Path to
peace in Ukraine unclear, says Trump, as US envoys prepare to meet Kyiv
official
Trump’s
comments come after an hours-long meeting at the Kremlin between US envoys and
Vladimir Putin failed to achieve a breakthrough
Guardian
staff and agencies
Thu 4 Dec
2025 02.15 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/dec/04/trump-ukraine-peace-envoys-prepare-meet-kyiv-official
The path
ahead for Ukraine peace talks is unclear, Donald Trump has said, after what he
called “reasonably good” talks between Russian president Vladimir Putin and US
envoys which nonetheless failed to achieve a breakthrough.
After
their hours-long meeting at the Kremlin on Tuesday, US special envoy Steve
Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, were set to meet top Ukrainian
negotiator Rustem Umerov in Florida on Thursday.
Speaking
to reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday, Trump said Putin would like to
make a deal, but “what comes out of that meeting I can’t tell you because it
does take two to tango.” The president added that the US had “something pretty
well worked out [with Ukraine].”
The
Kremlin said on Wednesday that Putin accepted some US proposals aimed at ending
the war in Ukraine and was prepared to keep working to find a compromise, but
that “compromises have not yet been found”.
Both
sides agreed not to disclose the substance of their discussion at the Kremlin,
but at least one major hurdle to a settlement remains; the fate of four
Ukrainian regions Russia partially occupies.
A Russian
official told reporters that “so far, a compromise hasn’t been found” on the
issue of territory, without which the Kremlin sees “no resolution to the
crisis”.
Vladimir
Putin meets US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner at the Kremlin.
Ukraine’s
president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has ruled out giving up territory that Russia has
captured and on Wednesday said his team was preparing for meetings in the
United States, adding that dialogue with Trump’s representatives will continue.
“Only by
taking Ukraine’s interests into account is a dignified peace possible,” he
said.
Ukraine’s
foreign minister Andrii Sybiha, took a stronger line, urging Putin to “stop
wasting the world’s time.”
The
negotiations have intensified at a difficult juncture for Kyiv, which has been
losing ground to Russia on its eastern front while facing its biggest
corruption scandal of the war.
Zelenskyy’s
chief of staff, who had led the Ukrainian delegation at peace talks, resigned
on Friday after anti-corruption investigators searched his home. Meanwhile
Russia’s advance in eastern Ukraine has gathered pace and Putin has said that
Moscow is ready to fight on to seize the rest of the land it claims if Kyiv
does not surrender it.
“The
progress and nature of the negotiations were influenced by the successes of the
Russian army on the battlefield in recent weeks,” Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov,
who took part in the US-Russia talks, told reporters.
In
November, a leaked draft of a US peace proposal emerged, alarming Ukrainian and
European officials who said that it was weighted too much in Moscow’s. The
proposal would have seen Ukraine cede territory to Russia, Russia readmitted to
the G8 and Ukraine banned from joining Nato
European
countries then came up with a counter-proposal, and at talks in Geneva, the US
and Ukraine said they had created an updated and refined peace framework to end
the war.
Putin on
Tuesday accused European powers of trying to sink the peace talks by proposing
ideas which were absolutely unacceptable to Moscow, while also issuing threats
that Russia was ready for war with Europe if it started one.
Ukraine
and its European allies have in turn accused Putin of feigning interest in
peace efforts, with UK foreign secretary Yvette Cooper saying on Wednesday that
Russia should “end the bluster and the bloodshed and be ready to come to the
table and to support a just and lasting peace”.
“What we
see is that Putin has not changed any course. He’s pushing more aggressively on
the battlefield,” Estonian foreign minister Margus Tsahkna said at a meeting of
European Nato foreign ministers. “It’s pretty obvious that he doesn’t want to
have any kind of peace.”
Nato
secretary-general Mark Rutte said Ukraine’s partners will keep supplying
military aid to ensure pressure is maintained on Moscow.
On
Wednesday the European Commission also announced it would move ahead with
controversial plans to fund Ukraine with a loan based on Russia’s frozen
assets. In a concession to concerns raised by Belgium, which hosts most of the
assets, the EU executive has also proposed the option of an EU loan based on
common borrowing.
EU
leaders will be asked to decide on the options later this month, as Ukraine
faces a looming funding crunch.
Elsewhere
on Wednesday, the UN general assembly for the immediate and unconditional
return of Ukrainian children “forcibly transferred” to Russia. Ukraine has
accused Russia of abducting at least 20,000 Ukrainian children since the start
of the conflict in February 2022.
The
assembly adopted the non-binding resolution by a vote of 91-12, with 57
abstentions. Russia was among the countries rejecting the measure.
With
Reuters, the Associated Press and Agence France-Presse

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