After Trump-Putin call, Russia agrees to limited Ukraine ceasefire
By: USA TODAY


WASHINGTON − A call between President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin ended with a limited agreement for Russia and Ukraine to cease attacks on energy infrastructure, but stopped short of a U.S. proposal for a temporary truce.
The U.S. said after the call that Russia had agreed to an energy and infrastructure ceasefire. After Moscow and Kyiv agree to stop hitting each other's power plants and electric grids, negotiators would move on to a potential halt in fighting on the Black Sea and then to a full ceasefire and peace agreement in the three-year-old Ukraine war, a White House statement said.
The White House said that discussions would begin immediately in the Middle East.
Trump's team has been meeting with representatives for Moscow and Kyiv separately to nail down a ceasefire and a framework for a peace deal that could permanently end the war. Trump promised a rapid end to the conflict during the 2024 campaign while touting his dealmaking skills, but has has been unable to bring about a resolution so far.
Special envoy Steve Witkoff visited Moscow last week. Secretary of State Marco Rubio also spoke Saturday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The interactions followed in-person talks with top Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia and set the stage for Tuesday's call between Putin and Trump.
The call lasted for at least an hour and a half, the White House indicated. Officials declined to say how much longer the phone call went.
A readout from the White House on the call provided scant details. On Monday, the president said he intended to lay the groundwork for a peace deal and implore Putin to spare the lives of Ukrainian soldiers under siege from Russian forces.
Last week the U.S. restored intelligence sharing with Ukraine and lifted a pause on military assistance, as officials awaited Russia's response to the temporary truce.
Ukraine agreed to a full 30-day ceasefire on the condition that Russia also accepts the terms of the agreement. That proposal called for a temporary freeze the conflict and halt an intense aerial battle between the two nations.
Disputed territory could be monitored during that time with satellites, intelligence and drones.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had previously pushed for a truce to bar the use of missiles, long-range drones and attacks on civilian and energy infrastructure. He also offered to halt attacks on Russian ships.
Zelenskyy's government has also pushed for Russia to agree to a prisoner exchange, the release of detained civilians and the return of kidnapped Ukrainian children.
The Ukrainian leader, currently on a visit to Finland, wrote on Telegram that Europe must be included in negotiations.
"Europe must be at the negotiating table, and everything that concerns European security must be decided together with Europe," Zelenskyy wrote.
The Ukrainian president has long been wary of Putin's willingness to abide by a ceasefire. He said Monday that Russia had already had a week to agree to the terms of the proposed U.S. truce − and that additional pressure is needed to force Putin's hand.
"It's clear to everyone in the world—even to those who refused to acknowledge the truth for the past three years—that it is Putin who continues to drag out this war," Zelenskyy said. "He's saying whatever he wants, but not what the whole world wants to hear."
What's under negotiation?
U.S. officials have said since the talks began that Ukraine would have to make concessions. They range from territory siezed by Russia to its dream of NATO membership and include a battle for control of Europe's largest nuclear power plant.
Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and launched a large-scale attack against Ukraine in 2022. It has is currently in control of roughly 20% of Ukraine's territory, much of it in the east.
Trump indicated over the weekend that the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine has been the topic of early discussion. The plant is under Russian occupation.
"We'll be talking about land. We'll be talking about power plants because that's a big question, but I think we have a lot of it already discussed very much by both sides," Trump told reporters Sunday.
Ukraine is all but certain to lose out on NATO membership for the foreseeable future, U.S. officials have signaled, and it will have to give up at least some of the territory that Russia forcibly seized.
"The Russians can't conquer all of Ukraine, and obviously it'll be very difficult for Ukraine in any reasonable time period to sort of force the Russians back all the way to where they were in 2014," Rubio said last week. "So the only solution to this war is diplomacy and getting them to a table where that's possible."
Russia has said that NATO membership, which it has used as a pretext for its war, is a nonstarter. It has also rejected a UK-led proposal to put European peacekeepers in Ukraine that France has also given its backing.
Ukraine has said it will not sign a peace agreement without firm security guarantees, citing Russia's history of violating ceasefires.
Kyiv gave up its nuclear arsenal after the collapse of the Soviet Union in exchange for security assurances from the U.S., UK and Russia. The invasion of Crimea in 2014 violated the memorandum, which explicitly barred unprompted military action against Ukraine and promised its territorial integrity.
