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The Russian invasion of Ukraine

Zelensky calls for creation of an 'army of Europe'​


Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky has called for the creation of an "army of Europe" to guard against Russia as he suggested the US may no longer come to the continent's aid.

Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, he also said that Ukraine would "never accept deals made behind our backs without our involvement" after US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to start peace talks.

In a speech on Friday, in which he attacked European democracies, US Vice President JD Vance warned that Europe needed to "step up in a big way" on defence.

Zelensky said: "I really believe the time has come - the armed forces of Europe must be created."

He said: "Yesterday here in Munich, the US vice president made it clear [that] decades of the old relationship between Europe and America are ending.

"From now on things will be different and Europe needs to adjust to that."

Earlier this week, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said that Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine was a "factory reset" for Nato which signalled the alliance needed to be "robust", "strong" and "real".

On Saturday, Zelensky said: "Let's be honest. Now we can't rule out the possibility that America might say no to Europe on an issue that threatens it.

"Many, many leaders have talked about Europe that needs its own military.

"An army, an army of Europe."

The concept of a European army is something that has been proposed by other leaders, including France's President Emmanuel Macron who has long backed the bloc's own military to reduce its reliance on the US.

Zelensky said: "A few days ago, President Trump told me about his conversation with Putin. Not once did he mention that America needs Europe at the table - that says a lot.

"The old days are over when America supported Europe just because it always had."

As Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine nears its three-year anniversary, Trump and Hegseth have both said it is unlikely that Ukraine will join Nato.

The US defence secretary also said a return to Ukraine's pre-2014 borders was unrealistic.

Zelensky said he would "not take Nato membership for Ukraine off the table".

 
Top US envoy to meet Russian officials for Ukraine peace talks

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio plans to meet Russian officials in Saudi Arabia in the coming days for talks aimed at ending the war in Ukraine, US officials say.

America's top diplomat will be joined by national security adviser Mike Waltz and the US special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, the officials told the BBC's US partner CBS News.

US special envoy to Ukraine Keith Kellogg said Washington, Moscow and Kyiv would be involved in talks, but Europe was not invited.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv had not been invited to the talks in Saudi Arabia.

Amid European concern that the US is moving ahead on peace talks with Russia without consulting the continent, Ukraine's European allies will gather in Paris next week for an emergency summit on the war.

Speaking on Saturday Kellogg said previous negotiations had failed because too many parties had been involved.

"It may be like chalk on the blackboard, it may grate a little bit, but I am telling you something that is really quite honest," the US diplomat added.

Also on Saturday, Rubio spoke to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, where he reaffirmed US President Donald Trump's "commitment to finding an end to the conflict in Ukraine", according to state department spokesperson Tammy Bruce.

It followed a phone call between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, when the White House shocked its European allies by reviving direct contact with Moscow after a freeze of more than three years.

After the call, Trump said negotiations to stop the "ridiculous war" in Ukraine would begin "immediately".

The upcoming talks in Saudi Arabia follow tensions at the international Munich Security Conference, where US Vice President JD Vance sharply criticised European democracies on Friday.

Vance repeated the Trump administration's line that Europe must "step up in a big way to provide for its own defence".

On Wednesday US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth appeared to rule out Ukraine joining Nato or recovering all of its territory - fuelling European alarm that the US may be making concessions to Russia before any peace deal is negotiated.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, having already seized Crimea and part of the eastern Donbas region in 2014.

Addressing the Munich conference, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged the creation of an "army of Europe" amid rising concern that Washington may no longer come to the continent's aid.

"We can't rule out the possibility that America might say no to Europe on issues that threaten it," Zelensky said.

BBC
 
Zelenskyy: I will never accept decisions between US and Russia about Ukraine

More from Volodymyr Zelenskyy now, who has said he will "never accept any decisions between the US and Russia about Ukraine".

Speaking to our US partner network NBC News, Ukraine's president thanked Donald Trump for his support, but added there is not "any leader in the world who can really make a deal with Vladimir Putin without us".

"I think he's [Putin] really a little bit scared about Trump, and I think Trump has this chance and he's strong, and he can push Putin to peace negotiations," he said.

But Zelenskyy called on Trump to approach his conversations with Putin and other Russian leaders while maintaining loyalty to Ukraine.

"I wanted very much that Ukraine is in priority for Trump, not Russia. I hope that we are more important," he added.

"We are not as big as Russia, but I think strategically, Ukraine is more important for the US, because we are really partners, allies, and we share common values."

Asked whether he believed Trump was negotiating in good faith, Zelenskyy said: "I hope so. I hope so. Yes, I count on it.

"I trust Trump because he's the president of the US, because your people voted for him and I respect their choice."

Sky News
 
France confirms it will host meeting on Ukraine tomorrow

An Elysee spokesperson has confirmed Emmanuel Macron will be hosting a meeting with European leaders on Ukraine in Paris tomorrow.

Sir Keir Starmer will be in attendance, as well as the leaders of Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, Denmark and the Netherlands.

