
The Ukrainian military claims to have pushed Russia’s forces back by about 1.2 miles on part of the Sumy front in northern Ukraine.
"Ukrainian soldiers continue active combat actions to destroy the enemy and liberate our settlements," the Ukrainian general staff said.
It comes as Vladimir Putin has demanded Ukraine surrender the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk provinces as one condition for ending the war.
The Russian leader told Donald Trump that he would be prepared to stop fighting on the rest of the frontline if Ukraine gave in to the demand.
The concessions were discussed at the summit of the two leaders in Alaska on Friday, which ended with no peace deal despite nearly three hours of talks. Sources very close to the meeting told The Independent the dramatic move appears to have been endorsed by Mr Trump as a means to bring an end to the war.
Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer will speak to western allies on Sunday ahead of Volodymyr Zelensky’s White House meeting with Donald Trump.
The prime minister, France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz will host the meeting of the coalition of the willing on Sunday afternoon.
Read More
Ukraine-Russia latest: Key points
- Ukraine says it presses Russian troops back on part of Sumy front
- Putin demands Zelensky surrenders Donestsk region as condition for ending war in Ukraine
- Zelensky: Russia continues to reject ceasefire calls
- Starmer to speak with coalition of the willing ahead of Zelensky-Trump meeting
- Analysis | He rolled out the red carpet for an indicted war criminal and all Trump got was an invitation to Moscow
Watch: Putin opens up on 'very frank' conversation with Trump
09:02
,
Holly Evans
The key takeaways from Putin and Trump’s summit in Alaska
08:46
,
Holly Evans
The highly-anticipated meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin had been hailed as an essential and crucial step in forging a path towards peace in wartorn Ukraine.
Three hours later, both leaders emerged claiming that the summit had been a “success” and “productive”. Yet no ceasefire deal has been struck, and little information has been given as to what was actually discussed behind closed doors.
In Moscow, the meeting has been praised as a success, while in the West, it has left more questions than answers.
Read the full article here:

Finnish president reportedly due to join Zelensky in Washington
08:19
,
Holly Evans
While multiple European leaders have been invited to join Volodymyr Zelensky during his trip to Washington on Monday, it has been reported that Trump favourite Alexander Stubb will be the one to make the trip.
According to two European diplomats and a person familiar with the matter who spoke to Politico, the Finnish president will be on hand to prevent any flare-ups between the Ukrainian president and Donald Trump, and to include Europe in any discussions.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, who has a close relationship with Trump, may also make the trip to Washington.
After an inconclusive summit, Ukraine’s fate hangs in the balance
07:50
,
Holly Evans
Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, has named his price for ending the war in Ukraine. If he is given those parts of the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk that he does not already occupy, he would freeze the rest of the frontline.
His offer, made at the summit meeting in Alaska, was relayed by Donald Trump to Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, and Mr Trump then advised Mr Zelensky in a public interview to “make a deal” with Russia.
The US president’s position remains confused and ambiguous, but the implication that Ukraine should give up more land than it has already lost is not the right place to start. It is generally accepted, including by Mr Zelensky, that Ukraine will have to compromise in order to secure peace, but this would not be a compromise. It would be a straightforward concession, yielding to Mr Putin what he has been unable to win on the battlefield.
Read the full article here:

