Why Putin has not shifted his position on Ukraine - and what that means for Trump as he prepares to meet Zelenskyy
Amid the forward momentum, it's telling that Trump touched the brakes.
Amid the forward momentum, it's telling that Trump touched the brakes.
"He doesn't have anything until I approve it," is how he trailed Volodymyr Zelenskyy's upcoming visit to Mar-a-Lago.
The Ukrainian leader has spoken of a peace plan that's "90% ready" but, as the guest markets its potential, the host isn't buying - yet, at least.
Any breakthrough breaks down on Russian refusal and Donald Trump needs no reminding - it's the evergreen reality that has undermined peace efforts and tested his diplomatic muscle with Moscow, often with unflattering results.
'Tough night' after Ukraine hit by Russia
Zelenskyy and coalition allies have talked him back from the brink - a sell-out, as they saw it, when the US floated a 28-point plan that read like a Russian wish list.
The 20-point version crafted in Kyiv includes compromise and Zelenskyy talks of a "good conversation" with Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner, in teeing up a tete-a-tete with the man himself.
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So far, so promising - but relative silence from Moscow screams otherwise.
Russian officials have made some optimistic noises but they have been measured and minimal. Vladimir Putin has barely shifted from his original position on Ukraine and there's limited expectation that will change this weekend.
Why would it?
This is a Russian leader basking in the bonhomie of a president reshaping US relations to Moscow's advantage and he senses opportunity to pursue territorial ambitions. Antagonism between the US and European allies is but another benefit to Putin of things as they are.