Russia, Putin and Ukraine
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Putin yet to show interest in peace, Trump envoy admits ahead of latest talks - Donald Trump says he does not know what Kremlin is doing after peace talks in Moscow yield very little
In trying to end the Russia-Ukraine war, the U.S. must not make the disastrous mistake of misreading Putin’s real motives.
Mark Rutte's comments come a day after Putin rejected US proposals for peace in Ukraine after talks with US negotiators in Moscow.
The officials in a joint statement said they made progress on creating a security framework for postwar Ukraine and are urging Russia to commit to peace.
Never in U.S. history has an American president been so out of step with the American people for so long on an important foreign policy issue.
President Zelensky says Ukraine faces one of the most difficult moments in its history, as the White House pushes its plan.
Putin has long argued that this has posed a threat to Russia. And it was talk of Ukraine joining NATO that was at least partly used as his rationale for invasion. On the equal and opposite side, both NATO and Europe more broadly, now see Ukraine as its frontline against Russian aggression.
Now almost four years into a war Russia started and with little to show for President Trump's peace efforts, Oklahoma's senior U.S. senator says, "Putin doesn’t really want peace, he wants to dominate his neighbors.
Russian President Vladimir Putin met US President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner in the Kremlin on Tuesday for talks on a possible way to end the deadliest European conflict since World War Two.
The White House national security strategy lays out its conflict with Europe amid the Ukraine war—follow Newsweek's live coverage.