Contents of letter that Melania Trump sent to Putin revealed
07:30
,
Shweta Sharma
In the letter hand-delivered by Donald Trump to Russian leader Vladimir Putin, Melania Trump appealed to “protect the innocence of children” and said that by doing so he would not only serve Russia but humanity as a whole.
"Every child shares the same quiet dreams in their heart, whether born randomly into a nation's rustic countryside or a magnificent city-center,” she wrote.
“They dream of love, possibility, and safety from danger. As parents, it is our duty to nurture the next generation's hope. As leaders, the responsibility to sustain our children extends beyond the comfort of a few.”
She said the world should paint a dignity-filled world for all - so that every soul may wake to peace, and so that the future itself is perfectly guarded.
“Mr Putin, you can singlehandedly restore their melodic laughter," she wrote.
Fox News published a letter that Melania Trump reportedly sent to Putin through the US president.
— NOELREPORTS (@NOELreports) August 16, 2025
In it, she appeals to him as a father and leader, writing that all children dream of love, opportunity, and safety, regardless of where they are born. She urges him to “protect the… pic.twitter.com/6Dxzcq60rg
PM to speak with allies, amid reports Trump mulling Russian land grab in Ukraine
07:24
,
Holly Evans
Sir Keir Starmer will meet European allies on Sunday, amid reports Donald Trump favours a Russian land grab in Ukraine to end the war.
The Prime Minister, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will host the coalition of the willing on Sunday afternoon.
The video conference of allies who plan to keep the peace in Ukraine comes ahead of Volodymyr Zelensky’s White House meeting with Donald Trump on Monday.
Several news outlets have cited sources which claimed that during the negotiations Mr Putin demanded full control of Donetsk and Luhansk – two occupied Ukrainian regions – as a condition for ending the war.
In exchange, he would give up other Ukrainian territories held by Russian troops.
Other outlets reported that Mr Trump is inclined to support the plan, and will speak to Mr Zelensky about it on Monday when they meet in the Oval Office.
Sir Keir commended Mr Trump’s “pursuit of an end to the killing” following a phone call with the US President, Mr Zelensky and Nato allies on Saturday morning.
Multiple European leaders invited to White House for Zelensky meeting
07:00
,
Shweta Sharma
Multiple European leaders have been invited to join president Donald Trump’s meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House on Monday, a US official told CNN.
It remains uncertain who will attend, though European diplomats have indicated that at least one leader from the continent is expected to take part in the talks.
Keir Starmer to meet European allies as Trump hints at Russian land grab
06:30
,
Shweta Sharma
Sir Keir Starmer will meet European allies on Sunday, amid reports Donald Trump favours a Russian land grab in Ukraine to end the war.
The prime minister, French president Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Friedrich Merz will host the "Coalition of the Willing" talks on Sunday afternoon.
The video conference of allies who plan to keep the peace in Ukraine comes ahead of Volodymyr Zelensky's White House meeting with Donald Trump on Monday.

The one-on-one in the Oval Office could pave the way for a three-way meeting alongside Russian leader Putin, the US president has said.
Several news outlets have cited sources which claimed that during the negotiations Putin demanded full control of Donetsk and Luhansk – two occupied Ukrainian regions – as a condition for ending the war.
In exchange, he would give up other Ukrainian territories held by Russian troops.
Other outlets reported that Trump is inclined to support the plan, and will speak to Zelensky about it on Monday when they meet in the Oval Office.
Sir Keir commended Trump's "pursuit of an end to the killing" following a phone call with the US president, Zelensky and Nato allies on Saturday morning.But he insisted Ukraine's leader must not be excluded from future talks to broker a peace in Ukraine.
Ukraine pushes 2km inside Sumy, general says
06:14
,
Shweta Sharma
Ukraine’s army says it has pushed forward about 2km in Sumy oblast, reporting fresh gains just a day after US president Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin reportedly discussed possible “land swaps” in Alaska.
Kyiv’s general staff said troops were “actively destroying the enemy and liberating settlements.”
The military said that Ukrainian units had made gains in multiple areas in Sumy, according to Kyiv Independent.

Reports of advances come as Russia claims to have captured two more villages in Donetsk, where president Volodymyr Zelensky admitted the situation remains “extremely difficult” but noted successful Ukrainian counterattacks near Dobropillia and Pokrovsk.
The battlefield shifts highlight a volatile front line, even as Moscow and Washington explore controversial territorial deals.
Is Zelensky about to walk into another White House ambush after Trump’s Putin meeting?
06:00
,
Shweta Sharma
The free world’s most celebrated president is showing some mettle in agreeing to a meeting with the leader of the free world. When Volodymyr Zelensky walks into the Oval Office on Monday, he knows he’s risking another ambush.
The Ukrainian president is prepared to gamble that he’ll get another White House schoolyard bullying session, because there’s a slim chance that Donald Trump may finally have tired of being played by the Kremlin.
It is now conceivable, just, that Trump is prepared to consider security guarantees for Ukraine that reflect Nato’s Article 5, which could mean that if Ukraine signed up to a peace deal then its long-term future sovereignty and security would be protected, by force of arms, by allies including the US.
Read our World Affairs Editor Sam Kiley’s report.

