Putin Admits There Was No Trump Peace Deal on Ukraine, Contradicting Months of Kremlin Claims
Russian President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that no agreement was ever reached with President Trump to end the war in Ukraine, contradicting months of Kremlin claims that last August’s summit in Alaska produced a framework for peace.
Speaking to Russian state television on Sunday, Putin conceded that the meeting in Anchorage did not result in any signed accord.
“There were indeed no agreements reached in Anchorage,” Putin told a state television reporter on Sunday.
“Nobody signed anything, but we discussed certain possibilities for ending the conflict in Ukraine, and the compromises that were discussed were precisely those proposals that were put forward by the American side to us,” the Russian leader added.
Putin’s remarks marked a sharp departure from the Kremlin’s longstanding narrative. For months, Russian officials portrayed the Alaska summit as a major diplomatic breakthrough, insisting that a roadmap to end the conflict had been established but later stalled because of Ukraine’s refusal to move forward.
Following the summit, Putin publicly declared that the proposed arrangement would “pave the path toward peace in Ukraine.” President Trump, while describing the discussions as “extremely productive,” cautioned at the time that “there’s no deal until there’s a deal.”
Despite that, senior Russian officials continued to insist an agreement had effectively been reached. Last week, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the Trump administration of abandoning what he described as the understanding reached in Alaska, calling the summit a “U.S. ploy to buy time to rearm the Kyiv regime.”
Lavrov also maintained that Putin had accepted a peace proposal put forward by the United States.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected those assertions, saying there was never a finalized agreement between the two sides.
“If there had been an agreement, we would have had an end of the war,” Rubio told reporters.
Rubio also argued that Moscow’s demands have remained a major obstacle to any settlement, noting, “Russia wants the entirety of Donetsk to be turned over to them, among some other things.”
French President Emmanuel Macron likewise said earlier this month that President Trump acknowledged during the G-7 summit that Russia was not genuinely interested in ending the war.
Putin’s comments come as Russia faces mounting military pressure. Ukrainian forces have recently reclaimed territory for the first time in years, aided largely by increasingly effective drone operations that have challenged Russian battlefield tactics.
Ukraine has also expanded its long-range drone campaign inside Russia. On Tuesday, Kyiv announced that it had successfully struck one of Russia’s largest satellite communications facilities.
Even so, Putin signaled that Moscow is not ready to end the fighting. He said Sunday that Russia expects U.S.-mediated peace negotiations to resume only after the “hot phase” of the conflict with Iran has passed.
Putin also disclosed that Ukraine recently presented “new proposals” regarding a possible settlement involving the Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Luhansk regions, but dismissed the initiative as an attempt by Kyiv to buy time to rebuild and reinforce its military.
{Matzav.com}
