Russia, Ukraine and Europe
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Major questions remain over what both sides might accept after Trump held successive talks with Putin and Zelensky.
The leaders of Germany, France, Britain and other supporters of Ukraine have come together in exceptional ways to help sway the U.S. president.
Trump is celebrating his White House summit as big progress toward peace in Ukraine. Russia is celebrating something else.
Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev taunted European leaders early Monday, accusing them of having "failed to outplay" U.S. President Donald Trump.
2hon MSN
Russia open to bilateral or trilateral talks with Trump and Zelensky: Putin’s foreign minister
Vladimir Putin has rejected attempts by Volodymyr Zelensky to meet face-to-face for the entirety of the 41-month-old war.
Ahead of his meeting with the Russian leader last week, Trump threatened Russia with “severe consequences” if it didn’t accept a ceasefire. Afterward, he dropped that demand and said it was best to focus on a comprehensive peace deal — as Putin has pushed for.
US President Donald Trump is threatening tariffs on other countries that buy Russian oil, in an attempt to pressure Moscow to end the war in Ukraine. But the United States and Europe themselves are still doing billions of dollars in trade with Russia.
The upcoming summit between President Donald Trump and his counterpart Vladimir Putin is being used by the Kremlin to divide the U.S. from Europe over the war in Ukraine, according to analysis.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is bringing with him to the White House an extraordinary group of European leaders to show U.S. President Donald Trump a united front against Russia.
Trump’s meeting with Putin rolled back key red lines that Zelensky says Ukraine won’t cross. But Europe could be relying on Trump to flip-flop once again, writes