An agreement providing for the concession or at least the consolidation of the control of its territories that have occupied or aimed at “freeing” the conflict is expected to sign during their meeting in the coming days, according to a report by the Bloomberg agency.
According to the report, citing sources with knowledge of discussions, American and Russian officials are working to reach an agreement on Ukrainian territories, in view of the scheduled summit between Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin.
According to the agency’s report, the US is working to secure the consent of Ukraine and its European allies on the deal, but it is not certain that they will achieve their goal.
As part of the agreement, Russia will stop its attack on the areas of Hersona and Zaporizia along the current battle lines, sources said, although as the terms and plans of the agreement said they could change, as discussions are ongoing.
It is not clear whether Moscow is willing to grant territories currently owned and including the Zaporizia nuclear station, the largest in Europe.
The agreement is essentially aimed at freezing war and preparing a roadmap for a ceasefire and technical talks for a definitive peace agreement, sources said. The US had previously pressed Russia to agree first on an unconditional ceasefire to create space for negotiations aimed at ending the war.
Polish medium reveals the Witkov proposals at the Moscow meeting
According to the OneT report. Pl, which even attracted the interest of Russian media in Telegram, during a Putin-Witkov meeting in Moscow in recent days by Donald Trump’s special envoy, presented some suggestions that could be included in the deal. According to OneT, US proposals included:
- cease fire in Ukraine, not peace agreement
- de facto recognition of Russian profits on the ground (but with the finalization of their status after 49 or 99 years),
- The removal of most sanctions imposed on Russia and, in the long run, the return to energy cooperation, namely imports of Russian gas and oil.
- The package did not guarantee NATO’s non -extensive warranty, which the Russians are consistently demanding.