A hastily arranged summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin is set for August 15, 2025, in Alaska, where the two leaders will discuss a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will not attend, barring a last-minute change.
Longtime diplomat Donald Heflin, now teaching at Tufts University’s Fletcher School, shares his perspective on the unconventional meeting and why it’s likely to produce, as he says, a photograph and a statement, but not a peace deal.
How do wars end?
Wars end for three reasons. One is that both sides get exhausted and decide to make peace. The second, which is more common: One side gets exhausted and raises its hand and says, “Yeah, we’re ready to come to the peace table.”
And then the third is – we’ve seen this happen in the Mideast – outside forces like the US or Europe come in and say, “That’s enough. We’re imposing our will from the outside. You guys stop this.”
What we’ve seen in the Russia-Ukraine situation is that neither side has shown a real willingness to go to the conference table and give up territory. So the fighting continues. And the role that Trump and his administration are playing right now is that third possibility, an outside power comes in and says, “Enough.”
Now you have to look at Russia. Russia is maybe a former superpower, but a power, and it’s got nuclear arms and it’s got a big army. This is not some small, Middle Eastern country that the United States can completely dominate.
They’re nearly a peer. So can you really impose your will on them and get them to come to the conference table in seriousness if they don’t want to? I kind of doubt it.

How does this upcoming Trump-Putin meeting fit into the history of peace negotiations?
The analogy a lot of people are using is the Munich Conference in 1938, where Great Britain met with Hitler’s Germany. I don’t like to make comparisons to Nazism or Hitler’s Germany. Those guys started World War II and perpetrated the Holocaust and killed 30 or 40 million people. It’s hard to compare anything to that.
But in diplomatic terms, we go back to 1938. Germany said, “Listen, we have all these German citizens living in this new country of Czechoslovakia. They’re not being treated right. We want them to become part of Germany.” And they were poised to invade.
The prime minister of Great Britain, Neville Chamberlain, went and met with Hitler in Munich and came up with an agreement by which the German parts of Czechoslovakia would become part of Germany. And that would be it. That would be all that Germany would ask for, and the West gave some kind of light security guarantees.
Czechoslovakia wasn’t there. This was a peace imposed on them. And sure enough, you know, within a year or two, Germany was saying, “No, we want all of Czechoslovakia. And, P.S., we want Poland.” And thus World War II started.

Can you spell out the comparisons further?
Czechoslovakia wasn’t at the table. Ukraine’s not at the table. Again, I’m not sure I want to compare Putin to Hitler, but he is a strongman authoritarian president with a big military.
Security guarantees were given to Czechoslovakia and not honored. The West gave Ukraine security guarantees when that country gave up its nuclear weapons in 1994. We told them, “If you’re going to be brave and give up your nuclear weapons, we’ll make sure you’re never invaded.” And they’ve been invaded twice since then, in 2014 and 2022. The West didn’t step up.
So history would tell us that the possibilities for a lasting peace coming out of this summit are pretty low.
What kind of expertise is required in negotiating a peace deal?
Here’s what usually happens in most countries that have a big foreign policy or national security establishment, and even in some smaller countries. The political leaders come up with their policy goal, what they want to achieve.
And then they tell the career civil servants and foreign service officers and military people, “This is what we want to get at the negotiating table. How do we do that?”
And then the experts say, “Oh, we do this and we do that, and we’ll assign staff to work it out. We’ll work with our Russian counterparts and try to narrow the issues down, and we’ll come up with numbers and maps.”
With all the replacement of personnel since the inauguration, the US not only has a new group of political appointees – including some, like Marco Rubio, who, generally speaking, know what they’re doing in terms of national security – but also many who don’t know what they’re doing.
They’ve also fired the senior level of civil servants and foreign service officers, and a lot of the mid-levels are leaving, so that expertise isn’t there. That’s a real problem. The US national security establishment is increasingly being run by the B team – at best.
How will this be a problem when Trump meets Putin?
You have two leaders of two big countries like this, they usually don’t meet on a few days’ notice. It would have to be a real crisis. This meeting could happen two or three weeks from now as easily as it could this week.
And if that happened, you would have a chance to prepare. You’d have a chance to get all kinds of documents in front of the American participants. You would meet with your Russian counterparts.
You’d meet with Ukrainian counterparts, maybe some of the Western European countries. And when the two sides sat down at the table, it would be very professional. They would have very similar briefing papers in front of them. The issues would be narrowed down.
None of that’s going to happen in Alaska. It’s going to be two political leaders meeting and deciding things, often driven by political considerations, but without any real idea of whether they can really be implemented or how they could be implemented.
Could a peace deal possibly be enforced?
Again, the situation is kind of haunted by the West never enforcing security guarantees promised in 1994. So I’m not sure how well this could be enforced.
Historically, Russia and Ukraine were always linked up, and that’s the problem. What’s Putin’s bottom line? Would he give up Crimea? No. Would he give up the part of eastern Ukraine that de facto had been taken over by Russia before this war even started? Probably not. Would he give up what they’ve gained since then? OK, maybe.