One injured and power line damaged in Ukrainian drone attack on Russia's Voronezh
05:30
,
Shweta Sharma
A railway employee was injured and a power line damaged by a Ukrainian drone attack at a station in Russia's Voronezh region, the regional governor said on Sunday.
"According to preliminary information, a railway station track technician was injured in one of the municipalities," Alexander Gusev said of the overnight attack on the Telegram messaging app.
"He has been hospitalised," Gusev said, adding that the attack caused train delays.
Russia’s stance 'complicates' end to Ukraine war
04:45
,
Shweta Sharma
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said Vladimir Putin's refusal to agree to a ceasefire is complicating efforts to end the war, accusing Moscow of rebuffing repeated calls to halt its attacks.
Speaking ahead of his own trip to the US – he will meet US president Donald Trump in Washington DC on Monday – Mr Zelensky said stopping the killing is a key element of stopping the war.
"We see that Russia rebuffs numerous calls for a ceasefire and has not yet determined when it will stop the killing. This complicates the situation," he said in a statement on X.
Monday's meeting will inevitably evoke memories of an earlier event in the White House's Oval Office in February, where Trump and vice president JD Vance gave Zelensky a brutal public dressing-down.
Trump–Putin summit a “propaganda win for Russia”, says analyst
04:00
,
Jabed Ahmed
Olga Tokariuk, Fellow in Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis, said the Alaska meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin offered “good news and bad news” for Ukraine – but ultimately handed Moscow a propaganda victory.
“The good news is that apparently no deal that would force Ukraine to capitulate or make major concessions was agreed,” she said.
“Another piece of good news is that a letter from Melania Trump was handed over to Putin, raising the issue of Ukrainian children illegally deported by Russia — a crime Putin was indicted for by the ICC.”
But she warned the optics were damaging. “The bad news is that Putin was given a five-star treatment by the US president Donald Trump… All these details and images are a clear propaganda win for Russia and are shared with delight in the Russian media. For Ukrainians, it was disheartening to watch Putin… being given such preferential treatment by the US.”
She added: “Putin had no intention to give up on his maximalist demands… Undoubtedly, Putin is coming back from Alaska even more convinced that he can get away with everything.”
03:00
,
Jabed Ahmed
Analysis | Is Zelensky about to walk into another White House ambush after Trump’s Putin meeting?
02:00
,
Jabed Ahmed

Recap | Zelensky braces for perilous Trump talks on Monday
01:00
,
Jabed Ahmed
Volodymyr Zelensky will fly to Washington on Monday under heavy US pressure to agree a swift end to Russia's war in Ukraine, but determined to defend Kyiv's interests - without sparking a second Oval Office bust-up with Donald Trump.
The US president invited Zelensky to Washington after rolling out the red carpet for Vladimir Putin, Kyiv's arch foe, at a summit in Alaska that shocked many in Ukraine, where hundreds of thousands have died since Russia's 2022 invasion.
The Alaska talks failed to produce the ceasefire that Trump sought, and the US leader said on Saturday that he now wanted a full-fledged peace deal and that Kyiv should accept because "Russia is a very big power, and they're not".
The blunt rhetoric throws the weight of expectation squarely back onto Zelensky, putting him in a potentially perilous position as he returns to Washington for the first time since his talks with Trump in the Oval Office spiralled into acrimony in February.
Trump briefed Zelensky on his talks with Putin during a call on Saturday that lasted more than an hour and a half, the Ukrainian leader said. They were joined after an hour by European and Nato officials, he added.
Comment | Putin got everything he wanted from Trump – Ukraine will be terrified for what comes next
Saturday 16 August 2025 23:59
,
Jabed Ahmed
Jon Sopel writes:
When I went to bed last night, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin had just gone into their summit meeting in Anchorage, Alaska – and I really had not the faintest idea what I might wake up to.
Would it be a comprehensive peace deal agreed between the two of them that would totally screw Ukraine; or would it be a furious Trump announcing massive, punitive sanctions against Russia over Putin’s intransigence – something he had been threatening just a couple of weeks ago before announcing the summit? Or would it be any number of outcomes in between? Instead, we woke up to – well, what exactly?
Sure, there was a lot of vacuous vibe stuff about progress, constructive talks, deeper understanding, but let’s be clear about the headline: THERE WAS NO DEAL. The missiles, the attack drones, will continue and, as far as we can tell, there is no timetable for a ceasefire.
Read the full Voices article below:

