Latest news with #UkraineDeal


The Independent
2 days ago
- Politics
- The Independent
Trump-Putin summit live: Delegations head to Alaska after Trump says Putin ‘will not mess me around' on Ukraine
Russian and American delegations have arrived in Alaska ahead of the crucial summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin later today. Ahead of the summit, Mr Trump claimed the Russian leader was 'not going to mess around with me', as the US president hopes to seal a Ukraine ceasefire deal. The US president also floated the idea that European leaders could be invited to participate in a second meeting, which would include Volodymyr Zelensky. The main aim of today's meeting is to set up talks between Putin and the Ukrainian president, Mr Trump told Fox News Radio, adding that he has three locations in mind for such a meeting. The US president, who is gearing up to meet his Russian counterpart for the first time since 2018, said that he thinks both leaders 'will make peace'.Friday's talks between the presidents will include a one-on-one meeting, a bilateral lunch with both delegations and a press conference, the White House announced. Earlier on Thursday, the Russian leader praised Mr Trump's 'sincere efforts' towards ending the war in Ukraine, telling Kremlin officials the US is making 'quite energetic and sincere efforts to stop the fighting'. Trump hopeful of reaching Ukraine ceasefire deal Speaking on the eve of today's summit with Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump said that he thought the Russian leader would do a deal on Ukraine – but the US president has blown hot and cold on the chances of a breakthrough in recent days. Mr Trump and Mr Putin hold talks in Alaska today, where the US president hopes to seal a ceasefire agreement on Ukraine. The meeting at a Cold War-era air force base in Alaska comes amid Ukrainian and European fears that Trump might sell Kyiv out. A source close to the Kremlin told Reuters it looked as if the two sides had been able to find some unspecified common ground beforehand. "Apparently, some terms will be agreed upon tomorrow (Friday) because Trump cannot be refused, and we are not in a position to refuse (due to sanctions pressure)," said the source. Mr Putin has set stringent conditions for a full ceasefire, but one compromise could be a phased truce in the air war, although both sides have accused the other of flouting a previous accord. Analysts say Mr Putin could try to look like he's giving Mr Trump what he wants while remaining free to escalate in Ukraine if he wants to. "If they (the Russians) are able to put a deal on the table that creates some kind of a ceasefire but that leaves Russia in control of those escalatory dynamics, does not create any kind of genuine deterrence on the ground or in the skies over Ukraine... that would be a wonderful outcome from Putin's perspective," said Sam Greene, director of Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 06:30 Ukraine supporters held at rally against Trump-Putin summit in Alaska Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 06:10 Trump to meet Putin at 3pm ET today US president Donald Trump's meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin will take place at 3pm ET (1900 GMT) in Anchorage, Alaska, the White House said in a press schedule statement. Mr Trump will depart the White House at 6.45am ET (1045 GMT) and leave Anchorage at 5.45pm Alaska Time the same day. He is scheduled to return to the White House early Saturday morning. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:50 Trump says 25% chance that summit with Putin will fail US prresident Donald Trump yesterday said there was only a 25 per cent chance that the summit with Russian leader Vladimir Putin would fail. The US president will meet his Russian counterpart today at the Alaska summit for the first time since 2018. Mr Trump said if the meeting with Mr Putin succeeds, he could bring Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky to Alaska for a subsequent, three-way meeting. In a radio interview with Fox News, Mr Trump also said he might be willing to stay in Alaska longer, depending on what happens with Mr Putin. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:35 Explosions at Russian oil refinery A Russian oil refinery was set ablaze in an overnight drone attack in Samara Oblast, according to reports. There was no official confirmation whether the drone attack was launched by Ukraine. Local residents said they heard at least ten explosions around 4am local time, UNN reported. The drone struck an oil refinery in Syzran, the third-largest city in Samara Oblast, located about 811km from the Ukrainian border. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:21 Can Zelensky the warrior cut it as a peacetime leader? Short, sweet, and largely symbolic' might be a reasonable summary of Volodymyr Zelensky's Downing Street visit on the eve of the US-Russia summit in Alaska. There will be those who take issue with Zelensky's swanning around foreign parts at such a time. There will also be those – some, if not many of them, in Russia – who hope that the coming days will, one way or another, spell the end of Zelensky's power. For all the missteps and failings on the part of his government in Kyiv, Zelensky is likely to be the person who has to try to shepherd Ukraine from war into peace, and he needs to be supported as perhaps the only one who can. Can Zelensky the warrior cut it as a peacetime leader? Whatever the fallout from the US-Russia summit in Alaska, the Ukrainian president – his public image and reputation having been forged in conflict – is the only person to shepherd his country into a new era, says Mary Dejevsky Holly Evans15 August 2025 05:20 Inside Putin's ruthless 'winning' mindset – and the major risk to Trump Understanding how Vladimir Putin thinks in the run-up to the crucial summit with Donald Trump in Alaska is about understanding what the Russian leader is accustomed to: being dominant at home, but seen as a pariah in most of the democratic world. In his view, this Friday's summit is about his grand re-entry onto the international stage and a complex psychological interplay with a US leader who is also fixated on what a 'win' over ending (or rather stalling) the war in Ukraine would do for his personal brand. The dynamics of a summit that has already sidelined Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky – and reduced European leaders to holding their own meeting in Berlin – will be driven by the needs of two men with immense but fragile egos. Read the full analysis here: Inside Putin's ruthless 'winning' mindset – and the major risk to Trump While Donald Trump boasts that he is the master of the deal, it is Putin who has perfected the art of the 'win' – which often includes humiliation through gestures, slights and power moves, writes Anne McElvoy Holly Evans15 August 2025 05:05 Donbas: Why Russia is desperate to capture eastern Ukraine's industrial heartland The future of Ukraine's industrial heartland in the east will almost certainly play a key role in talks between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump as they prepare to meet in Alaska on Friday. The Russian leader has demanded that Ukrainian forces withdraw from Donetsk as part of any any ceasefire deal, according to Volodymyr Zelensky. The Ukrainian president has said that Mr Putin wants the remaining 30 per cent of the eastern region, which has seen some of the fiercest battles in the three-and-a-half year long war. Donbas: Why Russia is desperate to capture eastern Ukraine's industrial heartland Fully giving up Donbas could have 'catastrophic consequences', according to experts Holly Evans15 August 2025 04:50 Trump 'must be prepared' to meet with Putin, European officials warn ahead of summit European officials insisted to CNN that US President Trump come prepared to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin while the pair discuss Ukraine while the country's president Volodymyr Zelensky is not present. 'He must be prepared because Putin is very, very well prepared,' one European official told the network about Friday's meeting. There is a 'vulnerability' for Trump to be alone in the room with Putin because the Russian president is 'an excellent player,' the official added. Another official acknowledged the US President has been tougher on Russia recently. On Thursday, for example, Mr Trump threatened "severe consequences" if Mr Putin doesn't agree to peace in Ukraine. Still, this official warned: 'It seems Trump doesn't really believe in the possibility of Ukrainian success.' Kelly Rissman15 August 2025 04:35 What has Trump said ahead of the summit with Putin? One day before the two world leaders were scheduled to meet, US President Donald Trump told reporters Thursday that Russian President Vladimir Putin is 'not going to mess around' with him. 'I am president, and he's not going to mess around with me,' he said during a press conference at the White House. 'I'll know within the first two minutes, three minutes, four minutes or five minutes... whether or not we're going to have a good meeting or a bad meeting. And if it's a bad meeting, it'll end very quickly, and if it's a good meeting, we're going to end up getting peace in the pretty near future.' The US president remained cautiously optimistic that the leaders of Russia and Ukraine 'will make peace.' "We're going to see what happens," he said. "And, I think President Putin will make peace. I think President Zelensky will make peace. We'll see if they can get along and if they can, it'll be great." Meanwhile, earlier in the day on Thursday, Mr Putin praised Mr Trump for making "quite an energetic and sincere effort, in my opinion, to stop hostilities, to stop the crisis and to reach an agreement that is of interest to all those involved in this conflict.' Kelly Rissman15 August 2025 04:20

