Trump and Putin Head to Anchorage for Ukraine Ceasefire Summit
- Trump and other administration officials indicated that the Alaska summit will not conclude the fighting in Ukraine, necessitating a follow-up summit with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
- Experts noted that the meeting marks the return of Putin to significant diplomatic discussions and sidelines Europe in the war context.
- Jana Kobzova from ECFR stated that the meeting signifies the end of Putin's international isolation, allowing him to meet with Trump without concessions.
- Putin has consistently opposed a temporary ceasefire, linking his acceptance of a ceasefire to conditions that Kyiv and its Western allies have rejected.
257 Articles
257 Articles
'He wants a piece of that': Trump teases economic deal with Putin on plane to Alaska
President Donald Trump teased the possibility of reaching an economic deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral talks in Alaska.The U.S. president spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One on his Friday morning flight across the country to the summit, and he was asked what woul...


Trump looks to apply lessons from Helsinki in face-to-face with Putin
ANCHORAGE, Alaska – President Donald Trump was criticized for siding with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the U.S. intelligence community in its assessment that Russia meddled in the 2016 election during Trump and Putin’s first and last stand-alone bilateral summit…
5 questions ahead of the Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska
President Trump will have the most important foreign policy meeting of his second term so far on Friday, as he comes face-to-face with Russian President Vladimir Putin at U.S. Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. The meeting convenes as Trump seeks a ceasefire in the war begun by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Stimulus check 2025? What we know about current rebate legislation The president’s tone has shifted…
Trump-Putin high-stakes summit - Washington Examiner
I used to fly frequently between England and Japan in the 1970s, often passing at 33,000 feet over the Arctic icecap and landing to refuel in Anchorage, Alaska. There, the airport was sometimes thronged with U.S. troops on their way to or from Vietnam. My brothers and I found a sticker in a copy of Mad magazine, of which we were avid in-flight readers, bearing a photograph of President Richard Nixon and the question, “Would You Buy a Used War fr…

High-stakes US-Russia summit: Trump meets Putin in Alaska
The meeting's outcome could have significant implications for international relations and U.S. diplomacy.
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