Russia's Lavrov discusses Alaska summit's outcome with Turkish and Hungarian counterparts
Saturday 16 August 2025 23:24
,
Jabed Ahmed
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held calls on Saturday with his Turkish and Hungarian counterparts, the Russian foreign ministry said, hours after a summit between the US and Russian presidents yielded no deal on ending the war in Ukraine.
The phone call between Lavrov and Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan took place at Turkey's initiative, the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement on its website.
"The foreign ministers exchanged views on the outcomes of the high-level Russia–U.S. meeting held in Alaska on August 15," the ministry said.
Turkey has tried to keep diplomatic channels open to both sides during the war, acting as a Nato member, a partner for both Russia and Ukraine, and a potential mediator.
Lavrov also held a call with Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto, the Russian foreign ministry said, in which "the parties discussed issues related to the Ukrainian crisis in the context of the outcomes of the Russia–US summit."
Hungary has maintained close ties with Russia throughout the war, often opposing EU sanctions and continuing energy cooperation with Moscow, and drawing criticism from Western allies of Kyiv.
Europe to decide whether to join Zelensky on trip to meet Trump, German minister says
Saturday 16 August 2025 23:21
,
Jabed Ahmed
European officials will decide this weekend whether Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will be accompanied on a visit to Washington to meet Donald Trump on Monday, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul has said.
Asked whether German Chancellor Friedrich Merz could accompany Zelensky to Washington, Wadephul said plenty of Europeans would be willing to travel with the Ukrainian president if that decision were taken.
"That'll be agreed this weekend, and Friedrich Merz's willingness to assume responsibility is evident; he has demonstrated this very clearly in the last few days. This will be discussed together," Wadephul told German broadcaster ARD.
Putin ‘immediately’ read Melania Trump’s letter in front of delegates at Alaska summit, report claims
Saturday 16 August 2025 23:14
,
Jabed Ahmed

The key takeaways from Putin and Trump’s summit in Alaska
Saturday 16 August 2025 22:59
,
Jabed Ahmed

Starmer to speak with coalition of the willing ahead of Zelensky-Trump meeting
Saturday 16 August 2025 22:29
,
Jabed Ahmed
Sir Keir Starmer will speak to Western allies on Sunday ahead of Volodymyr Zelensky’s White House meeting with Donald Trump.
The Prime Minister, France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz will host the meeting of the coalition of the willing on Sunday afternoon.
The coalition of the willing, made up of 30-plus nations, is prepared to deter Russian aggression by putting troops on the ground in Ukraine once the war is over.
The meeting, which is expected to take place at approximately 2pm UK time, comes on the heels of Mr Trump’s summit in Alaska with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.

