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European leaders are to speak to Donald Trump on Monday to help the US president “prepare” for his planned call with Vladimir Putin in what could be a pivotal week for stalled Ukraine peace talks.
Trump’s administration has cast his call with the Russian president, their first publicly disclosed encounter in almost three months, as a critical moment to establish concrete parameters for a lasting settlement to the war.
Long worried that the US president might cut a deal with the Kremlin that would overlook Ukraine’s interests, Europe’s leaders have at the same time been racing to influence Trump’s thinking ahead of the talks.
German chancellor Friedrich Merz said he would join the French President Emmanuel Macron and Sir Keir Starmer, the UK prime minister, on Monday for their second call with Trump since Friday.
“We can only hope that there will be further progress,” said Merz, who along with London and Paris has been arguing to raise pressure on Moscow. “My firm impression is that both the Europeans and the Americans are determined to work together, but now also purposefully, to ensure that this terrible war ends soon.”
During a flurry of diplomacy over the past 10 days, Putin has given little ground, refusing to engage on terms set by others and spurning a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Turkey last week despite proposing talks between the two sides.
While the US administration has grown more impatient with Russia, Trump’s team were guarded in their criticisms of Putin. Trump said on Friday that he arranged the direct call with Putin because he always felt a peace deal was not possible “without me”. Trump is expected to speak to Zelenskyy after his call with the Kremlin.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy met JD Vance in Rome on Sunday in what the Ukraine president described as a ‘good meeting’. © Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout/AFP/Getty Images
Zelenskyy on Sunday met in Rome with US Vice-President JD Vance, the first encounter between the two men since their blow-up in the White House in February. Zelenskyy called it a “good meeting” and said it included US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
“We discussed the negotiations in Istanbul, where the Russians sent a low-level delegation with no decision-making authority,” Zelenskyy said. “I reaffirmed Ukraine’s readiness for real diplomacy and stressed the importance of a full and unconditional ceasefire as soon as possible.”
Rubio has said that his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov told him on Saturday that Moscow would prepare a document “outlining their requirements for a ceasefire that would then lead to broader negotiations”.
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“We don’t want to be involved in this process of just endless talks, there has to be some progress, some movement forward,” he said in an interview with CBS.
If a document is agreed “in the next few days” where both sides show willingness to make concessions “then I think we can feel good about continuing to remain engaged”. “If, on the other hand, what we see is not very productive, perhaps we’ll have a different assessment,” he said.
Kyiv and its European allies are fearful that if the Trump administration walks away from peace talks it would also stop or reduce US military support to Ukraine, handing a further battlefield advantage to Moscow.
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Zelenskyy has been closely co-ordinating with European leaders and joined their call with Trump on Friday. During a visit to Rome on Sunday, Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, said the coming week “will be crucial” in attempting to push forward the peace process.
Signalling its intent to weaken Ukraine before any peace talks, Russia carried out its largest drone attack on Ukraine of the war over the weekend, launching 273 explosive-laden drones and decoys, according to the Ukrainian Air Force.
Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, GUR, also warned on Sunday that Russia intends to conduct a training launch of an RS-24 “Yars” intercontinental ballistic missile during the night of May 19.
The agency said the launch is meant to “intimidate Ukraine” and that the missile would be equipped with a training warhead. It said the missile has a range of 10,000km and would be launched from a site in Russia’s Sverdlovsk region, near the Ural Mountains.
Additional reporting: Barbara Moens in Brussels and Laura Pitel in Berlin
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