Trump
Plans to Meet With Putin to Talk About a Cease-Fire in Ukraine
A day
ahead of his meeting with Ukraine’s leader at the White House to discuss an
arms package, President Trump suggested that Russia might be open to a
diplomatic solution to the war it started.
Trump
said he planned to meet with President Vladimir Putin or Russia in a few weeks
to discuss a cease-fire as President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine arrived in
Washington to secure more weapons.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
By Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/16/us/politics/trump-putin-cease-fire-ukraine.html
Published
Oct. 16, 2025
Updated
Oct. 17, 2025, 2:24 a.m. ET
After
speaking for more than two hours on Thursday with President Vladimir V. Putin,
President Trump said he planned to meet with the Russian leader in Hungary in
“two weeks or so” to discuss ways to bring an end to Moscow’s three-year
invasion of Ukraine.
Mr. Trump
held what he termed a “productive” call with his Russian counterpart a day
before he was set to meet with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who is
expected to make the case that the United States should give Kyiv weapons
capable of striking deep inside Russia.
But after
days of suggesting he would allow the sale of Tomahawk missiles to Kyiv, Mr.
Trump abruptly expressed trepidation over further arming Ukraine, signaling
that he might back off if Mr. Putin proves willing to negotiate a diplomatic
end to the conflict.
“We
talked about it a little bit,” Mr. Trump said, describing his discussion with
Mr. Putin. “We need Tomahawks for the United States of America, too.”
Mr. Trump
went on to say that Mr. Putin did not want him to provide the missiles.
“Tomahawk is a vicious weapon,” Mr. Trump said. “It’s a vicious, offensive,
incredibly destructive weapon. Nobody wants Tomahawks shot at them.”
The
decision to hold the call with Mr. Putin, after days of expressing his
increasing frustration over the Russian leader’s unwillingness to take
substantive steps toward peace, and on the eve of meeting with Mr. Zelensky,
signaled a familiar pattern for Mr. Trump’s handling of the war.
On
multiple occasions this year, Mr. Trump has come right to the edge of imposing
penalties on Russia or giving powerful new military aid to Ukraine, only to
speak with Mr. Putin and raise hopes for a diplomatic solution — so far with
little to show for it.
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In the
spring, Mr. Trump accused Mr. Putin of “playing with fire” in his conduct of
the war and said he was considering imposing sanctions on Russia, only to end
up saying he needed two more weeks to know if Mr. Putin was serious about
negotiations. He never imposed the sanctions.
Mr. Trump
set another deadline in early August for Mr. Putin to end the war. Rather than
impose penalties, Mr. Trump met with the Russian leader in Alaska, emerging to
proclaim that they had made headway toward peace. But Mr. Putin continued his
assault on Ukraine and has shown little public willingness since then to back
off.
Mr.
Trump’s critics said he was again falling into a trap of rewarding Mr. Putin
with a summit meeting without being assured of getting anything in return,
allowing Russia to keep delaying and fighting the war on its terms.
“After
walking away from his Alaska summit with Putin empty-handed, President Trump
has now decided to reward Putin again by rolling out the red carpet in
Hungary,” said Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the top Democrat on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “President Trump is repeating the mistakes
of the past by not arming Ukraine to the teeth and letting them win this war.
Now he’s taking it a step further by rewarding Putin while Ukraine gets
nothing.”
But the
decision to engage again with Mr. Putin showed how emboldened Mr. Trump is
feeling when it comes to his handling of conflicts overseas. Having achieved
what appears to be a substantial victory in bringing about a cease-fire and
hostage deal between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, Mr. Trump is now throwing
himself again into peacemaking in Ukraine while also speaking openly about
military action against Venezuela.
“We hope
we’re going to get it stopped,” Mr. Trump said of the Ukraine war. “Because of
my relationship with President Putin, I thought this would be very quick.”
“Who
would think I did Middle East before I did this?” Mr. Trump added.
After his
meeting with Mr. Zelensky at the White House on Friday, Mr. Trump said he will
send his senior advisers, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, to meet
with Mr. Putin’s senior officials.
Yuri
Ushakov, an aide to Mr. Putin, told Russian news agencies that envoys from the
two countries would meet “without delay” to lay the groundwork for the summit.
Mr. Trump
then is expected to meet with Mr. Putin in Budapest, in a summit hosted by
Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary. Their aim, Mr. Trump said in a social
media post, will be to “see if we can bring this ‘inglorious’ War, between
Russia and Ukraine, to an end.”
But the
meeting with Mr. Putin is far from a sure thing, according to foreign policy
experts, who cautioned that it likely hinged on the success of the meeting with
Mr. Trump’s and Mr. Putin’s senior officials.
“I can
easily see it falling apart as they grapple with the actual issues,” said John
E. Herbst, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine and now senior director of the
Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center. But Mr. Herbst also said it is notable that
Mr. Trump has decided to lean into the conflict.
“Trump
has said since before he was elected he wants endurable peace,” Mr. Herbst
said. “He has put his reputation behind that concept. To allow himself to be
played by Putin indefinitely doesn’t serve his interests.”
Before
talking to Mr. Putin on Thursday, Mr. Trump blamed the Russian leader for the
continuous attacks on Ukraine that have undercut his efforts to broker peace.
He has also emphasized the difficulty of negotiating with Mr. Putin, even
suggesting that Mr. Putin had at times misled him and his senior aides.
“I’m very
disappointed because Vladimir and I had a very good relationship, probably
still do,” Mr. Trump said on Tuesday at the White House. “I don’t know why he
continues with this war.”
But he
struck a much more cordial tone after his call with Mr. Putin on Thursday. He
said the Russian leader had congratulated him on his diplomatic efforts in the
Middle East. Mr. Trump said he believed his success in negotiating a cease-fire
and hostage release in Gaza would help him in brokering an end to the fighting
in Ukraine.
He added
that Mr. Putin had expressed gratitude for the work of Mr. Trump’s wife,
Melania, who has held talks with Mr. Putin in an effort to secure the return of
Ukrainian children taken by Russia and separated from their families during the
war.
“He was
very appreciative, and said that this will continue,” Mr. Trump said in the
post. “We also spent a great deal of time talking about Trade between Russia
and the United States when the War with Ukraine is over.”
William
B. Taylor, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, said the administration was at
risk of repeating a familiar cycle with Mr. Putin.
“Here we
go again,” Mr. Taylor said after reading Mr. Trump’s summary of his call with
Mr. Putin. “We can hope that we’ve learned how Putin works.”
“There’s
no sign that Putin is interested in ending this war,” he said, adding that he
hoped Mr. Trump could put pressure on Mr. Putin like he was able to with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel.
Nataliya
Vasilyeva and Tyler Pager contributed reporting.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President
Trump and his administration.


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