President Trump dispatched senior negotiators to Russia and Ukraine while establishing an agreement-completion threshold for his participation in leader meetings. Trump stated that he would engage Putin and Zelensky through direct summit meetings only when peace negotiations reach final or near-final stages.
Special Envoy Steve Witkoff’s assignment to conduct Moscow talks with President Putin and Army Secretary Dan Driscoll’s engagement with Ukrainian officials reflect the coordinated approach. White House sources indicate that both envoys carry instructions aimed at addressing remaining obstacles.
Trump’s public characterization of recent progress emphasizes what he described as substantial advancement through intensive negotiations. The president claimed that what began as a proposal has been refined through bilateral consultations, with only a few disagreement points remaining.
The original American peace plan triggered intense opposition from Ukrainian and European officials who objected to provisions they viewed as excessively favorable to Russian interests. Subsequent negotiating rounds have produced revisions that administration officials maintain address significant concerns.
Ukrainian President Zelensky maintained careful public positioning on the negotiations, expressing gratitude while strategically avoiding confirmation of specific agreements. Ukrainian officials have emphasized that resolving territorial questions requires direct presidential-level engagement.