It has also been confirmed European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and NATO secretary general Mark Rutte will attend.

Sky News
 
Chernobyl radiation shield hit by Russian drone, Ukraine says

A Russian drone has hit the protective shelter over Chernobyl's damaged nuclear reactor, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

The overnight strike at the site of the world's worst nuclear accident caused a fire that has since been extinguished, he added.

The UN's nuclear watchdog (the IAEA) said radiation levels inside and outside Chernobyl were normal and stable - but later the plant's chief engineer, Oleksandr Titarchuk, said the possibility of radioactive substances leaking "now exists".

Russia has denied any claims it attacked Chernobyl, stating its military does not strike Ukrainian nuclear infrastructure and "any claims that this was the case do not correspond to reality".


 
Chernobyl radiation shield hit by Russian drone, Ukraine says

A Russian drone has hit the protective shelter over Chernobyl's damaged nuclear reactor, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

The overnight strike at the site of the world's worst nuclear accident caused a fire that has since been extinguished, he added.

The UN's nuclear watchdog (the IAEA) said radiation levels inside and outside Chernobyl were normal and stable - but later the plant's chief engineer, Oleksandr Titarchuk, said the possibility of radioactive substances leaking "now exists".

Russia has denied any claims it attacked Chernobyl, stating its military does not strike Ukrainian nuclear infrastructure and "any claims that this was the case do not correspond to reality".



They have to be careful with these reactors. This can be harmful for both Ukrainian and Russian citizens.
 
Chernobyl radiation shield hit by Russian drone, Ukraine says

A Russian drone has hit the protective shelter over Chernobyl's damaged nuclear reactor, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

The overnight strike at the site of the world's worst nuclear accident caused a fire that has since been extinguished, he added.

The UN's nuclear watchdog (the IAEA) said radiation levels inside and outside Chernobyl were normal and stable - but later the plant's chief engineer, Oleksandr Titarchuk, said the possibility of radioactive substances leaking "now exists".

Russia has denied any claims it attacked Chernobyl, stating its military does not strike Ukrainian nuclear infrastructure and "any claims that this was the case do not correspond to reality".


 
Self-staged by zelensky to stay relevant.

This is an act forewarning the world of ramifications for "suicidal possibilities".

If still not given a seat to be on the discussion table. trump's move now.
Remember when there were people here who told us Ukraine were winning. The delusion was off the charts. Reality about to hit home as Russia takes the donbas and Crimea officially.
 
Ukraine not invited to US-Russia peace talks, source tells BBC

Kyiv has not been invited to talks between the US and Russia aimed at ending the war in Ukraine, a senior Ukrainian government source has told the BBC.

The US special envoy to Ukraine Keith Kellogg had said Kyiv would be involved in Monday's talks in Saudi Arabia, but the source said no delegation would be present.

European leaders have also not been asked to join the discussions, and are due to meet instead on Monday in Paris at a summit hastily arranged by the French president, as fears grow the continent is being locked out of negotiations.

The separate meetings follow a turbulent week where Washington has signalled a drastic change in its approach to the war in Ukraine.

The White House's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed he was travelling to Saudi Arabia on Sunday evening for the first face-to-face talks between the US and Russia towards ending the conflict.

US President Donald Trump revealed on Sunday that Witkoff had met with Putin already "for a very extended period, like about three hours".

Witkoff, a billionaire real estate developer and friend of Trump, was in Moscow this week to secure the release of a US teacher imprisoned on charges of marijuana possession.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz are also set to meet Russian negotiators in Saudi Arabia, less than a week after Trump held a phone call with Russia's leader Vladimir Putin.

The call on Wednesday brought to an end a three-year freeze on direct contact between Moscow and Washington.

Zelensky has repeatedly ruled out accepting a peace deal negotiated without Ukraine, telling US television network NBC on Sunday that he would "never accept any decisions between the United States and Russia about Ukraine, never".


 
Starmer says US 'backstop' needed for Ukraine peace deal

Sir Keir Starmer has said any Ukraine peace deal would require a "US backstop" to deter Russia from attacking its neighbour again.

Speaking after a hastily convened meeting with European leaders in Paris, the prime minister repeated that he would consider deploying UK troops to Ukraine in the event of a lasting peace agreement.

But he said "a US security guarantee was the only way to effectively deter Russia", and vowed to discuss the "key elements" of a peace deal with US President Donald Trump when the pair meet in Washington next week.

Sir Keir said Europe would "have to do more" to defend the continent in the face of the "generational" security challenge Russia poses.


 
'You could have made a deal': Trump blames Ukraine after US-Russia talks

Donald Trump has taken aim at Ukraine after its President, Volodymyr Zelensky, said it was a "surprise" his country had not been invited to talks in Saudi Arabia on ending the war with Russia.

Saying he was "disappointed" by Ukraine's reaction, he appeared to blame Ukraine for starting the war, saying the country "could have made a deal".

A full-scale Russian invasion sparked the war in Ukraine almost three years ago.

