Trump and Putin Head to Anchorage for Ukraine Ceasefire Summit
The summit aims to negotiate a ceasefire in Ukraine amid ongoing conflict, with Trump prioritizing peace despite concerns over Ukraine's exclusion and potential territorial concessions.
- This Friday, the leaders will convene at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, at 11 a.m. Alaska time, as confirmed by the White House.
- Experts emphasize the territory’s symbolic value as former Russian land now part of the United States, with William Seward agreeing to pay $7.2 million on March 30, 1867.
- Preparatory meetings in Moscow on August 14 involved Putin and top Russian officials preparing for the Alaska summit, as Trump arrived in Anchorage aboard Air Force One on August 15.
- At 20:32 local time, the summit began with a handshake at Elmendorf-Richardson military base, Anchorage, marking the first face-to-face since 2021.
- Looking ahead, the summit aims to broker a ceasefire to end the more-than-three-year war in Ukraine, with Putin putting forward a last-minute nuclear agreement, analysts say.
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465 Articles
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin met in Alaska. There is no turning point for Ukraine for the time being. A surprising sentence by the Russian President is causing a stir.
The subject of a possible trilateral meeting between US, Russian and Ukrainian Presidents was not discussed by Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin at the summit held in Alaska, the Russian Presidential Adviser for Foreign Affairs Iuri Ushakov, transmitted Saturday Reuters, reading the Russian press agency TASS.
In the streets of Kiev, the population wakes up angry after the summit meeting in Alaska between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin. The images showing the American president's complacency with the Kremlin leader do not pass.
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin met in Alaska. There are hardly any results. The press comments.
After almost three hours of meeting, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin failed to reach any plan for an end to the war in Ukraine, which has ravaged the country for more than three years.

Putin and Trump conclude ‘productive’ summit but provide no details
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Three hours of negotiations with Vladimir Putin over Russia’s war in Ukraine were “extremely productive,” but only Kyiv can decide whether a deal toward a ceasefire is possible, President Donald Trump said Friday, capping a historic summit…
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