeting with Trump next week.


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
World leader to nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize
Cambodia's Prime Minister, Hun Manet, has nominated Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. The nomination is based on Trump's alleged extraordinary statesmanship in resolving a border dispute between Cambodia and Thailand. Trump's intervention, through a phone call to both nations' leaders, reportedly led to a ceasefire agreement and averted a potentially devastating conflict. The five-day conflict had previously resulted in 43 fatalities and displaced over 300,000 people, escalating to heavy artillery and F-16 deployment. This is not the first time Trump has been put forward for the award, with Pakistan and Israel also indicating previous nominations.


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Donald Trump to be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize by prime minister of Cambodia
Cambodia 's prime minister, Hun Manet, has put forward U.S. president Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, citing his "extraordinary statesmanship" in resolving a border dispute between Cambodia and Thailand. Mr Manet announced the nomination via a Facebook post on Thursday, which included a letter he claimed was sent to the Norwegian Nobel Committee. In the letter, he lauded Mr Trump's intervention as an example of his "exceptional achievements in de-escalating tensions in some of the world's most volatile regions". "This timely intervention, which averted a potentially devastating conflict, was vital in preventing a great loss of lives and paved the way towards the restoration of peace," the Cambodian leader wrote. The resolution stemmed from a July 26 call by Mr Trump to the leaders of both nations, which broke a stalemate in efforts to end some of the most intense fighting between the neighbours in recent history, as reported by Reuters. This led to a ceasefire agreement negotiated in Malaysia on July 28. The two countries further agreed on Thursday to prevent any reignition of hostilities and to permit observers from Southeast Asia. The five-day conflict had resulted in 43 fatalities and displaced over 300,000 people, escalating from small arms fire to heavy artillery and rocket attacks, culminating in Thailand's deployment of an F-16 fighter jet for air strikes. The nomination had been anticipated after Cambodia's deputy prime minister last week revealed the plan, simultaneously expressing gratitude for a U.S. tariff of 19 per cent on Cambodian imports. This was a significant reduction from the previously threatened 49 per cent, which he stated would have devastated the country's crucial garment manufacturing sector. This is not the first such nomination for Mr Trump; Pakistan indicated in June its intention to recommend him for his role in helping to resolve a conflict with India, and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated last month that he had also nominated him for the award.