US peace plan for Ukraine drew from Russian document: Report
- On Nov 25, Reuters reported the US-backed 28-point peace plan drew from a Russian-authored non-paper submitted to the Trump administration in October, confirming the document was a key input.
- The Russians shared the non-paper in mid-October outlining Moscow's conditions with senior US officials after the Trump–Zelensky meeting, and parts were composed during a Miami meeting with Jared Kushner, Steve Witkoff and Kirill Dmitriev.
- Following talks, nine of the original 28 points were cut, and Trump wrote, 'In the hopes of finalizing this Peace Plan, I have directed my Special Envoy Steve Witkoff to meet with President Putin in Moscow and, at the same time, Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll will be meeting with the Ukrainians.'
- The proposal sparked diplomacy across three continents, with Mr Driscoll meeting a Russian delegation in Abu Dhabi while the Ukrainian delegation was also in the UAE, and on Nov 25 Kyiv backed the modified framework pending territorial fixes at a potential Zelensky–Trump meeting.
- Few inside the State Department and White House were briefed on Nov 22, as a bipartisan group of US senators said Rubio called the plan a Russian 'wish list', which he later denied.
21 Articles
21 Articles
In October, Russia submitted conditions to the US for an end to the Ukraine war. The paper became even more important later: According to the news agency Reuters, it formed the basis for the 28-point plan.
A U.S. peace plan for Ukraine is causing a stir. According to a new report, it is partly based on Russian demands that Kiev has already rejected.
The 28-point peace plan supported by the US to end the war in Ukraine, made public last week, was inspired by a document written by Russian authors, presented to President Donald Trump's administration in October...
US-backed peace plan for Ukraine drew from Russian document: sources
The US-backed 28-point peace plan to end the war in Ukraine, which became public last week, drew from a Russian-authored paper submitted to the Trump administration in October, according to three sources familiar with the matter. The Russians shared the paper, which outlined Moscow’s conditions for ending the war, with senior US officials in mid-October, following a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zele…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 42% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium


















