Putin, Trump and White House
Digest more
The Kremlin hasn't ruled out summits but has said they could only meet in the very final stages of clinching a peace agreement.
The U.S. won’t send troops, and Russia won’t accept forces from NATO states in Ukraine, writes . So what kind of security guarantee is it really?
Political messages don’t get much blunter than the Russian missiles that slammed into an American-owned manufacturing firm overnight Wednesday in western Ukraine, hundreds of miles away from the frontline trenches of a war with no end in sight.
The documents reportedly included plans for a canceled luncheon, seating charts, a gift presentation and phone numbers for U.S. and Russian officials.
A week after Alaska, it looks like nothing has changed in the Kremlin.
President Trump is meeting today at the White House with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and the leaders of Britain, Germany, France, Finland and Italy, as well as NATO chief Mark Rutte and the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Doing so would require the Russian leader to “accept the failure of sitting down with a president he considers a joke from a country that doesn’t exist”
In a recent interview, Vice President JD Vance said President Trump called Vladimir Putin at 1 a.m., a bold move to push peace talks.