Earlier on Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Riyadh for the first high-level, face-to-face talks between the two countries since the invasion.

They agreed to appoint teams to start negotiating the end of the war.

Lavrov said his country would not accept peacekeeping forces from Nato countries in Ukraine under any peace deal, a proposal raised at a meeting of European members of Nato in Paris on Monday.

European Nato states, who remain committed to supporting Ukraine against Russia, have been smarting at being sidelined by Trump's unilateral peace initiative, which reversed the resolutely pro-Ukraine policy of his predecessor as president, Joe Biden.

Speaking to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago residence, Trump was asked by the BBC what his message was to Ukrainians who might feel betrayed.

"I hear that they're upset about not having a seat, well, they've had a seat for three years and a long time before that. This could have been settled very easily," he said.

"You should have never started it. You could have made a deal," he later added.

"I could have made a deal for Ukraine," he said. "That would have given them almost all of the land, everything, almost all of the land - and no people would have killed, and no city would have been demolished."

After the meeting in Riyadh, Trump said he was "much more confident".

"They were very good," he said. "Russia wants to do something. They want to stop the savage barbarianism."

"I think I have the power to end this war," he added.

Asked about the prospect of European countries sending troops to Ukraine, Trump said: "If they want to do that, that's great, I'm all for it. If they want to do that, I think that'd be fine. I mean, I know France has mentioned it, others have mentioned it, UK has mentioned it."

However, he added: "We won't have to put any over there because, you know, we're very far away."

After Monday's meeting in Paris, British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said any Ukraine peace deal would require a "US backstop" to deter Russia from attacking its neighbour again.

Sir Keir said a "US security guarantee was the only way to effectively deter Russia", and vowed to discuss the "key elements" of a peace deal with Trump in Washington next week.

Also at the talks in Riyadh were US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and US National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, as well as Russian presidential aide Yury Ushakov and the head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, Kirill Dmitriev.

Stressing that Moscow would not agree to peacekeeping forces from Nato countries in Ukraine under any peace deal, Lavrov said: "Any appearance by armed forces under some other flag does not change anything. It is of course completely unacceptable."

He said the US and Russia would appoint ambassadors to each other's countries as soon as possible and create conditions to "restore co-operation in full".

"It was a very useful conversation. We listened to each other, and we heard each other," he said.

He reiterated Russia's previous position that any expansion of the Nato defence alliance - and Ukraine joining it - would be a "direct threat" to Russia.

Rubio for his part said he was "convinced" Russia was "willing to begin to engage in a serious process" to end the conflict.

"There has to be concessions made by all sides. We're not going to predetermine what those are."

"Today is the first step of a long and difficult journey, but an important one", he added.

Rubio said the European Union was going to "have to be at the table at some point because they have sanctions as well that have been imposed".

On the absence of Ukraine at the meeting, he insisted "no-one is being sidelined".

"Everyone involved in that conflict has to be OK with it, it has to be acceptable to them," he added.

The talks in Paris, which were hastily arranged in response to the apparent rapprochement between Russia and the US under Trump, did not agree a unified position.

Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz said discussing sending troops to Ukraine at present was "completely premature".

Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk also said he did not intend to send troops while Italy's Giorgia Meloni - the only European leader to attend Trump's inauguration - expressed doubts.

She told the meeting in Paris that deploying European troops would be "the most complex and the least effective" way of securing peace in Ukraine.

Ukraine's leader looked visibly tired and upset when he gave his reaction to the Roiyadh meeting during a news conference in Turkey.

"We want everything to be fair and so that nobody decides anything behind our back," Zelensky said.

"You cannot make decisions without Ukraine on how to end the war in Ukraine."

He will be alarmed by all the smiles on both American and Russian faces in Riyadh, but he will know that he can do little to change whatever they agree on over his head.

The Ukrainian president will also know that his country's chances of resisting - let alone defeating - Russian troops without American help are very slim.

Following the overthrow of Ukraine's pro-Russian president in 2014, Moscow annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea and backed pro-Russian separatists in bloody fighting in eastern Ukraine.

The conflict burst into all-out war when Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022.

Moscow's attempts to take control of the capital Kyiv were thwarted, but Russian forces have taken around one-fifth of Ukraine's territory in the east and south, and have carried out air strikes across the country.

Ukraine has retaliated with artillery and drone strikes, as well as a ground offensive against Russia's western Kursk region.

Accurate casualty counts are hard to come by but it is estimated that hundreds of thousands of people, most of them soldiers, have been killed or injured, and millions of Ukrainian civilians have fled as refugees.

BBC
 
Ukraine is done, remarkable to see the double standards of Republicans on Gaza and Ukraine lol
 
Russia launches large-scale drone attack across Ukraine

Russia launched a large-scale drone attack on Saturday night, causing civilian casualties across Ukraine, official have said.

Yuriy Ignat, spokesman for Ukraine's Air Force Command, said a "record" 267 Russian drones were launched in a single, coordinated attack.

Among them, 138 were intercepted by air defence while 119 disappeared from radars after being jammed and did not cause any damage.

