Trump and Zelensky last met at the White House February 28. Photo: NBC News

Volodymyr Zelensky has thrown a wrench into the Trump administration’s effort to gear up peace talks between Ukraine and Russia. Just after Vladimir Putin, in a major departure from Russia’s policy, announced he was willing to talk to Zelensky, Zelensky himself rejected the deal US negotiators had put on the table.

The Trump team acted with the cooperation of some Europeans but not the EU, where Kaja Kallas, high representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, announced the EU would never recognize Crimea as Russian).

While the plan’s details remain secret, the basic outline has been widely reported. The two main territorial elements are the de jure recognition of Crimea as Russian, and the de facto acceptance of Russian territorial gains in the Donbas and elsewhere.

Recognition of a territory as de jure means it is recognized as a rightful entitlement. De facto does not confer any entitlement, but is simply agreed provisionally and might be changed later.

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, meeting the Estonian prime minister, Kaja Kallas, at Stenbock House in Tallinn on 11 January 2024. Photo: Raul Mee.

Russia has annexed the Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts​. An oblast is an administrative division or region and the borders of the oblasts were fixed originally under Soviet administration. At the present time, Russia controls roughly 70% of the oblasts it has annexed.

It isn’t clear that Russia would accept a de facto settlement of the four oblasts that leaves parts of them under Ukrainian control. Nor is it clear whether a de facto arrangement wouldn’t prevent renewal of the war in future.

Other features of the Trump administration proposal are not known. Among the issues are how any settlement of the war, even a temporary one, can be secured; whether Ukraine could use the deal as a means of rebuilding its military and growing its arms stockpiles; the role of outside parties (such as the armed forces of European countries on Ukrainian soil); disposition of key assets (minerals, power plants) and, of course, keeping Ukraine out of NATO.

One of the carrots the US is waving in front of Russia is ending sanctions (and probably includes returning seized Russian assets). This the US cannot do unilaterally because the sanctions reach into the international banking system, delivery of energy to Russia’s former clients and how commerce will be regulated on the Black Sea.

None of this may matter much if Zelensky won’t cooperate, which is the case at the moment. The background question is whether Zelensky simply wants to scuttle any deal and walk away, or whether he is using his blocking maneuver to try and extract more concessions from the United States. Probably he is hoping to do both.

Zelensky’s refusal over Crimea has touched off a firestorm in the US administration and among the Europeans who were hoping for a deal in which they would be partners. That was the reason a high level meeting of foreign ministers was supposed to take place in London.

The meeting now has been severely downgraded, and probably will be a fraught, and meaningless exercise. Instead of Secretary of State Rubio, or even Steve Witkoff, the US is sending General Keith Kellogg, who is arriving without any special mandate. Meanwhile Witcoff will be traveling to Moscow later this week for another meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The agenda for Witkoff and Putin is not known, especially in light of Zelensky’s scuttling action. A reasonable speculation is that the Trump administration wants to buy time and not see the Russians step up their military operations in Ukraine. President Trump is especially sensitive about the human costs of the war, and continually makes that point to both parties, and to others.

Buying time may include announcements on reducing some sanctions or concluding some commercial deals to placate the Russians. Doing such deals would also put Zelensky on notice that the US plans to move ahead with Russia.

One hint of what kind of deals could take place include greater cooperation in space and especially between SpaceX and Roscosmos. Roscosmos is a Russian state agency responsible for space flights, cosmonautics programs, and aerospace research.

Angara rocket at Vostochny Cosmodrome (photo Roscosmos)

The Russian press has lauded Elon Musk’s SpaceX accomplishments and would certainly welcome technology cooperation, particularly Starlink. Starlink has been a problem for Russia because it is deployed in Ukraine and gives the Ukrainians superb communication connectivity in the midst of the war. Any cooperation on Starlink would be a big victory for Putin. Whether Trump or Witkoff might be prepared to go in that direction is unknown.

Some experts, especially former NATO commander General Wesley K. Clark, think that Russia’s aim is to take Odesa. Clark says this would signal Russia’s victory in the Ukraine war. One presumes that the Trump administration wants to head this off if it can.

Stephen Bryen, a senior correspondent of Asia Times, served as staff director of the Near East Subcommittee of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee and as a deputy undersecretary of defense for policy. This article was originally published on his Weapons and Strategy Substack, and is republished with permission.

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7 Comments

  1. ukraine deserves the US as a ‘partner.’ If they want to keep fighting and dying, even after trump is offered them a peace deal, let them. Stupid doesn’t live long.

  2. Kaja Kallas (Estonia? Ethiopia?) will never recognize Crimea as Russian? But it’s been Russian since 1783, longer than Florida has been American.

    1. That old lady needs to eat something. Her potato crop probably wasn’t good this year.

  3. Another fake peace initiative. If the orange wrecking ball was serious about peace, he would have done ALOT more to bring the cocaine commander to the table. Unfortunately nothing of substance comes out of the EU and USA these days. Imperialist spoilt brats tip over the entire table when the chess game is not going their way.

  4. Time to let the CIA remove Zelensky, like it did with Victor Yanukovych. This time at least, it will lead to peace instead if war.

  5. Cut the loss, drop Zelensky. He is well-off on global properties and bank accounts. What are you waiting for, Trump? You promised many times, 24 hours, 100 days, what then?

    BTW, if you are sensitive about war human costs, please also consider the civilian deaths in the Middle East, almost all were killed by US ammunitions.

  6. US says F U to Ukraine. Ukraine says F U to the US. Meanwhile Russia actually Fs up Ukraine and deletes what few men Ukraine has left leaving millions of women left to work in China’s factories. What a wonderful world we live in.