News
Analysis
For
Trump, Flashy Summits Come First. Grunt Work Comes Next.
Diplomats
scrambled to come up with detailed proposals for security guarantees and other
sticking points following two high-level summits in Alaska and Washington.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
By Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs covers the White House. He reported from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/19/us/politics/trump-summits-putin-zelensky.html
Aug. 19,
2025
First,
President Trump rolled out the red carpet for President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia for a high-stakes summit in Alaska. Then he brought the president of
Ukraine and seven other European leaders to the White House for an
extraordinary gathering to discuss an end to the war.
Now comes
the grunt work.
Mr. Trump
in the past week has effectively flipped the traditional diplomatic process on
its head. After two critical meetings in four days aimed at ending the war in
Ukraine, American and European diplomats scrambled to come up with detailed
proposals for security guarantees and other sticking points that could upend
any momentum to secure peace.
Already,
major gaps were becoming evident, including whether Russia would countenance
U.S. security guarantees for Ukraine, and whether Mr. Putin was serious about
meeting with Mr. Zelensky face to face.
Ironing
out the details typically happens between staffers and diplomats before leaders
step in to finalize the agreement. But Mr. Trump, ever one to toss out norms
and traditions, went big last week in Alaska with Mr. Putin, then again at the
White House on Monday, without any breakthroughs to announce. Now, with Russia
continuing to hammer Ukraine and no sign that Mr. Trump or Mr. Putin see a
cease-fire as a precondition for a deal, the process could devolve into a
diplomatic version of trench warfare.
So far,
at least, Mr. Putin has a free hand to continue his war against his neighbor
without immediate concern for further penalty.
“In a
normal American administration you have all kinds of preparation,” said Steven
Pifer, a former ambassador to Ukraine under President Bill Clinton. “This is
very unusual.” He added: “The risk I see is that he doesn’t prepare the
details. My impression is that he wants a deal. He wants any deal so he can
claim, ‘I solved another war.’ But the details matter.”
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said on Tuesday that Mr. Trump’s
approach was a much-needed break from the “status quo.”
“Thanks
to President Trump’s efforts, we finally have movement after years of deadly
gridlock,” she said at a press briefing.
But the
statements coming out of the Trump administration did not always line up with
the information coming out of Russia. In her comments to reporters, Ms. Leavitt
said Mr. Putin had promised to meet with Mr. Zelensky in the coming weeks. But
Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, played down the prospect of such a
meeting.
Mr.
Trump, for his part, said on Tuesday that he felt Mr. Putin was “tired” of the
war. Yet Russia launched an overnight attack against Ukrainian energy and
transport infrastructure, with 270 drones.
On
security guarantees, Mr. Trump said he had ruled out deploying U.S. troops to
Ukraine but would be open to providing air support for troops from other
European nations. On multiple occasions, Russia has flatly rejected the idea of
an international force on its borders.
“We’ve
got the European nations, and they’ll front-load it,” Mr. Trump said in an
interview on Fox News Tuesday morning. “They want to have, you know, boots on
the ground.”
Still,
diplomacy is a messy process, and the recent summits were only the latest
attempts by Mr. Trump to jump start talks, a process made more urgent perhaps
by his open campaign for a Nobel Peace Prize.
Even Mr.
Trump on Tuesday acknowledged the challenging road ahead.
“This one
is the one that’s the most difficult, and I thought it would be an easy one,”
Mr. Trump said in the Fox News interview. “So I hope President Putin is going
to be good, and if he’s not, that’s going to be a rough situation.”
Some
foreign policy experts questioned Mr. Trump’s shifting stances. In just a week,
he threatened to impose “severe consequences” on Russia if Mr. Putin did not
agree to a cease-fire, only to adopt Mr. Putin’s preferred approach of
negotiating a sprawling peace agreement that would involve Ukraine ceding
territory. He has dropped a threat of sanctioning Mr. Putin, instead arguing
that the Russian leader was ready to negotiate and end the fighting.
“He’s
been all over the place,” said Charles A. Kupchan, a Europe adviser on the
National Security Council in the Obama and Clinton administrations. Mr. Kupchan
did commend Mr. Trump for engaging with Mr. Putin, saying it was long overdue
to secure a tangible diplomatic off-ramp for the conflict.
But he
said the lack of coordination and cohesive strategy meant that many crucial
details still needed to be worked out.
“It’s
hard to imagine a kind of diplomatic game plan that has unfolded in such a
chaotic fashion,” Mr. Kupchan said. “It’s been a mess.”
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President
Trump and his administration.


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