While many were repelled, emergency services reported drone strikes causing destruction and fires in a number of regions overnight.

The strike comes a day before the third anniversary of the start of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

It is not clear how many people have died, but initial figures from emergency services suggest there were at least three casualties.

Two people died in a strike on a residential building in Kherson, in southern Ukraine - a man and a mother of twins, the Ukrainian state emergency services said.

Regional authorities also confirmed that one man died and at least three were wounded following a strike on the central city of Kryvyi Rih.

Meanwhile, a 53-year-old woman was hospitalised after being injured in a drone attack in Zaporizhzhia, and firefighters were called to extinguish multiple fires in the capital, Kyiv.

Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Kltischko wrote on Telegram that the multi-wave drone attacks on the capital had damaged several houses and cars but there were no immediate reports of injuries.

Drones were intercepted in at least 13 regions including Kharkiv, Poltava, Sumy, Kyiv, Chernihiv, Mykolayiv and Odesa, according to Ukrainian authorities.

The Ukrainian air force also reported that Russia launched three ballistic missiles overnight.

Meanwhile, Russia's defence ministry said on Sunday that 20 Ukrainian drones launched into Russia were "destroyed" overnight.

BBC
 
Europeans win in UN clash with US over rival Ukraine resolutions

The United Nations on Monday rejected a U.S. bid to tone down the General Assembly's stance on Russia's war in Ukraine as President Donald Trump seeks to broker peace, giving Kyiv and European allies a diplomatic victory at the world body.

The 193-member General Assembly voted on rival draft resolutions - one from Washington and one written by Ukraine and European states - to mark the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of its neighbor.

The United States was forced to abstain in the vote on its own resolution after European countries successfully amended Washington's draft to add language reflecting long-held U.N. support for Kyiv during the war, including Ukraine's sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity.

"This war has never been about Ukraine only. It is about a fundamental right of any country to exist, to choose its own path and to live free from aggression," Ukraine's Deputy Foreign Minister Mariana Betsa told the assembly before the vote.

The showdown at the United Nations came after Trump launched a bid to broker an end to the war, sparking a rift with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and raising concerns among European allies that they and Kyiv could be cut out of peace talks. U.S. and Russian officials met last Tuesday.

The amended U.S.-drafted resolution won 93 votes in favor, while 73 states abstained and eight voted no. Russia failed in a bid to amend the U.S. text to include a reference to the "root causes" of the conflict.
Ahead of the vote on the U.S. text, acting U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Dorothy Shea said the proposed European and Russian changes pursued "a war of words rather than an end to the war."

She said the amendments detract "from what we are trying to achieve with this forward-looking resolution: A firm consensus from the members of this body to unite behind a resolution calling for the end to this conflict."


 
US sides with Russia in UN resolutions on Ukraine

The US has twice sided with Russia in votes at the UN to mark the third anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, highlighting the Trump administration's change of stance on the war.

First the two countries opposed a European-drafted resolution condemning Moscow's actions and supporting Ukraine's territorial integrity, which was passed by the UN General Assembly (UNGA) in New York.

Then they backed a US-drafted resolution at the UN Security Council calling for an end to the conflict but containing no criticism of Russia.

The Security Council resolution was passed but two key US allies, the UK and France, abstained in the vote after their attempts to amend the wording were vetoed.

The competing resolutions were tabled as French President Emmanuel Macron visited President Donald Trump at the White House in an attempt to address their sharp differences over the war.

On Thursday, British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will likewise visit the new American leader.

Trump's White House has upended the transatlantic alliance, currying favour with Moscow and casting doubt on America's long-term commitment to European security.

That rift was laid bare on the floor of the 193-member UNGA on Monday as US diplomats pushed their limited resolution mourning the loss of life during the "Russia-Ukraine conflict" and calling for a swift end to it.

European diplomats tabled a more detailed text, blaming Russia for its full-scale invasion, and supporting Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity.

"We need to reconfirm that the aggression should be condemned and discredited, not rewarded," said Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Mariana Betsa.

UNGA members backed the European resolution by 93 votes but, extraordinarily, the US did not abstain but actually voted against it, along with Russia, Israel, North Korea, Sudan, Belarus, Hungary and 11 other states, with 65 abstentions.

The UNGA also passed the US resolution but only after it was amended to include language supporting Ukraine, which led to the US abstaining.

At the much more powerful UN Security Council, which has 15 members, the unamended US resolution was passed by 10 votes, with the UK, France, Denmark, Greece and Slovenia abstaining.

America's acting envoy to the UN, Dorothy Camille Shea, described the US resolution as a "simple historic statement... that looks forward, not backwards. A resolution focused on one simple idea: ending the war".

Rarely has the US been so at odds with its supposed European allies.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine three years ago, the Security Council has been deadlocked by the power of Russia, one of its five permanent members, to veto any resolution there.

For this reason the UNGA has been the main forum for debating the war but its resolutions are not legally binding for member states, unlike those of the Security Council.

