RT.com
18 Aug 2025, 23:36 GMT+10
The US president has set the conditions for a peace deal between Kiev and Moscow ahead of talks with Zelensky and European leaders
US President Donald Trump has outlined terms for a peace deal between Kiev and Moscow that would require Ukraine to abandon its NATO ambitions and accept Crimea as part of Russia.
The announcement came on Truth Social on Sunday, two days after Trump met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, where both reaffirmed their commitment to resolving the Ukraine conflict. Trump is meeting Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky and senior European leaders in Washington on Monday.
Trump wrote that Zelensky "can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight." A settlement, he added, would require "no getting back... Crimea" and "no going into NATO by Ukraine."
Crimea became part of Russia in 2014 after the peninsula's population overwhelmingly supported the move in a referendum while Kiev prosecuted a war against its own eastern regions.
Moscow insists that a lasting settlement would require Kiev to renounce its desire for NATO membership, demilitarize, and recognize the new territorial reality on the ground, including the status of Crimea, Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson, and Zaporozhye Regions, all of which have voted to become parts of Russia.
Zelensky has consistently rejected territorial concessions. He wrote after Trump's post on X that it was "Russia [that] must end this war, which it itself started," adding that "Crimea should not have been given up then."
This is Zelensky's first White House visit since a stormy February encounter with Trump and US Vice President J.D. Vance. He will be joined by European leaders, including France's Emmanuel Macron, Germany's Friedrich Merz, Britain's Keir Starmer, and European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen.
Trump has indicated that if Monday's talks succeed he will push for a trilateral summit with Putin and Zelensky as early as Friday.
Putin has not ruled out direct talks with Zelensky, but stressed that they must be preceded by significant progress toward a settlement.
Moscow has voiced concerns about Zelensky's right to sign any binding agreement, given that his presidential term expired last year and that he has refused to call a new election, citing martial law.
(RT.com)
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