Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Alaska for high-stakes summit on Ukraine

US leader touts possible security pledges for Ukraine and ‘very severe’ impact for Russia if it spurns peace efforts  

US president Donald Trump greets Russian president Vladimir Putin on the tarmac at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty
US president Donald Trump greets Russian president Vladimir Putin on the tarmac at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty

US president Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin have met in Alaska for a high-stakes summit on the invasion of Ukraine.

The two leaders met in Anchorage, shaking hands warmly on arrival before proceeding to the closed-doors meeting.

Kyiv said earlier that it was “counting on” Mr Trump to persuade Mr Putin to come to the negotiating table and end his invasion of Ukraine.

Mr Trump and Mr Putin were scheduled to begin talks at a US military base in Anchorage at 11.30am local time (8.30pm Dublin time), then continue discussions over lunch with their delegations before addressing the media.

The pair briefly posed on a stage on which “Alaska 2025″ were written, before leaving the tarmac at the base in the US presidential state car, known as the Beast.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov were set to join the three-on-three summit, along with US secretary of state Marco Rubio and special adviser Steve Witkoff.

Mr Trump has said he believes Mr Putin is ready to end his war on Ukraine and, if that is confirmed at the summit, he will contact Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy soon afterwards to agree a follow-up meeting at which a peace deal could be agreed.

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin briefly posed on a stage marked "Alaska 2025" after meeting at the air base. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin briefly posed on a stage marked "Alaska 2025" after meeting at the air base. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty

“The key thing is that this meeting [in Alaska] should open up a real path toward a just peace and a substantive discussion between leaders in a trilateral format – Ukraine, the United States, and the Russian side,” Mr Zelenskiy said on Friday.

“It is time to end the war, and the necessary steps must be taken by Russia. We are counting on America. We are ready, as always, to work as productively as possible.”

Daniel McLaughlin: Ukraine faces another nervous nightOpens in new window ]

Mr Zelenskiy and a host of European leaders have presented a united front in recent days to insist that they must be involved in discussing crucial questions about Ukraine’s future and continental security.

Mr Trump has suggested that territorial concessions will be part of a peace deal, while acknowledging that Ukraine must have the final say on that.

“They’ll be discussed, but I’ve got to let Ukraine make that decision, and I think they’ll make a proper decision, but I’m not here to negotiate for Ukraine. I’m here to get them at a table,” Mr Trump said of territorial issues as he flew to Alaska.

“Look, Vladimir Putin wanted to take all of Ukraine. If I wasn’t president, he would, right now, be taking all of Ukraine, but he’s not going to do it,” he added.

Mr Trump also repeated a threat that Russia would face “very severe” economic consequences if it rejected peace efforts, and said US-Russia business co-operation would be impossible if Mr Putin continued his war on Ukraine.

“I noticed he’s bringing a lot of business people from Russia, and that’s good. I like that because they want to do business, but they’re not doing business until we get the war stopped.”

Kyiv and its European allies say any peace deal would be worthless without powerful security guarantees for Ukraine that would prevent another Russian invasion.

Ukraine wants Nato membership but Mr Trump has ruled that out. Moscow is demanding a permanent ban on the country ever joining Nato, and the permanent transfer of five Ukrainian regions to the Russian Federation.

When asked if the US could provide such security guarantees, Mr Trump said: “Maybe, along with Europe and other countries. Not in the form of Nato, because ... there are certain things that aren’t going to happen. But, yeah, along with Europe, there’s a possibility of that.”

North Korea’s media said on Friday that its leader Kim Jong-un had received a letter from Mr Putin praising their country’s friendship and the “heroic” troops that Pyongyang has sent to help Russia fight Ukraine.

Mr Trump said he had a “wonderful talk” with Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko, another close Putin ally. He described the veteran dictator as “highly respected” and said they had discussed the possible release of 1,300 prisoners – probably a reference to the many political prisoners held by the authoritarian regime in Minsk.

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Daniel McLaughlin

Daniel McLaughlin

Daniel McLaughlin is Eastern Europe Correspondent for The Irish Times