Trump and Zelenskyy hold phone call after senior US official defends Putin – live

Trump and Zelenskyy hold phone call after senior US official defends Putin – live


Trump-Zelenskyy call under way

The Trump-Zelenskyy call is now under way, both sides confirmed.

Dan Scavino, White House deputy chief of staff, said in a social media post:

Happening Now—President Trump is in the Oval Office on a call with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy’s spokesperson Sergiy Nykyforov also told reporters that the president was “having a conversation by telephone with US President Donald Trump,” AFP reported.

Share

Key events

No plans for Ukraine to take part in Riyadh US-Russia talks, Zelenskyy’s aide says

Trump and Zelenskyy hold phone call after senior US official defends Putin – live

Shaun Walker

in Kyiv

I sat down in Kyiv with Mykhailo Podolyak, an aide to President Zelenskyy.

He said that the talks planned for Sunday in Saudi Arabia are expected to be bilateral between the US and Russia, and said there were no plans for Ukraine to take part, though he conceded that we would have to wait for the results of a Trump-Zelenskyy call later to know when further talks involving Ukraine will take place.

Of the call, he said:

“The president wants to understand the contents of this call fully from Trump. The main thing is to understand how Trump sees the results of his call with Putin, and to draw conclusions from that.”

Reflecting on the last discussion between Trump and Zelenskyy, the disastrous meeting in the White House, he said:

“It was a fairly emotional conversation in the Oval Office, and it showed that contradictions had built up.

These contradictions were then put on the negotiating table in Saudi Arabia, and very quickly formal and informal communications were made.

The administrations created negotiating teams and we quickly moved to discussing concrete issues around these contradictions and found a synchronised position.”

On the Kremlin statement that Putin had said the West should cease all western military support and intelligence sharing to Ukraine before a ceasefire could be agreed, he said:

“It’s a very strange demand, of course. He’s saying, ‘We want you to be disarmed and then we can keep on fighting the war’. That’s what it sounds like…

He wants Ukraine to give up its army, to give up security guarantees, to give up its right to be in alliances, and to give up on various territories.

This is what he’s been fighting for three years, and he couldn’t do it militarily… And now that’s what he wants from the negotiations process.”

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak, pictured in 2022. Photograph: Christopher Cherry/The Guardian
Share


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *