
Trump says it will be ‘rough situation' if Putin does not agree peace plan
The US president's comments came as Sir Keir Starmer held talks with members of the 'coalition of the willing', the nations prepared to contribute to guaranteeing Ukraine's security if a deal to end the Russian invasion can be reached.
In a call on Tuesday, members of the group discussed the possibility of further sanctions on Russia, while planners from the nations will meet their US counterparts 'in the coming days', amid efforts to set up 'robust security guarantees', Number 10 said.
The Prime Minister and Mr Zelensky were among European leaders who travelled to Washington on Monday for talks at the White House.
Those discussions have paved the way for a potential meeting between Mr Zelensky and Mr Putin for the first time since the Russian leader invaded his neighbour in 2022.
Mr Trump told Fox News: 'I hope President Putin is going to be good and if he's not, that's going to be a rough situation.
'And I hope that Zelensky, President Zelensky, will do what he has to do. He has to show some flexibility.'
The UK and France have pledged to commit forces to Ukraine to deter Mr Putin from launching a fresh assault on his neighbour if a deal is done to end the war.
Mr Trump said they were 'willing to put people on the ground', and added: 'We're willing to help them with things, especially probably if you could talk about by air, because there's nobody has the kind of stuff we have.'
But he suggested that Mr Putin was unlikely to launch another invasion as he was 'tired of it' after three years of war.
'We are going to find out about President Putin in the next couple of weeks, that I can tell you,' Mr Trump said, acknowledging that it was 'possible he doesn't want to make a deal'.
Sir Keir said work with the US on what the security guarantees would entail could start as soon as Tuesday.
He said there was a 'real significant breakthrough when it comes to security guarantees, because we're now going to be working with the US on those security guarantees'.
Sir Keir told the BBC that teams from both sides of the Atlantic were starting 'the detailed work on that'.
The Prime Minister co-chaired a call on Tuesday morning of the so-called 'coalition of the willing', the group of nations he has been leading with France's President Emmanuel Macron.
Mr Trump spoke directly to Mr Putin to begin planning a meeting between the Russian leader and Mr Zelensky while hosting the gathering on Monday, which will then be followed by a three-way meeting involving himself.
The US president said Moscow will 'accept' multinational efforts to guarantee Ukraine's security.
Mr Zelensky, meanwhile, said he was 'ready' for bilateral and trilateral meetings.
But he told reporters following the White House meeting that if Russia does 'not demonstrate a will to meet, then we will ask the United States to act accordingly'.
Nato secretary general Mark Rutte said the US and Europe would 'do more' on tariffs and sanctions against Russia if the country 'is not playing ball' on direct talks with Ukraine, in comments to Fox News.
Sir Keir described the talks as 'good and constructive' and said there was a 'real sense of unity' between the European leaders, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky.
He said Mr Trump's plans to arrange the bilateral and trilateral meetings showed a recognition that Ukraine must be involved in talks.
'That is a recognition of the principle that on some of these issues, whether it's territory or the exchange of prisoners, or the very serious issue of the return of children, that is something where Ukraine must be at the table,' the Prime Minister said.

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


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Why is Putin so scared of meeting Zelensky? How showdown with hero Vlad dismissed as a ‘Nazi comic' exposes his FAILURE
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) VLADIMIR Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky have only met in person once before. The next time they set eyes on each other, it could expose the Russian tyrant as a fraud and a failure before the eyes of his people. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Zelensky and Putin attend a meeting on Ukraine with French President and German Chancelor at the Elysee Palace in 2019 Credit: AFP 5 Within three years of the meeting, their two countries would be locked in a full-scale war Credit: Reuters 5 In the days since Trump's separate meetings with the two leaders, Moscow has been quick to pour cold water on the prospect of a Putin-Zelensky summit Credit: Reuters When they first met, Zelensky was the freshly elected President of Ukraine, who soared to office with a landslide win - despite having no political experience. His past career was as an actor and comedian - rising to international fame with his role as an accidental president in the Ukrainian show Servant of the People. The contrast with the stony-faced macho image cultivated by Vladimir Putin could not have been more stark as they say down in 2019 for a summit in France. The pair did not shake hands at the tense, fruitless meeting. Within three years, their two countries would be locked in Europe's bloodiest war since 1945. Putin forced to 'accept failure' Donald Trump's renewed drive to bring the war to a close could bring a once unthinkable second meeting between Zelensky and Putin to reality. However, in the days since Trump's separate meetings with the two leaders, Moscow has been quick to pour cold water on the prospect. Zelensky, whose first language is Russian and performed in Moscow during Putin's rise to power, has said he is "ready" for a meeting with Vlad. But the very act of meeting with Zelensky could undermine Putin and the entire rationale for his war in the eyes of Russia. Scheming Putin WON'T draw a line under Ukraine - here's why he won't give up the Donbas Orysia Lutsevich, director of Chatham House's Russia and Eurasia program, told CNN that Putin "will have to accept the failure of sitting down with a President he considers a joke from a country that doesn't exist". Undermines Russia's war aims When the Russian despot ordered tanks to assault Kyiv in February 2022, his warped justification was based on claims that Ukraine was a fake country run by Nazis. Zelensky's Jewish identity makes the claim patently absurd, but for Putin to sit down with him would be a tacit admission of how ludicrous the claim was. For Vlad to meet Volod for talks, they would be sat there as two Presidents of legitimate, sovereign nations - something that the Kremlin's narrative could not possibly abide. And so long as Ukraine remains armed and sovereign, concession to Zelensky would prove Putin's war goals a failure. Russia has shown little indication of making major concessions so far, with the handover of vast swathes of Ukrainian territory to Moscow still Putin's core condition for peace. But to avoid Trump's wrath if talks fall through, Putin will want to shift the blame to Zelensky. Loggerheads over location His suggestion that the trilateral summit be held in Moscow - a predictably unacceptable proposal for Ukraine - could have been a calculated move to weasel out. And had the meeting been held in Russia's capital against the odds, Putin would have hailed it as a diplomatic coup for the Kremlin - and a chance to humiliate Ukraine's war leader. But Vlad's surrogates have taken to the airwaves to dampen expectations around a summit. Russia' Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said a meeting would have to be prepared "gradually... starting with the expert level and thereafter going through all the required steps". Lavrov added today that not involving Russia in discussions around Ukraine's security guarantees is a "road to nowhere". Disputes around the proposed location for the summit have also presented headaches for diplomats. While a Moscow meeting between the pair remains unlikely, other venues have also proved controversial. Suggestions for it to be held in Budapest were lambasted by Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk. He said: "Not everyone may remember this, but in 1994 Ukraine already got assurances of territorial integrity from the US, Russia and the UK. "In Budapest. Maybe I'm superstitious, but this time I would try to find another place." Switzerland, Qatar and Austria have been floated as other prospective venues. But Putin will be wary of a European location - where most states would be obliged to arrest him under an ICC warrant. 5 Disputes around the proposed location for a summit have presented headaches for diplomats Credit: EPA