Trump has abstained from making future security guarantees, beyond an unsigned critical minerals agreement that would benefit the U.S. financially if private companies invest in the development of Ukraine's natural resources. He has offered his support to a European fighting force without detailing any potential U.S. involvement.
In its statement after Trump's call with Putin, the White House emphasized the U.S. president's desire to lessen tension with Russia. According to the U.S., the leaders agreed that improved relations would have "huge upside," including the potential for economic deals and global stability.
"There is also a broader strategy at play in President Trump's approach to this war that is informed by the realization that the United States needs to reset relations with Russia," said Trump's special envoy to Ukraine Keith Kellogg said at a Council on Foreign Relations event in Washington this month.
Featured Weekly Ad
Trolling, taunting, spamming, and off-topic comments may be removed at the discretion of group mods. NT members that vote up their own comments, repeat comments, respond to themselves, or continue to disrupt the conversation risk having all their comments deleted. Please remember to quote the person(s) you are replying to preserve the continuity of this seed. Posting debunked lies will be subject to deletion
No Fascism References, Memes, Source Dissing.

But, But, but Trump can't actually negotiate................/S
A number of us have openly hoped that Trump would accomplish some good. No matter how stupid this guy is, he is the only PotUS we have right now and we want a stable peace.
So after all the truly brain-dead-stupid missteps, he has made some small progress. Yet you post an obnoxious comment that encourages people to continue to criticize Trump no matter what. So instead of strictly acknowledging something positive, I am going to acknowledge it and then illustrate why people have rightly been critical of Trump.
A 30 day ceasefire is good (if honored), but a negotiation for peace is substantially more difficult. Hopefully Trump has finally realized that weakening Ukraine is NOT the way to bring Putin to the table. Hopefully this can end with a stable peace.
If Trump can negotiate peace with terms that involve reasonably balanced concessions on both sides then he will get well deserved credit. If not, he will be criticized and his past brain-dead-stupid actions such as giving Russian media propaganda of the PotUS declaring that Ukraine started the war, that they have already lost the war, that Zelensky is a dictator with a 4% approval ration, and his temporary withholding of aid and intelligence from Ukraine will be part of the foundation for that criticism.
True.
If Trump can negotiate peace with terms that involve reasonably balanced concessions on both sides then he will get well deserved credit.
That will be determined by Zelensky and Putin. If they sign onto it, they are saying they think it is fair.
I never thought he would get this far.
Surely you have heard, the end justifies the means............and as such, that criticism will rapidly fail upon a stoppage of the fighting and destruction.
And that 4% is the last straw. Putin, it seems with that rating, has to do something to save face and he knows with the continuation of the fighting, that 4% is in danger of going to 1%. He has to do something popular with his people and the world for that matter to save some semblance of face.
What, exactly, is the purpose, in a peace negotiation, for the facilitator to give propaganda to the invader and demean the victim who is also an ally?
If you were trying to negotiate peace here and you knew that Putin was the aggressor and the more difficult one to deal with, why would you further weaken the bargaining position of your ally?
Explain that to us all, Jim.
Trump stated that Zelensky was a dictator with a 4% approval; he did not say that of Putin. Remember what he said of Putin when he first invaded Ukraine? Here, let me refresh your memory of this brilliant negotiator:
Nothing has been accomplished other than give Russia a 30 day reprieve to stock pile and rest it's troops.
Russia has no intention on giving up the territory they already declared is theirs by conquest.
Ukranians want to join the EU and NATO.
This is but a stumble but it gives the EU and NATO more time also.
They seem to have gone through most of their imported NK troops as well. Gives Putin time to ask for a few thousand more from Kim Jong Un.
And I'd like a million dollars.
And you have every right to want it, figure out how to earn and go get it.
Ukranians should have the same rights and opportunities without a bully neighbor stopping them.
BTW, those pesky Ukrainians bombed the Russians long range (nuke capable) bomber's airfield and set off millions
of dollars' worth of cruise missiles essentially destroying the adjacent town at Engels-2 airfield.
this thing is far from over. Maybe years.
It is a huge day for Trump.
Pftttt.
Absolutely HUGE!!!!
For the 1st time he "may" have done something that didn't benefit himself.
A good day for sure.