News.com.au
3 days ago
- Politics
- News.com.au
Everything we know as Trump meets Putin in Alaska
US President Donald Trump has acknowledged his high-stakes summit with Vladimir Putin may fail, and said any Ukraine deal would come through a future three-way meeting with Kyiv to 'divvy things up'. Russian President Vladimir Putin flies to Alaska on Friday at the invitation of Trump in his first visit to a Western country since he ordered the 2022 invasion of Ukraine that has killed tens of thousands of people. The Kremlin said that the two presidents planned to meet one-on-one, heightening fears by European leaders that Putin will cajole Trump into a settlement imposed on Ukraine. What Trump has said ahead of the meeting Trump, on the eve of the summit, insisted that he would not finalise any deal with Putin and that he would include Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in any decisions. 'This meeting sets up the second meeting, but there is a 25 per cent chance that this meeting will not be a successful meeting,' Trump told Fox News Radio. 'The second meeting is going to be very, very important, because that's going to be a meeting where they make a deal. And I don't want to use the word 'divvy' things up. But you know, to a certain extent, it's not a bad term,' Trump said. Zelensky has refused any territorial concessions to Russia, which has ramped up attacks and made sharp gains on the battlefield just ahead of the summit. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said any future deal needed to ensure Ukraine's security. 'To achieve peace, I think we all recognise that there'll have to be some conversation about security guarantees,' Rubio told reporters in Washington, saying he was 'hopeful' about the summit. Trump has previously ruled out letting Ukraine join NATO and backed Russia's stance that Kyiv's aspirations to enter the transatlantic alliance triggered the war. Ukraine and most of its European allies reject Putin's narrative and point to his remarks denying the historical legitimacy of Ukraine. Trump had boasted that he could end the war within 24 hours of returning to the White House in January. But his calls to Putin — and intense pressure on Zelensky to accept concessions — have failed to move the Russian leader and Trump has warned of 'very severe consequences' if Putin keeps snubbing his overtures. What Putin has said ahead of the meeting Putin on Thursday welcomed US efforts to end the conflict and said that talks could also help yield an agreement on nuclear arms control. 'The US administration … is making quite energetic and sincere efforts to end the fighting,' Putin told a meeting of top officials in Moscow. The talks are set to begin at 5.30am AEST on Saturday at the Elmendorf Air Force Base, a major US military installation in Alaska that has been crucial in monitoring Russia. 'This conversation will take place in a one-on-one format, naturally with the participation of interpreters,' Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters in Moscow. He said that delegations would continue discussions over a working lunch and that Putin and Trump would hold a joint news conference. The White House has not confirmed any plans for a joint press appearance. Trump faced heated criticism over his joint news conference after his 2018 summit with Putin in Helsinki where he sided with Russia over US intelligence in accepting Putin's denials of interfering in the 2016 US election to help Trump. What other European leaders are saying Zelensky, who will not join Friday's summit in Alaska, met Thursday with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, after talks a day earlier in Berlin. Starmer greeted the Ukrainian leader with a warm hug and handshake on the steps of his Downing Street residence and later voiced solidarity. European leaders expressed relief after a call with Trump on Wednesday, saying he appeared focused on a ceasefire rather than concessions by Ukraine. What is the latest on the Ukraine-Russia war A day before the summit, Ukraine fired dozens of drones at Russia, wounding several people and sparking fires at an oil refinery in the southern city of Volgograd. Russia meanwhile said its troops had captured two new settlements in eastern Ukraine, where it has been advancing for months. Diplomacy since Russia's invasion has largely failed to secure agreements beyond swaps of prisoners. Russia said Thursday it had returned 84 prisoners to Ukraine in exchange for an equal number of Russian POWs in the latest exchange.

