‘Something Good Just May Be Happening’: Trump Hints at Progress in Ukraine Peace Talks
The plan demands Ukraine cede key territories, limits its military to 600,000 troops, allocates $100 billion for rebuilding, and prevents war-crime trials, raising sovereignty concerns.
- A secret 28‑point plan drawn with Russia reflects many of Vladimir Putin's demands and allocates about $100 billion of frozen Russian assets for Ukraine, EU, and a US‑Russia fund.
- With a corruption scandal shadowing President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, US pressure on Ukraine intensified as Russia makes slow gains and Ukrainians identified five red lines they will not accept.
- The draft would cap Ukraine's armed forces at 600,000 while placing no limit on Russia and proposes a blanket amnesty for Russian officers and soldiers, barring war-crimes trials amid abuses.
- Axios reported a separate document mentioning Nato‑like guarantees, yet the main 28‑point draft gives no detailed security terms and uses non‑binding phrasing, critics say.
- Ceding Donbas would strip Ukraine of its industrial core, handing over vital mining, machinery, and chemical sectors; abandoning fortress belts like Slovyansk and Kramatorsk would remove key defenses and risk military backlash.
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35 Articles
European Leaders Raise Concerns Over 28-Point Peace Plan to End War in Ukraine
Already a subscriber? Make sure to log into your account before viewing this content. You can access your account by hitting the “login” button on the top right corner. Still unable to see the content after signing in? Make sure your card on file is up-to-date. Multiple European leaders have warned that President Trump’s proposed 28-point peace plan to end the war in Ukraine could leave the country dangerously exposed to future aggression f…
Boris Kagarlitsky on the Trump Administration’s 28-Point Plan to End the Ukraine War
Boris Kagarlitsky From prison, the eminent critic of Putin and the war calls for the conflict to end. The post Boris Kagarlitsky on the Trump Administration’s 28-Point Plan to End the Ukraine War appeared first on The Nation.
The sudden plan to end the war against Ukraine is causing a stir. Kiev's representatives are trying everything to achieve change in the US. Now several points have even been deleted. Moscow does not hold anything from the European counter-proposal.
The US portal "Axios" has reconstructed how the 28-point plan for Ukraine came about. US negotiators apparently took an example at the Gaza deal.
How sustainable is Trump's 28-point plan – and how good is it for America's interests?
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