Then let’s put ourselves in Ukraine’s shoes. Will they want to give up Crimea? They say, “No.” Do they want to give up any of the eastern part of the country? They say, “No.”
I’m curious what your colleagues in the diplomatic world are saying about this upcoming meeting.
People who understand the process of diplomacy think that this is very amateurish and is unlikely to yield real results that are enforceable. It will yield some kind of statement and a photo of Trump and Putin shaking hands.
There will be people who believe that this will solve the problem. It won’t.
Donald Heflin is executive director of the Edward R Murrow Center and Senior Fellow of Diplomatic Practice, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Trump will say, “We had a good conversation.” Putin will smile and be noncommittal. And the experts will say, “I wonder what he meant by that”?
To be complete and accurate for your readers French Foreign Minister Edouard Deladier was at the table with Chamberlain and he too agreed the pact on France’s behalf. He expected to be shunned on his return home but like Chamberlain both were deliriously received by the public !
The fact that the author sees no point in this meeting doesn’t necessarily mean that it doesn’t. Now comparing Putin to Hitler falls under the catergory #PropagandaForEurope.
War will only stop if Putin wills it. I hope he does, Ukrainians are considered a disposable people by the EU, whereas Russian blood should be regarded as precious to Putin. He’s already proven Russia is a indomitable power, now it’s time to join China and reap the benefits of a world fractured by Trump.
‘should’ is the operative word. Putin obviously does not regard peoples’ lives as precious. Only his own power.
Funny how Taco bullies EU etc and they all came round.
Face it, no one trusts or likes the Tiddly Winks.
Big Loser, F 🖕your tiddey winks, azzz wh@le
Russians are just as disposable. There are 3 real scenarios –
#1 war just keeps on as it is (US benefits from arms sale, LNG, etc, Russia keeps peddling its resources via India, etc, Europe keeps stagnating, moving out is energy-dependent businesses and financing a war);
#2 – some poor, temporary form of peace. Europe will hold its sanctions and have to be scared of that war would continue so they’d buy more US weapons. Triumph (Nobel size) for Trump, but can he pull this off?
#3 – unlikely, but suppose that Trump announces full-throttle sanctions on Russia – what does Putin have to lose using tactical ballistics on Western Ukraine to stop reinforcements? No nobel peace price for Trump here.
PS – “Putin’s will” has really nothing to do with how things go. Giving away lands that cost hundred thousands lives is a political suicide even for him.
Things may well turn out as the author says, but peddling speculation as certainty is indeed journalism of the poorest standard.
That’s what journos do in the West. In China they repeat the party line.
Shallow.
Germany appeared to be rising, while Russia is finished.
Large military, large and Putinkim more like. Winnie Xi Pooh and FatboyKim also have large waistlines, but their weapons are small.
Russia is testing Burevestnik nuclear cruise missile.
About as effective as the submarine Moskau?
Putin and Trump look so cute together in silhouette. Is that you, that little shadow under your hero’s legs?
You seem to know intimately the below-the-waistline areas of Xi and Kim. Hope you brushed your teeth after,
They haven’t seen their winkas in a long time
Russia was finished 30 years ago, they said. Now it sounds kinda stupid… In Russia they have nationalist fools predicting collapse of the Dollar and the US for decades now too.
No Leopard tanks,hmar missiles, patriots systems or F16 made any difference. The west trowed all he had to Russia including several hundred thousant very motivated ukranian troops. No joy!
Russia went controling 16.350 km2 in 2022 to 115.000 km2 and counting.
This meeting is about saving face…
And 1m dead and injured Russians and counting. Very small gains.
Ukraine lost an área the size of Boulder Colorado every second day for the last 3 years.
Very smal gains…
throwed ? Threw? Comrade the CCP need to teach you Engrish !
Ouch! Touché….
But : **”CCP” needs”** (third-person singular).
Trump cannot negotiate his way out of a plastic bag. Western elites are simply too deluded. You cannot take them seriously until they change their ideology and prove to us that they have goodwill.
Like the peace between Azeri & Armenia. Another 2 countries who have left Russia’s orbit.
Actually Munich agreement was about UK pushing Germany eastwards to destroy Soviet Union and to instigate a German-Soviet war.
What the writer wrote is British fake propaganda.
But the unconditional surrender that the allies insisted on, destroyed Germany and allowed Russia to take Middle Europe.
Start making sense.
What the F are you talking about? I am talking about 1938 Munich.
Oh dear. Educate yourself. The US/UK/Russ insisted on Germany surrendering, and then they would dictate terms.
This is hardly the actions of folks who wanted to destroy Russia
You don’t have a clue, you idiot.
See my comments at 196, 205, 263, 266, 343, 346, 383, 388, 405, 437, 488, 518, 535 here for more on origins of WWII:
unz . com / runz / american-pravda-charles-a-lindbergh-and-the-america-first-movement /
Even idiots write article
Goes for posters too !
Takes one to recognize others…
We are in agreement !
Ohhh baby killer aren’t too much excited today.
Did you get what wanted? Below the waste? Was it satisfying ?
Stupid chicken
Go back to your handler and ask him to educate you more
I believe the word we are reaching for is “equate” – not “compare.”