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'We're Making Progress': President Trump Optimistic with Ukraine and Russia Peace Plan
The U.S. peace plan includes territorial concessions to Russia, military caps, and phased sanctions relief amid rising pressure on Ukraine, with Kyiv facing a Nov. 27 decision deadline.
- U.S. President Donald Trump is pressing Ukraine to accept a 28-point peace proposal that mirrors Russian demands, giving Kyiv until Nov. 27 to decide or risk losing American support.
- A five-minute call on October 14 between Steve Witkoff, U.S. Special Envoy, and Yuri Ushakov, Kremlin adviser, and a mid-October Russian "non-paper" heavily influenced the plan's early architecture.
- At its core, the draft demands surrender of the entire eastern Donbas region, envisages de facto recognition of Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk, and designates demilitarized zones with frozen front lines in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
- Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said he faces "one of the most difficult moments" and European partners, excluded from drafting, joined a Nov. 21 call with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron, and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
- The plan would aim to reintegrate Russia economically by staging sanctions relief, redirecting around $300 billion in frozen Russian sovereign assets to Ukraine's rebuilding, restarting Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant under IAEA oversight, and pledging U.S. military response to future attacks.
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21 Articles
21 Articles
Coverage Details
Total News Sources21
Leaning Left1Leaning Right2Center11Last UpdatedBias Distribution79% Center
Bias Distribution
- 79% of the sources are Center
79% Center
C 79%
14%
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