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Report: Hegseth's security requirements strain Army's CID
The Army agency tasked with protecting Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and his family is under serious strain, forcing the group to reallocate resources from criminal investigations. The Army's Criminal Investigation Division (CID) works to protect Hegseth, 45, his family members and residences. It also acts as the Army's police force, investigating felony crimes and violations of U.S. military code. Sources familiar with the operation say the multi-million dollar initiative to protect Hegseth and his family has diverted agents from essential investigations the Washington Post reports. The agents have been sent to protect Hegseth's properties in Tennessee , Minnesota and D.C. They have also been tasked with the protection of the former Fox News host's seven children, split among three different wives. 'I've never seen this many security teams for one guy,' one CID official told the Post. 'Nobody has.' While Hegseth enjoys outings with his family, a phalanx of security can often be spotted on the perimeters of the secretary and his brood. In one instance, when the Daily Mail spotted Hegseth out to eat in South West D.C., over half a dozen security personnel were spotted surrounding the Pentagon boss, his young children, and wife, Jennifer Hegseth. 'We have complete inability to achieve our most basic missions,' another person familiar with the matter told the Washington Post. But the Pentagon pushed back on the report. 'Any action pertaining to the security of Secretary Hegseth and his family has been in response to the threat environment and at the full recommendation the Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID),' Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell told the Daily Mail in a comment. 'When left-wing blogs like the Washington Post continue to dox cabinet secretaries' security protocols and movements, it puts lives at risk.' In addition to Hegseth CID is also tasked with defending other top military personnel. The protection of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Army secretary, and other top Pentagon officials is also the responsibility of CID agents. Typically, around 150 of the 1,500 CID agents have served on VIP security details, multiple sources revealed.


South Wales Guardian
an hour ago
- South Wales Guardian
Minister unveils UK crackdown on Kyrgyz finance to ‘keep pressure on' Putin
Stephen Doughty unveiled sanctions against eight organisations and individuals on Wednesday, and said the move would help 'keep up the pressure on' Russian president Vladimir Putin, who he alleged was exploiting 'dodgy crypto networks'. Kyrgyzstan's Capital Bank, formally known as the OJSC Capital Bank of Central Asia, was among the sanctioned organisations, along with its director Kantemir Chalbayev. Leonid Shumakov, who is understood to be the director of the rouble-linked A7A5 cryptocurrency token, also features on the list of sanctions targets, along with Grinex LLC, CJSC Tengricoin, Old Vector LLC, Zhanyshbek Uulu Nazarbek and Altair Holding SA. According to the Government, A7A5 has moved 9.3 billion US dollars (£6.9 billion) on a dedicated cryptocurrency exchange in just four months. 'If the Kremlin thinks they can hide their desperate attempts to soften the blow of our sanctions by laundering transactions through dodgy crypto networks – they are sorely mistaken,' Mr Doughty said. 'These sanctions keep up the pressure on Putin at a critical time and crack down on the illicit networks being used to funnel money into his war chest. 'Alongside our allies, we will continue to support the US-led drive to end this illegal war and secure a just and lasting peace.' The Kremlin has, in turn, sanctioned 21 individuals, including former Labour MP Denis MacShane, several journalists, and the Government-appointed independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, Jonathan Hall. The Russian Foreign Ministry announced in a statement that its move was 'in response to London's ongoing confrontational course, which includes efforts to demonise' Russia, tackling 'individuals who spread disinformation and unfounded accusations'. London and Moscow traded sanctions after a pair of summits on Friday and Monday, when US President Donald Trump said 'everyone is happy about the possibility of peace' in eastern Europe. Mr Trump, who hosted Mr Putin in Anchorage and then his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky in Washington, claimed he had begun planning for trilateral talks between the three leaders. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, who was in the White House with Mr Zelensky and several other European leaders, welcomed early-stage plans for three-way talks as a 'sensible next step'. Mr Trump also claimed the Putin administration would 'accept' multinational efforts to guarantee Ukraine's security, to ward off future Russian attacks. A YouGov poll of more than 6,300 adults found that 57% of Britons would support deploying British soldiers as peacekeepers in Ukraine, if a peace deal to end the war is reached, with 25% opposed.