Wall Street Journal
28-07-2025
- Politics
- Wall Street Journal
Trump Plans to Give up to 12 Days for Putin to Agree to Ukraine Deal
Trump Plans to Give up to 12 Days for Putin to Agree to Ukraine Deal While in Scotland, President Trump said he is 'disappointed' in Russian President Vladimir Putin for not yet reaching a deal to end the war in Ukraine. Photo: Andrew Leyden/Zuma Press


Russia Today
08-05-2025
- Politics
- Russia Today
Trump announces upcoming talks with Zelensky
US President Donald Trump has announced that he plans to talk with Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky in the near future. He has also confirmed that a minerals agreement between Washington and Kiev had been ratified by the Ukrainian parliament. 'We just concluded the rare earth deal with Ukraine,' Trump told journalists in the White House on Thursday. 'We appreciate that and I'll be speaking with [Zelensky] in a little while,' he stated, without providing any further details about the date or the format for the upcoming talks. DETAILS TO FOLLOW


Reuters
08-05-2025
- Politics
- Reuters
Trump says rare earth deal with Ukraine concluded
WASHINGTON, May 8 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday he plans to talk to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy now that a rare earth deal with Ukraine has been concluded. Trump said he would be speaking with Zelenskiy soon. He made the comment at an event announcing a U.S.-British trade deal.