BBC
 

Macron says Ukraine ceasefire 'must not mean surrender' - as Trump claims Russia wants 'to end this war'​


Emmanuel Macron has said a peace deal with Russia "must not mean a surrender of Ukraine" - as Donald Trump claimed Vladimir Putin's forces "want to end this war".

The US and French presidents met amid fragile relations between America and Europe and after Mr Trump launched a verbal attack on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Meeting in the White House on the third anniversary of Russia's war in Ukraine, the French president said he and Mr Trump "made substantive steps forward during our discussions".

Mr Macron told reporters that Europe should do more to bolster defence in the continent.

However, he stressed Russia "is the aggressor" in the conflict and added: "President Putin violated the peace."

Peace must allow Kyiv 'sovereignty'

The French leader then said: "We want peace, he wants peace. We want peace swiftly, but we don't want an agreement that is weak."

"This peace must not mean a surrender of Ukraine or a ceasefire without guarantees," he added. "It must allow for Ukrainian sovereignty and allow Ukraine to negotiate with other stakeholders regarding the issues that affect it.

"It is also a country in which we need to shoulder our responsibilities so that we ensure security and stability for Ukraine and for the entire region.

"For Europeans, this is an existential issue."

'Get this war stopped'

At a news conference following the talks, Mr Macron said he "fully believes" there is a path forward in negotiations.

He also agreed "there is good reason for President Trump to re-engage with President Putin" - a week after the leaders had a 90-minute-long phone call.

Mr Trump added Russia would accept European troops in Ukraine as part of peacekeeping efforts, adding: "I specifically asked him (Putin) that question. He has no problem with it."

He told reporters: "When I got here, one of the first calls I made was to Putin and it was made with great respect. They want to end this war."

Mr Trump then explained he wants to "get this war stopped," whether that's through a ceasefire or a direct agreement - but when asked if Ukraine should give up territory as part of any deal, he said: "We'll see."

In an interview after the news conference, Mr Macron said he thought a peace deal could be struck within weeks.

"We want peace swiftly but we don't want an agreement that is weak," he told Fox News.

On Monday, Mr Putin said he is ready to discuss Russia cutting its defence budget alongside the US, saying a mutual drop of 50% would be a "good idea".

The Russian president also touted a possible economic deal with the US, offering talks on a deal for its own rare earth metal supplies and for the sale of aluminium to American firms.

The US president is due to meet Sir Keir Starmer on Thursday, after the prime minister warned Mr Trump that a bad peace deal would be a "disaster for everyone".

 

Putin offers Russian and Ukrainian rare minerals to US​


Russian President Vladimir Putin said he is open to offering the US access to rare minerals, including from Russian-occupied Ukraine.

This comes after US President Donald Trump has repeatedly pushed for Ukraine to give up some of its minerals in exchange for support, in a deal which is currently being finalised, according to a Ukrainian minister.

In a state TV interview on Monday, Putin said he was ready to "offer" resources to American partners in joint projects, including mining in Russia's "new territories" - a reference to parts of eastern Ukraine that Russia has occupied since launching a full-scale invasion three years ago.

The proposal could also see the two countries collaborating on aluminium extraction and supply to the US to stabilise prices, he added.

In his televised interview, Putin countered Trump's push to access Ukraine's mineral deposits, saying they were ready to work with "foreign partners" including companies on mining minerals.

Putin said a potential US-Ukraine deal on rare minerals was not a concern and that Russia "undoubtedly have, I want to emphasise, significantly more resources of this kind than Ukraine".

"As for the new territories, it's the same. We are ready to attract foreign partners to the so-called new, to our historical territories, which have returned to the Russian Federation," he added.

He also suggested that Russia and the US could collaborate on aluminium production in Krasnoyarsk, in Siberia, where one Russian aluminium maker, Rusal, has its largest smelters.

The televised comments followed a cabinet meeting on Russia's natural resources.

On Tuesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists the proposal opened up "quite broad prospects", adding that the US needed rare earth minerals and Russia had "a lot of them".

Offering the US access to minerals is an eye-catching move by Putin, given how much pride the Kremlin has taken in keeping Russia's natural wealth in Russian hands. In 2023 Putin accused the West, particularly the US, of trying to "dismember" Russia to gain access to its natural resources.

Putin's intervention comes as Ukraine has been facing growing pressure from the Trump administration to sign a deal for access to its mineral deposits.

Kyiv estimates that about 5% of the world's critical raw materials are in Ukraine. However, some of the mineral deposits have been seized by Russia in the three years since its invasion of Ukraine.

Trump said earlier this month that the US military and economic aid to Ukraine amounted to about $500bn (£396bn), and he wants the US to have access to Ukrainian minerals of that value.

Zelenzky has disputed that figure and is also said to want any deal to include security guarantees.

On Monday Ukraine's deputy prime minister for European and Euro-Atlantic integration, Olga Stefanishyna, said negotiations on such a deal "have been very constructive, with nearly all key details finalised".

