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Zelenskiy to meet Trump in Florida for talks on Ukraine peace plan

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and U.S. President Donald Trump will meet in Florida on Sunday to hammer out a plan ​to end the war in Ukraine, but face major differences on crucial issues and ‍provocations from Russian air attacks.

Russia struck Kyiv and other parts of war-torn Ukraine with hundreds of missiles and drones on Saturday, knocking out power and heat in parts of the capital. Zelensky called it Russia’s response to the ongoing U.S.-brokered peace efforts.

Zelensky has told journalists that he plans to discuss the fate of eastern Ukraine’s contested Donbas region during ‍the meeting ​at Trump’s Florida residence, as well as the future of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and other topics.

The Ukrainian president and his delegation arrived in Florida late on Saturday, Ukraine’s Deputy Foreign Minister Serhiy Kyslytsya said on X.

“Good evening, Florida!” Kyslytsya wrote, accompanying the post with a photo of an aircraft bearing the U.S. president’s surname on the fuselage.

Russia claims more battlefield advances

Moscow has repeatedly insisted that Ukraine yield all of the Donbas, even areas ⁠still under Kyiv’s control, and Russian officials have objected to other parts of the latest proposal, sparking doubts about whether Russian President Vladimir Putin would accept whatever Sunday’s talks might produce.

Putin said on Saturday that Moscow would continue waging its war if Kyiv did not seek a quick peace. Russia has steadily advanced on the battlefield in recent weeks and months, claiming control over several more settlements on Sunday.

The Ukrainian president told Axios on Friday he still hopes to soften a U.S. proposal for Ukrainian forces to withdraw completely from the Donbas. Failing that, Zelenskiy said the entire 20-point plan, the result of weeks of negotiations, should be put to ‌a referendum vote.

Axios said U.S. officials viewed Zelenskiy’s willingness ‍to hold a referendum as a major step forward and a sign that he was no longer ruling out territorial concessions, although he said Russia would need to agree to a ‍60-day ceasefire to allow Ukraine to prepare for and hold such a vote.

A recent poll suggests that ‌Ukrainian voters may also reject the plan.

Kyiv residents interviewed by Reuters on Sunday expressed a mix of hope and skepticism over the talks.

“I want for this ⁠to be over – but this is what our side wishes for,” said Stanyslav, a 44-year-old soldier who declined to provide his last name. “We don’t have any leverage in this situation.”

Zelenskiy’s in-person meeting with Trump, scheduled for 1 p.m. (1800 GMT), follows ​weeks of diplomatic efforts. European allies, while at times cut out of the loop, have stepped up efforts to sketch out the contours of a post-war security guarantee for Kyiv that would be supported by the United States.

Writing on X ahead of talks, Zelenskiy said that “a lot can be decided before the New Year” but that peace depended on strong support from Kyiv’s partners.

Sticking points over territory

Kyiv and Washington have agreed on many ⁠issues, and Zelensky said on Friday that the 20-point plan was 90% finished. But the issue of what territory, if any, will be ceded to Russia remains unresolved.

While Moscow insists on getting all ​of the Donbas, Kyiv wants the map frozen at current battle lines.

The United States, seeking a compromise, has proposed a free economic zone if Ukraine leaves the area, although it remains unclear how that zone would function in practical terms.

Zelensky, whose past meetings with Trump have not always gone smoothly, worries along with his European allies that Trump could sell out Ukraine and leave European powers to foot the bill for supporting a devastated nation, after Russian forces took 12 to 17 square kilometres of its territory per day in 2025.

Russia ​controls all of Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, and since its invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago has taken control of about 12% of its territory, including about 90% of Donbas, 75% of the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, and slivers of the Kharkiv, Sumy, Mykolaiv and Dnipropetrovsk regions, according to Russian estimates.

Putin said on December 19 that he thought a peace deal should be based on conditions he set out in 2024: Ukraine withdrawing from all of the Donbas, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, and Kyiv officially renouncing its aim to join NATO.

Ukrainian officials and European leaders view the war as an imperial-style land grab by Moscow and have warned that if Russia gets its way with Ukraine, it will one day attack ⁠NATO members.

The 20-point plan was spun off from a Russian-led 28-point plan, which emerged from talks between U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and Russian special ⁠envoy Kirill Dmitriev, and which became public in November.

Subsequent talks between Ukrainian officials and U.S. negotiators have produced the more Kyiv-friendly 20-point plan.

Canada, European allies rally around Kyiv

Saturday’s air attacks show that Putin does not want ‌peace, Zelensky said to reporters after arriving in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he met with Prime Minister Mark Carney.

In a brief statement with Zelensky by his side, Carney said peace “requires a willing Russia.”

“The barbarism that we saw overnight — the attack on Kyiv — shows just how important it is that we stand with Ukraine in this difficult time,” Carney said, pledging $2.5-billion in additional economic aid to Ukraine.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who spoke with Zelensky along with other European leaders on Saturday, said on X that their shared objective remained “a just and lasting peace” that preserved Ukraine’s sovereignty ‌and territorial integrity, while strengthening the country’s security and defense capabilities.

Zelensky said he would speak with European leaders again after his meeting with Trump.

By ANDREA SHALAL and GRAM SLATTERY/Reuters

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