Trump’s path to Ukraine peace becoming more apparent
Trump’s Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia Keith Kellogg told Reuters that he’d like to see Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky hold parliamentary and presidential elections, though that outlet’s sources in Kyiv claim that Washington has yet to formally make the request.
Ukrainian law stipulates that elections can’t be conducted during times of marital law, ergo the need to first lift it. That won’t happen without a ceasefire, however, but therein lies the problem since Russia’s ceasefire terms are still unacceptable to Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said last June that Russia will freeze hostilities only after Ukraine withdraws from all the territory that his country claims as its own and declares that it no longer wants to join NATO.
Negotiations could resume immediately afterward, but he specified at the time that they would have to be held with the parliamentary speaker instead of Zelensky, whose legal term expired at the end of May per Putin’s reading of the Ukrainian Constitution. He then reiterated this position last week but with an added twist.
According to Putin, Zelensky could still hypothetically participate in negotiations, but he’d be powerless to sign anything. This followed Zelensky’s claim that October 2022’s prohibition on talks with Russia applied to everyone but himself.
He then told the Associated Press over the weekend, around the same time as Kellogg’s interview with Reuters, that he is interested in resuming talks with Russia but doesn’t think that it wants a ceasefire. Amidst these statements from Kellogg, Putin and Zelensky were Trump’s.
He claimed that “We’re having very serious discussions (with Russia) about that war, trying to get it ended,” but said that he hadn’t yet talked