Zelensky: Russia continues to reject ceasefire calls
Saturday 16 August 2025 22:15
,
Jabed Ahmed
President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Russia of ignoring repeated international appeals for a ceasefire, warning that Moscow “has not yet determined when it will stop the killing”.
He said the lack of willingness to halt strikes makes the situation more difficult and raises questions over Russia’s commitment to “peaceful coexistence with its neighbours for decades”.
“Stopping the killing is a key element of stopping the war,” Mr Zelensky wrote on X.
The Ukrainian leader said he had spent the day coordinating with international partners and would hold further calls on Sunday.
He confirmed preparations were underway for Monday’s meeting with US President Donald Trump, thanking Washington for the invitation and stressing the need for dialogue “at the level of leaders”.
Mr Zelensky also welcomed a joint statement from Nordic-Baltic nations and praised their “very significant assistance”, adding that “the unity of all strengthens each one”.
Putin ‘rewarded’ for Ukraine invasion with Trump summit, experts warn
Saturday 16 August 2025 21:59
,
Jabed Ahmed
Vladimir Putin has been “rewarded” for his invasion of Ukraine with Donald Trump’s summit in Alaska, leading experts have warned.
Orysia Lutsevych, deputy director of the Russia and Eurasia programme and head of the Ukraine forum at the Chatham House think tank, said: “After six bilateral Trump-Putin phone calls, five trips of Trump’s envoy (Steve) Witkoff to Moscow, the Alaska summit, watched globally with so much anticipation and anxiety, failed to produce any tangible outcome to stop Russian aggression against Ukraine.
“Russia has received a reward for its invasion.
“Trump called Russia a ‘great country’ and said there is strong mutual understanding between the two parties.
“This represents a further fissure in the already shaky Transatlantic alliance, the rupture of which is a primary Russian aim.
“The Alaska summit represents another step towards this goal.”
Keir Giles, an associate fellow of the Russia and Eurasia programme at Chatham House, meanwhile, suggested there were “two dangers” which could emerge from the summit.
The first is that Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky may now be perceived by Mr Trump as a “softer target where he is more willing to exert leverage”, and that the US president could “once again try to strongarm Zelensky into compromising the future of his country”.
The second danger is that European leaders “might once again think the immediate danger has passed” and become complacent, after their scramble to speak to Mr Trump ahead of the summit.
Trump–Putin summit a “propaganda win for Russia”, says analyst
Saturday 16 August 2025 21:31
,
Jabed Ahmed
Olga Tokariuk, Fellow in Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis, said the Alaska meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin offered “good news and bad news” for Ukraine – but ultimately handed Moscow a propaganda victory.
“The good news is that apparently no deal that would force Ukraine to capitulate or make major concessions was agreed,” she said.
“Another piece of good news is that a letter from Melania Trump was handed over to Putin, raising the issue of Ukrainian children illegally deported by Russia — a crime Putin was indicted for by the ICC.”
But she warned the optics were damaging. “The bad news is that Putin was given a five-star treatment by the US president Donald Trump… All these details and images are a clear propaganda win for Russia and are shared with delight in the Russian media. For Ukrainians, it was disheartening to watch Putin… being given such preferential treatment by the US.”
She added: “Putin had no intention to give up on his maximalist demands… Undoubtedly, Putin is coming back from Alaska even more convinced that he can get away with everything.”
Canada praises US stance on Ukraine security guarantees
Saturday 16 August 2025 20:58
,
Jabed Ahmed
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has welcomed what he said was US openness to providing security guarantees to Ukraine under a peace deal to end Russia's war against Kyiv.
"Robust and credible security guarantees are essential to any just and lasting peace. I welcome the openness of the United States to providing security guarantees as part of Coalition of the Willing’s efforts," Carney said in a statement.
"The leadership of President Trump and the United States is creating the opportunity to end Russia's illegal war in Ukraine."
Full report | Putin demands Zelensky surrenders Donestsk region as condition for ending war in Ukraine
Saturday 16 August 2025 20:29
,
Jabed Ahmed
Our World Affairs Editor Sam Kiley reports:

Ukraine says it presses Russian troops back on part of Sumy front
Saturday 16 August 2025 20:02
,
Jabed Ahmed
The Ukrainian military said that it had pushed Russian forces back by about 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) on part of the Sumy front in northern Ukraine.
There was no immediate comment from Russia, which controls a little over 200 square kilometres in the region, according to Ukraine's battlefield mapping project DeepState.
"Ukrainian soldiers continue active combat actions to destroy the enemy and liberate our settlements," the Ukrainian general staff wrote on Facebook.
It added that fighting was raging near the villages of Oleksiivka and Yunakivka, which lie 5 km and 7 km from the Russian border, respectively.
The ebb and flow of the battlefield lines has taken on greater political significance in recent days as Ukraine finds itself at another critical diplomatic juncture with U.S. President Donald Trump stepping up his efforts to broker an end to the war.
Watch | Starmer speaks with Trump after president’s Ukraine ceasefire talks with Putin
Saturday 16 August 2025 19:59
,
Jabed Ahmed
Trump and Zelensky to meet at the White House Monday. Here’s what to expect
Saturday 16 August 2025 19:29
,
Jabed Ahmed
Katie Hawkinson reports:

Recap | Zelensky must be at future peace talks, Starmer says
Saturday 16 August 2025 18:59
,
Jabed Ahmed
The “path to peace in Ukraine” cannot be decided without Volodymyr Zelensky, Sir Keir Starmer said, as he commended Donald Trump’s “pursuit of an end to the killing”.
The Prime minister said the US president’s actions had “brought us closer than ever before” to an end to the war in Ukraine.
But he insisted insisted Ukraine’s leader must take part in future peace talks after speaking with Mr Trump and Nato allies in the wake of the US president’s negotiations with Vladimir Putin.
Sir Keir spent Saturday morning speaking to western allies in the wake of the Anchorage summit.
Following the round of calls, the Prime minister said: “President Trump’s efforts have brought us closer than ever before to ending Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine. His leadership in pursuit of an end to the killing should be commended.
“While progress has been made, the next step must be further talks involving President Zelensky. The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without him.”
Saturday 16 August 2025 18:31
,
Jabed Ahmed
The key takeaways from Putin and Trump’s summit in Alaska
Saturday 16 August 2025 18:12
,
Jabed Ahmed
My colleague Holly Evans reports:

