Trump backs Putin’s Ukraine land plan: Source, reports

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President Donald Trump reaches for a handshake with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, on Aug 15.

President Donald Trump reaching for a handshake with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, on Aug 15.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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- US President Donald Trump backs a Russian proposal for Moscow to take full control of two Ukrainian regions and freeze the front line in two others which Moscow only partially controls, a source told AFP.

The source with knowledge of the matter said Russian President Vladimir Putin “de facto demands that Ukraine leave Donbas”, an area consisting of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions in eastern Ukraine.

“Trump is inclined to support it,” the source said.

Mr Trump on Aug 17 spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders about

his talks on Aug 15

with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“The Ukrainian President refused to leave Donbas,” the source said.

Mr Zelensky has rejected any territorial concessions, saying he is bound by Ukraine’s Constitution.

But he has not ruled out discussing the issue at a trilateral meeting with Mr Trump and Mr Putin.

The New York Times also cited two senior European officials saying Mr Trump supported Mr Putin’s plan “to end the war in Ukraine by ceding unconquered territory to the Russian invaders, rather than try for a ceasefire”.

The Financial Times reported that Mr Putin had told Mr Trump that “he could freeze the rest of the front line if his core demands were met” and the message had been relayed directly by Mr Trump in his call on Aug 16.

AFP’s source said US officials had said that if Russia’s demands were met then “Putin would not continue the offensive in the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions so there would be a kind of freeze there”.

“But de facto it all will depend on Putin’s word of honour,” the source said.

Several months into its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russia in September 2022 claimed to have annexed all four Ukrainian regions – even though its troops still do not fully control any of them.

Russian forces now occupy almost all of the Luhansk region and most of the Donetsk region, including their regional capitals.

That is not the case for Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, where the main hubs are still under Ukrainian control.

Russia in 2014 invaded and later claimed to have annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine. AFP

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