After a two-hour phone call with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on May 19, US president Donald Trump took to social media to declare that Russia and Ukraine will “immediately start negotiations” towards a ceasefire and an end to the war. He did add, however, that the conditions for peace “will be negotiated between the two parties, as it can only be.”
With the Vatican “very interested in hosting the negotiations,” according to Trump, and with European leaders duly informed, it seems clear that the US has effectively abandoned its stalled mediation efforts to end the war in Ukraine.
It was always a possibility that Trump could walk away from the war, despite previous claims he could end it in 24 hours. This only became more likely on May 16, when the first face-to-face negotiations between Ukraine and Russia for more than three years predictably ended without a ceasefire agreement.
When Trump announced shortly afterward that he would be speaking to his Russian and Ukrainian counterparts by phone a few days later, he effectively mounted the beginning of a rearguard action. This was further underlined when, shortly before the Trump-Putin call, Vice-President JD Vance, explicitly told reporters that the US could end its shuttle diplomacy.
The meager outcomes of the talks between Russia and Ukraine – as well as between Trump and Putin – are not surprising. Russia is clearly not ready for any concessions yet. It keeps insisting that Ukraine accept its maximalist demands of territorial concessions and future neutrality.
Putin also continues to slow-walk any negotiations. After his call with Trump, he reportedly said that “Russia will offer, and is ready to work with Ukraine on a memorandum on, a possible future peace agreement,” including “a possible ceasefire for a certain period of time, should relevant agreements be reached.”
The lack of urgency on Russia’s part to end the fighting and, in fact, the Kremlin’s ability and willingness to continue the war were emphasized the day before the Trump-Putin call. Russia carried out its largest drone attack against Ukraine so far in the war, targeting several regions including Kyiv.
There has been no let-up in the fighting since. And the fact that Putin spoke to Trump while visiting a music school in the southern Russian city of Sochi does not suggest that a ceasefire in Ukraine is high on the Russian leader’s priority list.
A large part of the Kremlin’s calculation seems to be its desire to strike a grand bargain with the White House on a broader reset of relations between the US and Russia. It is signaling clearly that this is more important than the war in Ukraine and might even happen without the fighting there ending.
This also appears to be driving thinking in Washington. Trump foreshadowed an improvement in bilateral relations by describing the “tone and spirit” of his conversation with Putin as “excellent.” He also seemed pleased about the prospects of “large-scale trade” with Russia.
Abandoning European allies
Trump is on record as saying that there would be no progress toward peace in Ukraine until he and Putin got together. But it is worth bearing mind that very little movement towards a ceasefire in Ukraine – let alone a peace agreement – occurred after the last phone call between the two presidents in February.
Part of this lack of progress has been Trump’s reluctance to put any real pressure on Putin. And despite agreement in Brussels and preparations in Washington for an escalation in sanctions against Russia, it is unlikely that Trump will change his approach.
In this context, the sequence in which the calls occurred is telling. Trump and Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, had a short call before Trump spoke with Putin. Zelensky said he told Trump not to make decisions about Ukraine “without us.”
But rather than presenting Putin with a clear ultimatum to accept a ceasefire, Trump apparently discussed future relations with Putin at great length before informing Zelensky and key European allies that the war in Ukraine is now solely their problem to solve.
This has certainly raised justifiable fears in Kyiv and European capitals that, for the sake of a reset with Russia, the US might yet completely abandon its allies across the Atlantic.
However, if a reset with Russia at any cost really is Trump’s strategy, it is bound to fail. As much as Putin seems willing to continue with his aggression against Ukraine, Zelensky is as unwilling to surrender. Putin can rely on China’s continued backing while Zelensky can count on support from Europe.
Supporting Russia’s war in Ukraine is essential for China to keep Moscow on side in its rivalry with the US. And for Europe, supporting Ukraine has become an existential question of deterring and containing a revisionist Russia hell-bent on restoring a Soviet-style sphere of influence in central and eastern Europe.
In a world that has been in flux since Trump’s return to the White House, these are some of the emerging constants. And they make a US-Russia reset highly improbable.
Even if it were to happen, it would not strengthen Washington’s position with Beijing. Walking away from Ukraine and Europe now will deprive the US of the very allies it will need in the long term to prevail in its rivalry with China.
By abandoning his mediation between Moscow and Kyiv, Trump may have broken the deadlock in his efforts to achieve a reset with Russia. But getting this deal over the line will be a pyrrhic victory.
Stefan Wolff is a professor of international security at the University of Birmingham.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

trump is a blowhard nothing more . he likes to boast about his imaginary abilities to pander to his cult.
It was always about PR and narrative control above substance and truth. This has predated Trump and will outlast Trump. Its how the Western elites roll. Just look at all the big beautiful announcements, and big fake and utterly pointless Ukrainian offensives that led to nowhere, just to grab headlines and goldfish memories in England and the EU.
And don’t you wish you had won 1st prize in the lottery of life.
Your narcissistic drivel is symptomatic of new world evangelism. You hail from a crude, unsophisticated anti-culture that thinks everybody worships the ground you walk on. In reality, your fork-tongued ways are typical of many Westerners who were raised on a diet of relentlessly degenerate American Jewish anti-culture. Westerners are the most gullible and naive of the lot because they have been lied to by the CIA machine since WW2 about all sorts of complexes. Now we are dismantling the machinery and exposing you lot for what you truly are.
Shiver me timbers!
You must have had a really bad time studying in the US and working in Aus. Bullied much ?
Face the facts, we won 1st prize in today’s world.
The US is a direct participant to the conflict against Russia AND trying to be a mediator at the same time? This is some clown show for sure. Trump is a fake messiah, I’m sorry for the disappointment. He was never in the business of real peace. For if he was, he would have cut all arms to Ukraine and Israel on day 1. But he didn’t, – he ramped them up, while “talking peace” with Russia and Iran. I guess Western readership must be THAT dumb afterall. Its all fake.
Yup, we like it. Fewer Palys and Russians is no bad thing. Next thing use Jap, SK and Taiwan to cull the Chinese.
Celebrating genocide while pretending to be virtuous. That’s a typical Western dummy for you.
Show me a comment when I have pretended to be virtuous?
I’m a cynic, I laugh at people who believe a slaving pedo (Aisha was 9) rode to heaven on a winged camel (or was it a goat?).
I also ridicule people who get on the www and root for a fat Winnie Xi Pooh to gaol Uighurs and Tibetans.
Neither Russia’s demographics, military force structure nor economy suggest any intent to conquer Europe. The Soviet Union ended in 1991, as NATO also should have. Neocons remain stuck in a world that hasn’t existed for almost 35 years.
Everything they touch they ruin – Libya, Syria, Iraq, and now Ukraine. And not a single apology to their victims or the families of US servicemen who died in the Feith-Nuland-Kagan project.
If you want to talk Grand Strategy, look no further than the Mackinder Doctrine. By driving Russia closer to China, the neocons have created the foundation for a World Island hegemon. The US should have partnered with Russia, and not tried to dominate or shatter it. And the Nuland-Kagan clan should be tried for their crimes, with people from the nations they shattered serving as the jury.
The N u d e l m a n – K a h a n e moving geopolitical circus has been one hell of a ride
” the Nuland-Kagan clan should be tried for their crimes”
Don’t forget the fake African-American, Nobel Laureate Obama who was the orchestra conductor in all of this.
When the war ends, so does Putin’s life.