Ukraine, peace talks and Trump
Digest more
With US-brokered negotiations entering a critical phase, Washington signals impatience while Moscow holds to hardline demands.
MOSCOW, Dec 7 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's outgoing Ukraine envoy said a deal to end the Ukraine war was "really close" and depended on resolving just two major issues but the Kremlin said there had to be radical changes to some of the U.S. proposals.
U.S. and Russian officials were scheduled to meet this weekend in Miami to discuss ending the war in Ukraine, White House officials said Thursday.
The issue of ceding territory remains a major sticking point in negotiations, and Vladimir Putin last week reiterated his goal to take eastern Ukraine “by force” unless his demands are met.
The United States just wrapped up two days of talks with Ukrainian and European negotiators in Berlin, followed by more discussions among leaders in Europe – all of which ended with positive signals about a future peace agreement.
Ukraine is willing to share its military technology, including drones, with Canada either by selling it or through joint production, Kyiv’s envoy told MPs Tuesday.
THE head of the Ukrainian mission to the Philippines described the ongoing foreign aggression in her country as “an asymmetric war of the 21st century.” Ambassador Yuliia Fediv—the first resident ambassador of the Eastern European nation to the Philippines—recently recounted the tragic state of her countrymen and the effect
Discover how close the United States is to negotiating a deal between Russia and Ukraine to end a "horrific" war with two million casualties.
The US is preparing a fresh round of sanctions on Russia’s energy sector to increase the pressure on Moscow should President Vladimir Putin reject a peace agreement with Ukraine, according to people familiar with the matter.