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Peace Talks to Resume in Abu Dhabi as Ukraine War Grinds On
Peace talks focus on security guarantees and Donbas territory issues as fighting continues with over 60 clashes reported on January 25, officials said.
- On February 1, trilateral U.S.-Ukraine-Russia talks are set to resume in Abu Dhabi after two days described as constructive, with White House envoy Steve Witkoff crediting the UAE for hosting and arranging follow-up sessions.
- Security guarantees remain central obstacles to reaching an agreement, and Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, `For us, security guarantees are first and foremost guarantees of security from the United States`, while opposing NATO deployments and rejecting ceding Donbas territory.
- Frontline clashes intensified, with at least 66 engagements recorded on January 25, and the Ukrainian Armed Forces said the Russian military launched more than 100 drones and two missiles that night.
- Progress in the talks could open the door to meetings in Moscow or Kyiv, while a U.S. security guarantees document is ready and Kyiv awaits signing details.
- Despite diplomacy, the Kremlin continues offensive pushes westward through eastern Ukraine, while Russian drone and missile strike campaigns damage infrastructure, worsening winter hardships for millions of Ukrainian residents.
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The Russian military is achieving significant successes in the east of its western neighbor. Trilateral negotiations are again in Abu Dhabi on Sunday.
Peace Talks Set To Resume Amid Ground Fighting And Severe Power Outages In Ukraine
This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission. Ukraine, Russia, and the United States are set to resume negotiations in Abu Dhabi next week after two days of what officials described as “constructive” peace talks, even as the war shows no signs of easing. On January 23-24, “the United States coordinated a trilateral meeting alongside Ukraine and Russia, graciously hosted by the United A…
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Total News Sources15
Leaning Left4Leaning Right5Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Right
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Right
50% Right
L 40%
R 50%
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