Trump
says Zelenskyy set to visit White House on Friday to sign minerals deal
President
says ‘I hear he’s coming on Friday’ amid reports that terms of US-Ukraine aid
exchange have been reached
Andrew Roth
in Washington
Wed 26 Feb
2025 06.14 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/25/trump-zelenskyy-ukraine-minerals-deal
Donald Trump
has said that Volodymyr Zelenskyy is likely to visit the White House on Friday
to sign a rare earth minerals deal to pay for US military aid to defend against
Russia’s full-scale invasion.
The
announcement followed days of tense negotiations between the US and Ukraine in
which Zelenskyy alleged the US was pressuring him to sign a deal worth more
than $500bn that would force “10 generations” of Ukrainians to pay it back.
Media
outlets reported late on Tuesday that the terms of an agreement had been
reached.
“I hear that
he’s coming on Friday,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “Certainly
it’s OK with me if he’d like to. And he would like to sign it together with me.
And I understand that’s a big deal, very big deal.”
According to
the Financial Times, which first reported the deal, the new terms of the deal
did not include the onerous demands for a right to $500bn in potential revenue
from exploiting the resources, which include rare earth metals and Ukrainian
oil and gas resources.
A framework
for the deal included joint ownership of a fund to develop Ukraine’s mineral
resources with certain caveats for those resources already contributing to the
state budget.
It was more
favourable to Ukraine than the original deal proposed by Washington, but did
not include references to long-term security guarantees that Kyiv wanted to
receive in the deal.
Certain
details of the deal remained unclear, including the US’s ownership stake in the
new fund.
Asked what
Ukraine would receive in the deal, Trump said: “$350bn, military equipment and
the right to fight on.”
“We’ve
pretty much negotiated our deal on earth and various other things,” Trump
added. “We’ll be looking … general security for Ukraine later on. I don’t think
that’s going to be a problem. There are a lot of people that want to do it, and
I spoke with Russia about it. They didn’t seem to have a problem with it. So I
think they understand they’re not going back. And once we do this, they’re not
going back.”
Neither the
US nor Ukrainian governments immediately responded to requests for comment from
the Guardian on the terms of the deal.
The initial
US proposal, which included a 100% financial interest in the fund to which
revenues from the natural resource extraction would flow, had provoked outrage
in Ukraine and other allies in Europe. “I am not signing something that 10
generations of Ukrainians will have to repay,” Zelenskyy said of the initial
proposal. The negotiations were accompanied by a public war of words in which
Trump called Zelenskyy a “dictator without elections”, a common Kremlin talking
point.
The
resources the US is seeking in Ukraine include key components for batteries,
titanium production, and rare earth metals that are used in electronics, wind
turbines, weapons and other modern products.
Ukrainian
officials had said earlier this week that the deal was nearing completion.
“Ukrainian
and US teams are in the final stages of negotiations regarding the minerals
agreement,” Olha Stefanishyna, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister for European and
Euro-Atlantic integration, said on Monday. “The negotiations have been very
constructive, with nearly all key details finalised. We are committed to
completing this swiftly to proceed with its signature. We hope both US and UA
[Ukrainian] leaders might sign and endorse it in Washington the soonest to
showcase our commitment for decades to come.”
As the US
and Ukraine neared an agreement, Russian President Vladimir Putin had also
proposed a deal to develop Russia’s mineral resources, including in the
Ukrainian territories under Russian occupation. Putin said Russia “undoubtedly
[has], I want to emphasise, significantly more resources of this kind than
Ukraine”.
A newly
appointed Russian presidential envoy, Kirill Dmitriev, on Wednesday said the
two countries were interested in finding joint economic projects, according to
the state-run news agency Tass.
Dmitriev was
named by Putin on Sunday as his special envoy on international economic and
investment cooperation. He is seen as a key figure in Moscow’s efforts to
improve relations with the new Trump administration.

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