Moscow
welcomes White House document critical of the EU as talks to end the Ukraine
war enter a key phase
Shaun
Walker in Kyiv
Sun 7 Dec
2025 17.27 CET
The
Kremlin has heaped praise on Donald Trump’s latest national security strategy,
calling it an encouraging change of policy that largely aligns with Russian
thinking.
The
remarks follow the publication of a White House document on Friday that
criticises the EU and says Europe is at risk of “civilisational erasure”, while
making clear the US is keen to establish better relations with Russia.
“The
adjustments that we see correspond in many ways to our vision,” the Kremlin
spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said on Sunday. He welcomed signals that the Trump
administration was “in favour of dialogue and building good relations”. He
warned, however, that the supposed US “deep state” could try to sabotage
Trump’s vision.
It came
as the White House’s efforts to push through a peace deal in Ukraine enter a
key phase. US officials claim they are in the final stage of reaching an
agreement, but there is little sign that either Ukraine or Russia is willing to
sign the framework deal drawn up by Trump’s negotiating team.
The
Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, will visit Downing Street on Monday
for a four-way meeting with with the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, the
French president, Emmanuel Macron, and the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
Zelenskyy
has previously called on European allies for support at times when the White
House has tried to push Ukraine towards agreeing to give up territory. A key
issue for Kyiv is what security guarantees it would receive if it does agree to
renounce control of some territory.
Zelenskyy
has said he had a “substantive phone call” with US officials on Saturday
evening after they finished three days of talks with a Ukrainian delegation in
Florida. Those meetings followed a visit to Moscow by Trump’s envoys, Steve
Witkoff and Jared Kushner, earlier in the week. A source told Axios the call
had lasted two hours and was “difficult”.
“Ukraine
is determined to keep working in good faith with the American side to genuinely
achieve peace,” Zelenskyy wrote on social media. He said the two sides had
discussed “key points that could ensure an end to the bloodshed and eliminate
the threat of a new Russian full-scale invasion”.
It is not
clear that either the US or Europe are willing to offer the kind of security
guarantees that would genuinely deter Russia from invading again. Nor is it
likely that Vladimir Putin would agree to a deal that involved any western
troops stationed in Ukraine.
US
officials have claimed to be close to a sustainable deal on numerous occasions
since Trump began his second term in office, only for the claims to be exposed
as wishful thinking.
Trump’s
outgoing Ukraine envoy, Keith Kellogg, said at a defence forum on Saturday that
the administration’s efforts to end the war were in “the last 10 metres”. He
said there were two outstanding issues: territory and the fate of the
Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
Kellogg
is seen as among the US officials most sympathetic to Kyiv’s position, but is
due to leave his role in January and was present at the Florida talks. Many
others in Trump’s orbit, including Witkoff, have been much more open to
adopting Russian positions. Trump’s son, Donald Jr, said at a forum in Doha on
Sunday that Zelenskyy was deliberately continuing the conflict for fear of
losing power if it ended. He said the US would not be “the idiot with the
chequebook” any longer.
Analysts
in Kyiv say the situation is not yet so bad that Ukraine would be forced to
sign any deal whatsoever simply to prevent a continuation of the war, but they
say a difficult and potentially bleak winter lies ahead as Russia continues to
target energy infrastructure, disrupting power and heating supplies for
millions of Ukrainians.
Exhaustion
is setting in as Ukraine enters the fourth winter of full-scale war, and
Zelenskyy has been weakened by a corruption scandal that has touched numerous
associates and led to the resignation of his powerful chief of staff, Andriy
Yermak.
One
person was killed during a drone attack in the northern Chernihiv region late
on Saturday, according to local officials, and a combined attack of drones and
missiles targeted energy infrastructure in the central city of Kremenchuk. It
left much of the city without power and water on Sunday. It was the second
consecutive night of attacks targeting energy, after more than 600 drones and
50 missiles were used on Friday night.

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