Zelensky skeptical over Trump-Putin peace talks to end Ukraine war

WASHINGTON — President Trump is to hold talks Tuesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin as he looks to get buy-in on a US cease-fire proposal that he hopes can create a pathway to ending Russia’s devastating war on Ukraine.
The engagement is just the latest turn in dramatically shifting US-Russia relations as Trump made quickly ending the conflict a top priority — even at the expense of straining ties with longtime American allies that want Putin to pay a price for the invasion.
“It’s a bad situation in Russia, and it’s a bad situation in Ukraine,” Trump told reporters Monday. “What’s happening in Ukraine is not good, but we’re going to see if we can work a peace agreement, a cease-fire and peace. And I think we’ll be able to do it.”
In preparation for the Trump-Putin call, White House special envoy Steve Witkoff met last week with Putin in Moscow to discuss the proposal. Secretary of State Marco Rubio had persuaded senior Ukrainian officials during talks in Saudi Arabia to agree to the cease-fire framework.
The US president said Washington and Moscow have already begun discussing “dividing up certain assets” between Ukraine and Russia as part of a deal to end the conflict.
Trump, who during his campaign pledged to quickly end the war, has at moments boasted of his relationship with Putin and blamed Ukraine for Russia’s unprovoked invasion, all while accusing Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky of unnecessarily prolonging the biggest land war in Europe since World War II.
Putin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters Tuesday that Trump and Putin will discuss the war in Ukraine but added that there are also a “large number of questions” regarding normalizing US-Russia relations. The call will take place between 1 p.m. GMT and 3 p.m. GMT (9 a.m. ET to 11 a.m. ET), Peskov said.
Trump has said that control of land and power plants will be part of the conversation, which comes on the anniversary of Russia annexing Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula 11 years ago. That bold land grab by Russia set the stage for Moscow to invade its neighbor in 2022.
Witkoff and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested that US and Russian officials have discussed the fate of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant — Europe’s largest — in southern Ukraine.
The plant has been caught in the crossfire since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine in 2022 and seized the facility shortly after. The UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency has repeatedly expressed alarm about it, fueling fears of a potential nuclear catastrophe.
The plant is a significant asset, producing nearly a quarter of Ukraine’s electricity in the year before the war.
“I can say we are on the 10th yard line of peace,” Leavitt said. “And we’ve never been closer to a peace deal than we are in this moment. And the president, as you know, is determined to get one done.”
But Bradley Bowman, senior director of the Center on Military and Political Power at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, questioned whether Putin is ready to end the war or will hold out for potential further concessions as Trump grows impatient.
After a disastrous Feb. 28 White House meeting with Zelensky, Trump temporarily cut off some military intelligence-sharing and aid to Ukraine. It was restored after the Ukrainians last week signed off on the Trump administration’s 30-day cease-fire proposal.
“The US has been consistently offering in some form preemptive concessions that have been weakening the American and Ukrainian negotiating position,” Bowman said. “I think there’s a real danger here that the administration’s approach is boiling down to sticks for Ukraine and carrots for Putin.”
Zelensky in his nightly video address on Monday made clear he remains doubtful that Putin is ready for peace.
“Now, almost a week later, it’s clear to everyone in the world — even to those who refused to acknowledge the truth for the past three years — that it is Putin who continues to drag out this war,” Zelensky said.
In his dealings with Zelensky and Putin, Trump has frequently focused on who has leverage. Putin has “the cards” and Zelensky does not, Trump has said repeatedly.
Trump, who has long shown admiration for Putin, has also made clear he’d like to see the US-Russia relationship return to a more normal footing.
The president during his recent contentious meeting with Zelensky grumbled that “Putin went through a hell of a lot with me,” a reference to the federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election in which he beat Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Trump on Monday again underscored his view that Ukraine is not in a strong negotiating position. He said Russian forces have “surrounded” Ukrainian troops in Russia’s Kursk region — amplifying an assertion made by Russian officials that’s been refuted by Zelenskyy.
Ukraine’s army stunned Russia in August last year by attacking across the border and taking control of an estimated 1,300 square kilometers (500 square miles) of land. But Ukraine’s forces are in retreat and it has all but lost a valuable bargaining chip, as momentum builds for a cease-fire with Russia.
Zelensky has acknowledged that the Ukrainians are on their back foot but denies Russian claims that they have encircled his troops in Kursk.
Trump suggested that he’s taken unspecified action that has kept Russia from slaughtering Ukrainian troops in Kursk.
“They’re surrounded by Russian soldiers, and I believe if it wasn’t for me, they wouldn’t be here any longer,” Trump said.
Leavitt is one of three Trump administration officials who face a lawsuit from the Associated Press on First Amendment and Fifth Amendment grounds. The AP says the three are punishing the news agency for editorial decisions they oppose. The White House says the AP is not following an executive order to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America.