Ukraine and Europe worry about being sidelined as Trump pushes direct
talks with Russia on war's end
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[February 17, 2025]
By AAMER MADHANI and MEG KINNARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s approach to ending Russia’s
war against Ukraine has left European allies and Ukrainian officials
worried they are being largely sidelined by the new U.S. administration
as Washington and Moscow plan direct negotiations.
With the three-year war grinding on, Trump is sending Secretary of State
Marco Rubio, national security adviser Mike Waltz and special envoy
Steve Witkoff to Saudi Arabia for talks with Russian counterparts,
according to a U.S. official who was not authorized to publicly discuss
the upcoming diplomatic efforts and spoke on condition of anonymity.
It is unclear to what extent Ukrainian or European officials will be
represented in discussions expected to take place in Riyadh in the
coming days. The official said the United States sees negotiations as
early-stage and fluid, and who ultimately ends up at the table could
change.
In an exchange with reporters Sunday, Trump said Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy “will be involved” in the negotiations. Trump
offered no further explanation.
The outreach comes after comments by top Trump advisers this past week,
including Vice President JD Vance, raised new concerns in Kyiv and other
European capitals that the Republican administration is intent on quick
resolution to the conflict with minimum input from Europe.
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“Decades of the old relationship between Europe and America are ending,”
Zelenskyy said in an address Saturday at the Munich Security Conference.
“From now on, things will be different, and Europe needs to adjust to
that.”
White House officials on Sunday pushed back against the notion that
Europe has been left out of the conversation. Trump spoke by phone in
recent days with French President Emmanuel Macron and is expected to
consult with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer this week.
During his visit to Munich and Paris, Vance held talks with Macron,
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte as well as Zelenskyy.
“Now they may not like some of this sequencing that is going on in these
negotiations but I have to push back on this ... notion that they aren’t
being consulted,” Waltz told “Fox News Sunday.”
"They absolutely are and at the end of the day, though, this is going to
be under President Trump’s leadership that we get this war to an end,’’
Waltz said.
Rubio, who was in Israel on Sunday before heading to Saudi Arabia, said
the U.S. is taking a careful approach as it reengages with Moscow after
the Biden administration's clampdown on contacts with the Kremlin
following the February 2022 invasion.
Trump spoke by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week and
the two leaders agreed to begin high-level talks on ending the war. They
were initially presented as two-way, but Trump later affirmed that
Ukraine would have a seat — though he did not say at what stage.
It was not immediately clear whether any Ukrainians would take part in
the upcoming Riyadh talks. A Ukrainian delegation was in Saudi Arabia on
Sunday to pave the way for a possible visit by Zelenskyy, according to
Ukraine's economy minister.
Starmer, the U.K. premier, wrote in an op-ed for Monday’s Daily
Telegraph that Ukraine must be involved in any negotiations on its
future “because anything less would accept Putin’s position that Ukraine
is not a real nation.
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Starmer also recalled the U.S. disastrous troop withdrawal from
Afghanistan under President Joe Biden. “We cannot have another situation
like Afghanistan, where the U.S. negotiated directly with the Taliban
and cut out the Afghan government,” Starmer said. “I feel sure that
President Trump will want to avoid this too.”
Trump on Sunday said he believed Putin is eager for a deal, while also
noting that Russia has historically impressed on the battlefield.
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President Donald Trump meets with Ukraine's President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy at Trump Tower, Sept. 27, 2024, in New York. (AP
Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson, File)
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“I think he wants to stop fighting,” Trump said. “They have a big
powerful machine, you understand that. they defeated Hitler and they
defeated Napoleon. They’ve been fighting a long time.”
Heather Conley, a deputy assistant secretary of state for Central
Europe during Republican President George W. Bush's administration,
said that with Trump's current approach to Moscow, the U.S. appears
to be “seeking to create a new international approach based on a
modern-day concert of great powers.”
“As in the 19th and early 20th centuries, it is only for the great
powers to decide the fate of nations and to take — either by
purchase or force — that which strengthens the great powers’
economic and security interests,” Conley said. “Each of these powers
posit claims or coerce countries in their respective regional
spheres of influence.”
There is some debate inside the administration about its developing
approach to Moscow, with some more in favor of a rapid rapprochement
and others wary that Putin is looking to fray the Euro-Atlantic
alliance as he aims to reclaim Russian status and wield greater
influence on the continent, according to the U.S. official who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
Trump said last week that he would like to see Russia rejoin what is
now the Group of Seven major economies. Russia was suspended from
the G8 after Moscow's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region.
“I’d like to have them back. I think it was a mistake to throw them
out. Look, it’s not a question of liking Russia or not liking
Russia,” Trump told reporters. “I think Putin would love to be
back.”
The anticipated Saudi talks also come amid tension over Trump's push
to get the Ukrainians to agree to give the U.S access to Ukraine's
deposits of rare earth minerals in exchange for some $66 billion in
military aid that Washington has provided Kyiv since the start of
the war, as well as future defense assistance.
Zelenskyy, who met on Friday with Vance and other senior U.S.
officials in Munich, said he had directed Ukraine's minister to not
sign off, at least for now. He said in an interview that the deal as
presented by the U.S. was too focused on American interests and did
not include security guarantees for Ukraine.
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The White House called Zelenskyy's decision “short-sighted," and
argued that a rare-earth's deal would tie Ukraine closer to the
United States — something that Moscow doesn't want to see.
European officials were also left unsettled by some of Vance's
remarks during his five-day visit to Paris and Munich last week in
which he lectured them on free speech and illegal migration on the
continent. He warned that they risk losing public support if they
don’t quickly change course.
Vance also met while in Munich with Alice Weidel, the co-leader and
candidate for chancellor of the far-right and anti-immigrant
Alternative for Germany party in this month's election.
Throughout Europe, officials are now looking to recalibrate their
approach in the face of the Trump administration's unfolding Ukraine
strategy.
Macron will convene top European countries in Paris on Monday for an
emergency “working meeting” to discuss next steps for Ukraine,
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said Sunday.
“A wind of unity is blowing over Europe, as we perhaps have not felt
since the COVID period," Barrot told public broadcaster France-Info.
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Kinnard reported from Chapin, South Carolina. Associated Press
writers Darlene Superville in West Palm Beach, Florida, and Jill
Lawless in London contributed to this report.
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