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Mixed Signals Emerge on Ukraine 05/02 06:19
The discussions have taken place in an ornate Kremlin hall, on the polished
marble of St. Peter's Basilica and in a famously contentious session in the
Oval Office of the White House.
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) -- The discussions have taken place in an ornate
Kremlin hall, on the polished marble of St. Peter's Basilica and in a famously
contentious session in the Oval Office of the White House.
What's emerged so far from the Washington-led effort to end the war in
Ukraine suggests a deal that seems likely to be favorable to Russia: President
Donald Trump has sharply rebuked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy,
echoed Kremlin talking points, and indicated Kyiv would have to surrender
territory and forego NATO membership. What's more, he has engaged in a
rapprochement with Moscow that was unthinkable months ago.
More recently, Trump has offered mixed signals -- social media posts that
perhaps Russian President Vladimir Putin is stringing him along -- and a deal
has yet to materialize.
While the optics so far have been in the Kremlin's favor, no proposals that
were put forth have been cemented.
And on Wednesday, Washington and Kyiv signed an agreement granting American
access to Ukraine's vast mineral resources that could enable continued military
aid to the country under ongoing attacks from Russia.
Zelenskyy said Thursday the deal was the first result of his "truly
historic" meeting with Trump at the Vatican before the funeral of Pope Francis.
Dialogue and aligned vision
One gain for the Kremlin is that Washington is talking again to Moscow after
years of extremely strained ties following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine -- and
not just about the war, said Nikolay Petrov, senior research fellow with the
New Eurasian Strategies Centre think tank.
Russian officials and state media from the very start of discussions with
Trump's officials sought to underscore that Ukraine was only one item on the
vast agenda of the "two superpowers." Trump and Putin talked in March about
Ukraine but also the Middle East, stopping the proliferation of strategic
weapons and even organizing hockey games between the countries.
Russia's main state TV channel reported that the meeting between Putin and
Trump envoy Steve-Witkoff showed that Moscow and Washington were building "a
new structure of the world" together.
In this sense, "Putin already got a part of what he sought" -- the optics of
Russia as a country that is on par with the U.S., Petrov said.
Trump has said Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula Moscow illegally annexed in
2014, "will stay with Russia," and outlines of a peace proposal his team
reportedly presented to Kyiv last month apparently included allowing Russia to
keep control of other occupied Ukrainian territories. Trump, who had a
contentious meeting with Zelenskyy in the Oval Office on Feb. 28, lashed out at
him for publicly rejecting the idea of ceding land, and also said that Kyiv was
unlikely to ever join NATO.
All of these have long been Moscow's talking points, and Trump's use of them
suggested his administration's vision was aligned with the Kremlin's.
Trump also seemingly puts more pressure on Kyiv than Moscow in trying to
reach a peace deal and appears eager to return to a more normal relationship
with Russia and its "big business opportunities," said Sam Greene of King's
College London.
"Is there any part of this that doesn't look like a win for Russia? No,"
Greene adds.
So far, it's only talk
But so far, all of this has remained nothing but rhetoric, with terms of a
possible settlement still very much "in the air," says Sergey Radchenko, a
historian and a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
Studies.
Moreover, there are still demands by both Russia and Ukraine that would be
hard to reconcile in any kind of peace settlement.
Ukraine refuses to cede any land and wants robust security guarantees
against future aggression, possibly involving a contingent of peacekeepers ---
something a handful of European nations have been discussing and Russia
publicly rejects as a nonstarter.
Russia, in turn, demands that it holds onto the territory it has seized as
well as no NATO membership for Ukraine. It also wants Kyiv to "demilitarize,"
or significantly reduce its armed force.
Radchenko sees the latter as a major sticking point in peace talks, because
a strong, viable army is important for Ukraine to defend itself.
"If there are restrictions on the kinds of weapons Ukraine can receive (from
the West) or the size of the army, then it will be very difficult to get them
to accept this sort of agreement," he said.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov seemingly raised the stakes further
this week by saying that international recognition of regions annexed from
Ukraine by Russia was "imperative" for a peace deal.
Achieving that remains unclear, given that dozens of countries have decried
the annexations as violating international law.
What if the US walks away?
Some analysts believe it is in Putin's interest to prolong the war and keep
making gains on the battlefield.
Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have
threatened to wash their hands of the peace effort if there is no progress soon.
Putin, in an apparent gesture of willingness to keep talking, announced this
week a 72-hour ceasefire starting May 8 for Russia's Victory Day holiday that
marks the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.
Zelenskyy dismissed the gesture as a further attempt by Putin at
"manipulation" to string along the U.S., saying a ceasefire should begin
immediately and last longer.
Greene noted that the Russian ruble and markets have been doing better
recently over expectations of a peace deal and U.S. businesses and investors
coming back, "and there may be a price to be paid" for pulling out the rug from
under that.
The larger question is what happens on the battlefield if the Trump
administration withdraws from the peace effort.
"When the Trump administration says they'll walk away, we don't know what
that means. Does that mean they walk away from negotiations and keep supporting
Ukraine?" Greene said.
Greene says that Ukraine probably doesn't feel confident that the U.S.
stepping back from the process means that Washington will keep supporting Kyiv,
adding that Russia may not be sure of the Trump administration ending aid,
either.
"I think it's very difficult for the Kremlin to calculate the risks of
dragging this out," he said.
And U.S. Treasury Secretary Sctott Bessent said the mineral deal "signals
clearly to Russia that the Trump administration is committed to a peace process
centered on a free, sovereign, and prosperous Ukraine over the long term."
A lot depends on whether Europe can step up and fill any gaps in U.S. aid.
If Trump walks away from the peace effort and still pursues normalizing
relations with Russia, lifting sanctions, "this will amount to a major
breakthrough" for Putin, but it's not a given, Radchenko says.
That would be an uphill battle for Trump as "there's a lot of congressional
sanctions that are predicated on the war in Ukraine," Greene notes.
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