News

The US president demanded a ceasefire before he met Putin. His change of mind flies in the face of what Europe and Ukraine ...
US President Donald Trump said he and Russian President Vladimir Putin made “great progress” but did not emerge from ...
The US reportedly offered Ukraine NATO-style security guarantees, modeled on Article 5, without formal membership, contingent on a peace deal. Trump ruled out an immediate Russia-Ukraine ceasefire, ...
Achieving a ceasefire is no longer the White House’s goal—a reversal that came directly after meeting with the Russian leader ...
There was no mention of a possible ceasefire in Russia's war with Ukraine following the historic Alaska summit. U.S. President Donald Trump says progress was made but that there's no deal until ...
They spoke as Trump flew back from Friday’s high-profile summit with Putin in Alaska, which failed to deliver a path to end ...
Trump told European leaders that he believed a rapid peace deal could be negotiated if Zelenskiy agrees to cede the rest of the Donbas region to Russia, even those areas not occupied by Russian troops ...
The true master of the art of the deal is Vladimir Putin, not Donald Trump. Though no agreement was formally struck by the ...
At the Alaska summit with Donald Trump, Russian President Vladimir Putin demanded full control of Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions as a condition.
Vladimir Putin has reportedly demanded that Ukraine withdraw from the eastern Donetsk region as a condition for ending Russia's war, and offered to freeze the frontline if his core demands were met.
Vladimir Putin emerged from the summit having made no concessions and having seemingly staved off the threat of more US ...
One key party who will not be in attendance Friday at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, is Ukrainian ...