Analysis
Trump
alone in a room with Putin is a recipe for disaster – just look to their last
meeting
Andrew
Roth
in
Washington
The two
plan to meet behind closed doors Friday in Alaska to discuss ‘land swapping’.
What will happen this time?
Wed 13
Aug 2025 09.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/13/trump-putin-meeting-alaska
The
lessons of Helsinki are clear: putting Donald Trump alone in a room with
Vladimir Putin is an unpredictable – and often dangerous – affair.
It was
2018 when the two leaders met at the invitation of Sauli Niinistö, the Finnish
president, to discuss a collapse in US-Russia relations, accusations of
elections interference, and the grinding war in east Ukraine, among other
topics.
By the
time he came out of the room, Trump looked dazzled by the Kremlin leader. Asked
at a press conference about the conclusions of the US intelligence community
that Russia had interfered in the elections, Trump said: “President Putin says
it’s not Russia. I don’t see any reason why it would be.”
Fiona
Hill, Trump’s senior Kremlin adviser on the US national security council, later
said that she had considered pulling a fire alarm or faking a medical emergency
to end the press conference.
Somehow,
the stakes are even higher as Trump and Putin plan to meet on Friday in
Anchorage, Alaska, where Trump has said the two will discuss “land swapping” in
Putin’s first meeting with a G7 leader since his invasion of Ukraine in
February 2022. European leaders are fearful that Trump could once again emerge
from a closed-door meeting preaching the Kremlin gospel.
The White
House has been lowering expectations for the summit – a sign that no concrete
deal is on the table. “This is really a feel-out meeting, a little bit,” Trump
said during a news conference on Monday. He said he would know within the first
few minutes whether or not Putin was ready for a ceasefire and would pass that
on to Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders. “I may say, ‘Lots of
luck, keep fighting.’ Or I may say, ‘We can make a deal,’” he said.
But Putin
will still try his luck to shape Trump’s image of what a peace deal could
entail in a way that will bring maximum benefit to the Kremlin. Putin “wants a
deal with Trump that will be presented to Kyiv and other European capitals as a
fait accompli,” wrote John Herbst, senior director of the Atlantic Council’s
Eurasia Center and a former ambassador to Ukraine. The lack of invites for
European leaders “has the smell of the Yalta Conference in 1945 … where the
United States, the Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom decided the fate of
half of Europe over the heads of those nations”.
Europe
and Ukraine have pushed back. Ahead of the summit, Zelenskyy said that Ukraine
would not cede Russia territory that it could use to launch a new offensive,
effectively ruling out Trump’s predictions that “there will be some [land]
swapping”.
The
ad-hoc nature of Trump’s approach to foreign policy can play into the hands of
the US’s foreign adversaries – but it has frustrated them too. Leaders like
president Xi Jinping of China are said to prefer more advance work before
getting into the room with Trump specifically because of his unpredictability.
Russia too has become frustrated with the lack of process in the Trump
administration.
But that
has not stopped Putin from taking his chances by stepping into the ring with
Trump for their first one-on-one meeting of this administration.
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said on Tuesday that the meeting
between Trump and Putin would be one-on-one, and a “listening exercise” for
Trump during which he could suss out the Russian point of view.
“That’s
the way Trump does it. He just wings it,” said Hill, the former presidential
aide.
“And
Putin likes sparring … he prides himself on being able to be light on his feet
in these kinds of settings,” she said.
The lack
of advisers in the room has raised a key question: will any agreements made in
a private setting, even if interpreters or other notetakers are present, lead
to lasting outcomes?
“It’s
kind of like a meeting falling in the forest,” said Hill.
A similar
event took place during the Helsinki summit, when Trump exited the room and
said that he had made an agreement with Putin for US law enforcement to have
access to the GRU operatives accused of influencing the US elections. Putin
later said in turn that he would have access to Americans responsible for
pushing for the anti-corruption Magnitsky Act.
“Of
course, that went nowhere,” Hill said. “Trump hadn’t fully understood what
Putin had said to him.”
“In other
words, you know, there is a meeting or something, it doesn’t solidify into
something,” she said.

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