Similarly - albeit in a different approach to the US - the European Union has also proposed a partnership with Ukraine that would give it access to minerals in what the the European Commissioner for industrial strategy, Stéphane Séjourné, called a "win-win".

 
Ukraine official says minerals deal agreed with US

Ukraine has agreed the terms of a major minerals deal with the US, a senior official in Kyiv has told the BBC.

"We have indeed agreed it with a number of good amendments and see it as a positive outcome," the official said, without providing any further details.

Media reports say Washington has dropped initial demands for a right to $500bn (£395bn) in potential revenue from utilising the natural resources but has not given firm security guarantees to war-torn Ukraine - a key Ukrainian demand.

US President Donald Trump said he was expecting his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky in Washington to sign the deal this week, after the two leaders exchanged strong words about each other.

Without confirming that an agreement had been reached, Trump said on Tuesday that in return for the deal Ukraine would get "the right to fight on".

"They're very brave," he told reporters, but "without the United States and its money and its military equipment, this war would have been over in a very short period of time".

Asked whether supplies of US equipment and ammunition to Ukraine would continue, he said: "Maybe until we have a deal with Russia... We need to have a deal, otherwise it's going to continue."

There would be a need for "some form of peacekeeping" in Ukraine following any peace deal, Trump added, but that would need to be "acceptable to everyone".

Just last week, Trump described Zelensky as a "dictator", and appeared to blame Ukraine - not Russia - for starting the war, after the Ukrainian leader rejected US demands for $500bn in mineral wealth and suggested that the American president was living in a "disinformation space" created by Russia.

Trump has been pushing for access to Ukraine's minerals in return for previous military and other aid to the country since Moscow launched a full-scale invasion three years ago.

Zelensky argued nowhere near that much American aid had been provided, adding: "I can't sell our state."

On Tuesday, Trump said the US had given Ukraine between $300bn and $350bn.

"We want to get that money back," he said. "We're helping the country through a very very big problem... but the American taxpayer now is going to get their money back plus."

Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Olha Stefanishyna told the Financial Times - which first reported the minerals deal on Tuesday - that the deal was "only part of the picture".

"We have heard multiple times from the US administration that it's part of a bigger picture," said Stefanishyna, who has led the negotiations.

According to Ukrainian sources, the US has had to back away from some of its more onerous demands from the war-torn nation and many of the details of this agreement will require further negotiation.

The precedent, however, is set. US aid in the Trump era comes with strings attached. Aid for aid's sake – whether given for humanitarian or strategic reasons – is a thing of the past.

That represents a fundamental reordering of American foreign policy for more than 75 years, from the days of the Marshall Plan to post-Cold War idealism and George W Bush's "Freedom Agenda" push to promote global democracy.

Ukraine is just the start. Expect Trump and his foreign policy team to apply their "America First" principles around the world over the course of the next four years.

Ukraine's news site Ukrainska Pravda reported that the minerals deal was set to be signed by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

The news site's economics unit EP said the two countries had also agreed to set up a reconstruction investment fund.

Ukraine holds huge deposits of critical elements and minerals, including lithium and titanium, as well as sizeable coal, gas, oil and uranium deposits - supplies worth billions of dollars.

Last year, Zelensky presented a "victory plan" to Ukraine and its Western partners which proposed that foreign firms could gain access to some of the countries' mineral wealth at the end of the war.

On Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he was open to offering the US access to rare minerals, including from Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine.

Ukraine and its European allies have become increasingly alarmed over a recent thaw in US-Russian ties, including their bilateral talks in Saudi Arabia last week.

There is concern in Kyiv and across Europe that they might be excluded from any negotiations aimed at ending the war, and that the continent's future security as a whole could be decided behind their backs.

What minerals does Ukraine actually have?

It is estimated that about 5% of the world's "critical raw materials" are in Ukraine - including:

  • 19 million tonnes of proven reserves of graphite, which is used to make batteries for electric vehicles
  • A third of all European lithium deposits, the key component in current batteries.
Before Russia's full-scale invasion began three years ago, Ukraine also produced 7% of the world's titanium, used in construction for everything from aeroplanes to power stations.

Ukrainian land also contains significant deposits of rare earth metals, a group of 17 elements that are used to produce weapons, wind turbines, electronics and other products vital in the modern world

Some mineral deposits have been seized by Russia. According to Yulia Svyrydenko, Ukraine's economy minister, resources worth $350bn remain in Russian-occupied territories today.

BBC
 
Zelensky to meet Trump in Washington to sign minerals deal

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will meet US President Donald Trump in Washington on Friday to sign an agreement on sharing his country's mineral resources, Trump has said.

Zelensky has described the bilateral deal as preliminary, and said he wants further agreements which include US security guarantees to deter renewed Russian aggression.

But Trump said the US would not provide guarantees "beyond... very much", saying the responsibility should instead fall to Europe.

Trump also seemingly ruled out the prospect of Ukraine becoming a Nato member - one of Zelensky's long-held ambitions.