Comment | Putin got everything he wanted from Trump – Ukraine will be terrified for what comes next
Saturday 16 August 2025 17:49
,
Jabed Ahmed
Jon Sopel writes:
When I went to bed last night, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin had just gone into their summit meeting in Anchorage, Alaska – and I really had not the faintest idea what I might wake up to.
Would it be a comprehensive peace deal agreed between the two of them that would totally screw Ukraine; or would it be a furious Trump announcing massive, punitive sanctions against Russia over Putin’s intransigence – something he had been threatening just a couple of weeks ago before announcing the summit? Or would it be any number of outcomes in between? Instead, we woke up to – well, what exactly?
Sure, there was a lot of vacuous vibe stuff about progress, constructive talks, deeper understanding, but let’s be clear about the headline: THERE WAS NO DEAL. The missiles, the attack drones, will continue and, as far as we can tell, there is no timetable for a ceasefire.
Read the full Voices article below:

Nordic-Baltic leaders say they remain steadfast in support of Ukraine
Saturday 16 August 2025 17:36
,
Jabed Ahmed
The leaders of eight Nordic-Baltic nations have said that they remain steadfast in their support for Ukraine and to the efforts by Donald Trump to end the Russian aggression against Ukraine.
The leaders of Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden said in a statement that achieving peace between Ukraine and Russia requires a ceasefire and security guarantees for Ukraine.
"We welcome President Trump's statement that the US is prepared to participate in security guarantees. No limitations should be placed on Ukraine's armed forces or on its cooperation with other countries," the statement said.
Trump has said that he had agreed with Putin that a peace deal should be sought without the prior ceasefire that Ukraine and its European allies, until now with US support, have demanded.
Recap | Zelensky braces for perilous Trump talks on Monday
Saturday 16 August 2025 17:16
,
Jabed Ahmed
Volodymyr Zelensky will fly to Washington on Monday under heavy US pressure to agree a swift end to Russia's war in Ukraine, but determined to defend Kyiv's interests - without sparking a second Oval Office bust-up with Donald Trump.
The US president invited Zelensky to Washington after rolling out the red carpet for Vladimir Putin, Kyiv's arch foe, at a summit in Alaska that shocked many in Ukraine, where hundreds of thousands have died since Russia's 2022 invasion.
The Alaska talks failed to produce the ceasefire that Trump sought, and the US leader said on Saturday that he now wanted a full-fledged peace deal and that Kyiv should accept because "Russia is a very big power, and they're not".
The blunt rhetoric throws the weight of expectation squarely back onto Zelensky, putting him in a potentially perilous position as he returns to Washington for the first time since his talks with Trump in the Oval Office spiralled into acrimony in February.
Trump briefed Zelensky on his talks with Putin during a call on Saturday that lasted more than an hour and a half, the Ukrainian leader said. They were joined after an hour by European and Nato officials, he added.
Analysis | He rolled out the red carpet for an indicted war criminal and all Trump got was an invitation to Moscow
Saturday 16 August 2025 16:54
,
Jabed Ahmed
Our World Affairs Editor Sam Kiley writes:
The backslapping bonhomie that started the day vanished into the stormy sulk and red glower from Donald Trump across a podium from Vladimir Putin who still glowed with success. The Alaskan summit was a humiliation for Trump.
His hopes of winning a Nobel Peace Prize didn’t crystallise in this meeting of superpowers dissolved. Even the key word of the whole farrago – “ceasefire” – had vanished.
Ukraine and Europe, supporters of democracy and world order, were on tenterhooks worrying if Trump would repeat Putin’s demands and endorse them as his own. He has done that in the past.
Putin, clearly, had made no concessions. But, emerging from three and a half hours of talks, Trump and the Russian president had nothing to present to the world.
Read the full analysis below:

Pictured | Putin holds meeting with Kremlin officials following Trump meeting
Saturday 16 August 2025 16:38
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