Submitted from the US President arrives on Friday Moscow for meeting with Russian President
The United States will demand from Russia to accept Ukraine’s right to have its own army and a defense industry. This seems to be the first favorable requirement to Kiev, when the details of the Trump administration’s peace proposal are beginning to be known.
According to, which cites sources with knowledge of the negotiations, this should be one of the topics on the table during the meeting on Friday between the president of the president of the United States and the president of Russia.
Steve Witkoff is expected in Moscow for a meeting with Vladimir Putin and, after all, will not only be pleasant proposals for Kremlin to be under discussion.
This requirement meets what Kiev intends from the beginning, but also what the European allies defend. On the contrary, it requires Vladimir Putin to give up one of its main goals: a demilitarized Ukraine.
This after being known that the United States has three favorable requirements for Russia: a ceasefire with the current front lines, the non-adherence of Ukraine to the NATO and the Ukrainian recognition that Crimea is part of the Russian Federation.
This is thus a new sign that the Trump administration is also looking for some concessions on the Kremlin side, on a day when the US President directly asked Vladimir Putin through the social network, which “stops” attacks like this dawn.
And there is yet another news that goes against Russia, although it may not necessarily go to Ukraine. The United States want the Zaporizehzia Nuclear Center, the largest in Europe, to return to the Ukrainian side, which does not totally mean that it benefits Kiev.
This is because the United States want to include virtually all Ukraine’s energy infrastructure in its mineral agreement. The control of the nuclear central would thus be administered by Washington, DC.
There is also a third concession that favors Ukraine. The United States intend Kiev to be able to pass over the Dniepre River, then decisive in the division of regions such as Kherson, in confirmation of what had already been said by the US Vice President JD Vance.
This would force Vladimir Putin to give part of the territory conquered, and the president of Russia complains that Lugansk, Donetsk, Zaporizehzia and Kherson are Russian territory, namely after the illegal referendum held in 2022.
All of this at a time when Donald Trump goes, here and there, criticizing both leaders, though more incisively compared to Volodymyr Zelensky. It seems to be as the White House spokesman said: “The president is losing his patience.”