Speaking at a meeting of his cabinet on Wednesday, Trump said the presence of American workers extracting rare earth metals on Ukrainian soil would provide "automatic security" for Ukraine.

He said Kyiv should "forget about" joining Nato and repeated Russia's claims that the issue was one of the driving factors behind the war.

The US president suggested a ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia was not far off, telling reporters: "We're going to make a deal with Russia and Ukraine to stop killing people."

But Zelensky said without security guarantees "we won't have a ceasefire, nothing will work, nothing".

"I want to find a Nato path or something similar," he said.

Russia has consistently opposed the idea of Ukraine becoming a member, fearing it would bring Nato forces too close to its borders.

In 2008, the alliance had said that Ukraine could eventually join.

Trump has suggested European peacekeeping troops could be stationed in Ukraine as part of a ceasefire deal, but Russia says it is against this.

European representatives, however, were not included in Washington's initial talks with Russia.

Speaking to the BBC on Wednesday, Kaja Kallas, the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, said "for any kind of deal to work on European soil, you need the Europeans to also agree to it".

She said the mineral resources deal was up to Ukraine, but any peace agreement would "need the Europeans on board".

Ms Kallas' scheduled meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday was abruptly cancelled, with both sides citing scheduling issues.

Zelensky said the success of the minerals deal, which was formally backed by his government on Wednesday evening, would depend on the outcome of his meeting with Trump this week.

Key details have not yet been made public, but Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said it envisages an "investment fund" for Ukraine's reconstruction.

The prospect of a deal was first proposed by Zelensky last year as a way to offer the US a tangible reason to continue supporting Ukraine.

But disagreements over its substance exacerbated tensions between Trump and Zelensky in recent weeks.

The Ukrainian president had rejected an initial request from the US for $500bn (£395bn) in mineral wealth, but media reports suggest this demand has now been dropped.

There are also differences in how both sides are now describing the deal. Trump has lauded the "very big agreement" as an opportunity for the US to get its "money back" after funding aid to Ukraine.

But Zelensky has instead referred to it as a "framework agreement" upon which he hopes further deals can be made.

Trump has said he wants a quick end to the war in Ukraine and has sought to reset relations with Russia. After a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the two leaders sent delegations to Saudi Arabia in bilateral talks which excluded Ukraine.

In response, Zelensky accused the US of helping Putin "break out of years of isolation" and Trump of living in a "Russian disinformation space".

Ukraine is a country rich in natural resources. Kyiv estimates that about 5% of the world's "critical raw materials" are there. But accessing some of these resources will not be completely straightforward.

Some of the mineral deposits have been seized by Russia. According to Yulia Svyrydenko, Ukraine's economy minister, resources worth $350bn (£277bn) remain in occupied territories today.

There are warnings too that Ukraine first needs to addresses its problem with unexploded mines before striking a deal with the US.

A quarter of Ukraine's landmass is estimated to be contaminated with landmines, mainly concentrated in the war-torn east of the country.

Putin has also said he is open to offering the US access to rare minerals, including from Russian-occupied Ukraine.

UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will also be meeting both Trump and Zelensky separately this week to discuss the war in Ukraine.

He is due to arrive in Washington later on Wednesday.

BBC
 

Ukraine latest: Putin says Russia does not reject peaceful solution to war​

The Kremlin has reiterated its conditions for peace talks, and claims to have recaptured part of Kursk. Earlier, South Korea said North Korea appears to have sent more troops to fight Ukraine. Meanwhile, Keir Starmer is in Washington for talks with Donald Trump.
 
Trump commends Zelensky ahead of White House talks

US President Donald Trump has said he has a "lot of respect" for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, on the eve of their talks at the White House.

Asked by the BBC if he would apologise for recently calling him a "dictator", he said he could not believe he had said this. He also called Zelensky "very brave".

Trump was speaking after talks with UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer about ending the war between Ukraine and Russia.

He predicted a "very good meeting" with Zelensky on Friday, saying efforts to achieve peace were "moving along pretty rapidly".

This week's meetings come after the Trump administration shocked its Western partners by holding the first high-level US talks with Moscow since Russia invaded Ukraine just over three years ago.

America's new president had appeared to blame Zelensky for the war and chided him for not starting peace talks earlier.

"You've been there for three years," he had said last Tuesday. "You should have ended it... You should have never started it. You could have made a deal."

But this Thursday, speaking after meeting Sir Keir, Trump told reporters asking about his forthcoming talks with Zelensky: "I think we're going to have a very good meeting tomorrow morning. We're going to get along really well."

Asked by the BBC's Chris Mason if he still thought Zelensky was a "dictator", he replied: "Did I say that? I can't believe I said that."

Zelensky will be hoping to win some kind of security guarantees for his country that would underpin any peace deal that may be negotiated.

Asked about these on Thursday, Trump only said he was "open to many things" but he wanted to get Russia and Ukraine to agree a deal before deciding what measures might be put in place to enforce it.

On his visit on Friday, Zelensky is expected to sign a deal that will give the US access to Ukraine's rare earth mineral resources.

Trump suggested that the presence of US mining concerns in Ukraine would act as a deterrent against future Russian attacks on Ukraine.

"It's a backstop, you could say," he said on Thursday. "I don't think anybody's going to play around if we're there with a lot of workers and having to do with rare earths and other things which we need for our country."

The British prime minister had said earlier that the UK was prepared to send troops to Ukraine after the war as part of a peacekeeping force but only if the US, Nato's leading member, provided a "backstop".

Asked if the US would aid British peacekeepers if they were attacked by Russia, Trump said: "The British have incredible soldiers, incredible military and they can take care of themselves. But if they need help, I'll always be with the British, okay?"

Nato's Article 5 holds that Nato members will come to the defence of an ally which comes under attack.

Praising Trump's "personal commitment to bring peace" in Ukraine, Sir Keir said the UK was "ready to put boots on the ground and planes in the air to support a deal".

"We're focused now on bringing an enduring end to the barbaric war in Ukraine," he said.

But, he added, it must not be a peace deal "that rewards the aggressor or that gives encouragement to regimes like Iran".

Asked whether Vladimir Putin was trustworthy, the UK prime minister said his views on the Russian president were well-known.

Asked in turn why he seemed to trust Putin and Sir Keir did not, Trump said: "I know a lot of people that you would say no chance that they would ever deceive you, and they are the worst people in the world.

"I know others that you would guarantee they would deceive you, and you know what, they're 100% honourable, so you never know what you're getting."

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, who had been due to meet US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington before he cancelled the talks "due to scheduling issues", told BBC News that Putin and Russia did "not want to have peace".

"For any peace agreement to function, it needs the Europeans as well as Ukrainians on board," she added.

Stopping off in the Irish Republic on Thursday en route to the US, Zelensky met the Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Micheál Martin at Shannon Airport.

"We discussed the steps to end the war with guaranteed peace for Ukraine and the whole of Europe," he said later.

Following the overthrow of Ukraine's pro-Russian president in 2014, Moscow annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea and backed pro-Russian separatists in bloody fighting in eastern Ukraine.

The conflict burst into all-out war when Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022.

It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of people, most of them soldiers, have been killed or injured, and millions of Ukrainian civilians have fled as refugees.

As well as Crimea, Russia now occupies parts of four other regions - Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.

The Kremlin warned on Thursday that Russia would make no territorial concessions to Ukraine as part of a peace deal.

"All territories that have become subjects of the Russian Federation... are an integral part of our country, Russia," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. "This is an absolutely indisputable fact and a non-negotiable fact."

Separately, Russian and US officials met in the Turkish city of Istanbul for talks on rebuilding diplomatic ties.

The two nuclear superpowers expelled one another's embassy staff when Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, was in the White House.

BBC
 
Russian drone attack kills one, triggers power cuts in Odesa for second day

A Russian drone attack late on Tuesday killed one person and triggered power, water and heating cuts in Ukraine's Black Sea port of Odesa for the second day running, the regional governor said.

Oleh Kiper, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said a woman aged 77 had died of shrapnel wounds on the outskirts of the city.

Drone strikes damaged critical infrastructure, leaving neighbourhoods without services, he said.

Kiper said fragments from downed drones had damaged private houses and started fires in outlying city districts. A missile strike had destroyed an empty sanatorium near the town of Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, south of Odesa, he added.

East of the capital Kyiv, drones targeted a multi-storey apartment building near the town of Boryspil, smashing windows and triggering a fire in a business. Local officials reported no casualties.


 

Ukraine reels as Trump pulls US support while Russia’s war rages on​


Zynaida Shelepenko is still reeling about what happened in the White House on Friday.

“They cornered Zelenskyy like two bandits, like two mafiosi who want your money and your humiliation,” the 52-year-old bank clerk told Al Jazeera, referring to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s meeting with United States President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance.

Therefore, Shelepenko said, she was not surprised with Trump’s Monday night decision to freeze military aid to Ukraine after Zelenskyy refused to apologise for the spat and said his aborted visit to Washington, DC, “didn’t bring anything positive”.

The Ukrainian president and his US counterpart have since struck more conciliatory tones, but to Shelepenko, there is a clear winner from these tensions between Washington and Kyiv, which until Trump came to power were close allies.

“Guess who’s cheering now? The vampire, the killer of children in the Kremlin,” she said, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin. “We saw the most shameful moment in American history.”

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Russian strike kills 11 in town near Donetsk, Ukraine says

At least 11 people were killed and 30 injured in a Russian strike on Dobropillya, a town in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region, Ukrainian authorities say.

Eight residential buildings and an administrative building were damaged in the attack late Friday, the regional emergency service reported. The town lies north-west of Russian-held Donetsk city.

The report also said Russian forces launched a second strike on emergency responders while they were fighting a blaze.

It comes after intense fighting in nearby areas, with Ukrainian prosecutors reporting five killed in Russian attacks on Thursday night.

BBC
 
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