Ukraine agrees to peace deal brokered by Trump, US official says

Ukraine agrees to peace deal brokered by Trump, US official says

The Ukrainian peace delegation has agreed with the US terms to end the war with Russia, according to a new report.

‘The Ukrainians have agreed to the peace deal,’ the U.S. official told ABC News. ‘There are some minor details to be sorted out but they have agreed to a peace deal.’

US Army Secretary Dan Driscoll met with the Russian peace delegation in the United Arab Emirates on Monday for secret peace talks.

The meeting came after Driscoll’s weekend talks with Ukraine in Geneva that were aimed with pushing the peace forward, according to a US official.

The new agreement has been revised from 28-point peace plan to a 19-point peace plan that no longer includes guarantees amnesty regarding criminal acts committed during the war, along with limits on the size of Ukraine’s military.

The modified plan agreed by US-Ukraine officials will likely be rejected by the Russian delegation, according to the Washington Post.

Driscoll is currently in the United Arab Emirates meeting with the Russian delegation, while Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky is traveling to the United States.

Kremlin spokesman Dimitry Peskov announced on Tuesday Russian officials were still waiting to review the new proposed peace agreement for Ukraine.

‘Late Monday and throughout Tuesday, Secretary Driscoll and team have been in discussions with the Russian delegation to achieve a lasting peace in Ukraine,’ Lt. Col. Jeffrey Tolbert, a U.S. Army spokesman, said. ‘The talks are going well and we remain optimistic. Secretary Driscoll is closely synchronized with the White House and the U.S. interagency as these talks progress.’

The ongoing negotiations occur amid the backdrop of brutal overnight bombings in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, with Russian missiles raining destruction own on residential buildings.

Ukrainians React to Peace Plan to End Russia’s War

Ukrainians React to Peace Plan to End Russia’s War

The statement added that “Ukraine and the United States agreed to continue intensive work on joint proposals in the coming days.”

Earlier in the day, Mr. Rubio said the American and Ukrainian teams were working through the peace plan point by point and making adjustments, “narrowing the differences and getting closer to something” that both Kyiv and Washington would be “comfortable with.”

He said he was “very optimistic” that an agreement could be reached “in a very reasonable amount of time.”

Mr. Rubio noted that “obviously the Russians get a vote here” and will “have to agree to this.” He later left Geneva to return to Washington, a State Department official said.

Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine’s delegation, had earlier spoken of “very good progress” and told reporters that discussions would continue in the days ahead.

The cautiously optimistic — and seemingly aligned — remarks, followed by the joint statement, came despite a lengthy missive that Mr. Trump posted on social media criticizing Ukraine, as well as its European allies, which have been largely excluded from the plan.

“Ukraine ‘leadership’ has expressed zero gratitude for our efforts,” Mr. Trump wrote, “and Europe continues to buy oil from Russia.”

He also again appeared to blame Ukraine for Russia’s full-scale invasion, saying that the war “would have NEVER HAPPENED” had there been “strong and proper” Ukrainian leadership.

It was not the first time that the American president had accused Ukraine of insufficient gratitude, or of responsibility for the war that Russia started. During a disastrous meeting with Mr. Zelensky in the Oval Office in February, Mr. Trump told the Ukrainian leader that he was not doing enough to thank the United States for its support.

Since then, Mr. Zelensky and other members of his administration have taken pains to express their thanks.

Mr. Zelensky did so again on Sunday in a series of statements, not long after Mr. Trump’s social media posts. Mr. Zelensky welcomed the “substantive conversations” in Geneva and appeared to respond, albeit indirectly, to the U.S. president’s latest accusations.

“The crux of the entire diplomatic situation is that it was Russia, and only Russia, that started this war, and it is Russia, and only Russia, that has been refusing to end it,” Mr. Zelensky wrote in one of the statements.

“The leadership of the United States is important, we are grateful for everything that America and President Trump are doing for security, and we keep working as constructively as possible,” he added, saying later that “tomorrow will be no less active.”

President Trump wearing a blue suit and a red tie during a discussion with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who is dressed all in black.

President Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine during their fractious meeting in the Oval Office in February

Ukraine’s European allies, some of whom sent representatives to Geneva to participate in the discussions, have been working to respond to the U.S. proposal and to demonstrate their continued support for Kyiv. In their statement on Sunday night, Ukraine and the United States said they would “remain in close contact with their European partners as the process advances.”

A draft of the U.S. peace proposal posted online last week contained many conditions that Ukraine has long rejected as unacceptable, including surrendering territory and slashing the size of its army.

On Saturday, the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and other countries had released a statement urging changes to the points in the plan that were most objectionable to Ukraine.

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, reasserted this on Sunday. “As a sovereign nation there cannot be limitations on Ukraine’s armed forces that would leave the country vulnerable to future attack,” she said.

That, she said, would also undermine European security.

There was no immediate comment on Sunday from the Kremlin about the talks in Geneva. An American official said earlier that plans for separate talks between the United States and Russia were underway.

Other diplomatic efforts are expected in the coming days.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, who has offered to mediate between Russia and Ukraine, said he expected to speak to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, on Monday about the peace efforts. And President Emmanuel Macron of France suggested that there would be a meeting involving the leaders of Britain, Canada and several other nations on Tuesday.

While Mr. Trump has said he wants Ukraine’s response to the peace plan by Thursday, he has left open the possibility that the deadline could be extended “if things are working well.”

Ukrainian and U.S. officials had already discussed changes to the 28-point plan before the meeting in Geneva, according to a Western official briefed on the talks. The working version now differs, the official said, from a version posted online on Thursday by a Ukrainian lawmaker.

Still, there seemed to be continued confusion about the original proposal, including among lawmakers. A group of U.S. senators said on Saturday that Mr. Rubio had told them that the document “was not the administration’s plan” but a “wish list of the Russians.”

The State Department said that was “blatantly false,” and Mr. Rubio also rejected the characterization, writing on social media that “the peace proposal was authored by the U.S.”

“It is offered as a strong framework for ongoing negotiations,” he said. “It is based on input from the Russian side. But it is also based on previous and ongoing input from Ukraine.”

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