Putin agrees that US, Europe could offer NATO-style security guarantees to Ukraine, Trump envoy says
JILL COLVIN
Sun, August 17, 2025
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/us-envoy-says-putin-agreed-134023096.html?
NEW YORK (AP) — Russian leader Vladimir Putin agreed at his summit with President Donald Trump that the United States and its European
allies could offer
Ukraine a security guarantee resembling NATO’s collective defense mandate as
part of an eventual deal to end the war, a U.S. official said Sunday.
Trump envoy Steve Witkoff, who took part in the talks
Friday at a
military base in Alaska, said it “was the first time we had ever heard the
Russians agree to that” and called it “game-changing.”
“We were able to win the following concession: that
the United States could offer Article 5-like
protection,
which is one of the real reasons why Ukraine wants to be in NATO," Witkoff
told CNN's “State of the Union.”
Witkoff offered few details on how such an arrangement
would work. But it appeared to be a major shift
for Putin and could
serve as a workaround to his deep-seated objection to Ukraine’s potential NATO
membership, a step that Kyiv has long sought.
It was expected to be a key topic Monday as Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy and major
European leaders meet with Donald Trump at the White House to discuss ending the 3 1/2-year conflict.
“BIG PROGRESS ON RUSSIA,” Trump said Sunday on social
media. “STAY TUNED!”
On Sunday night, however, Trump seemed to put the onus
on Zelenskyy to agree to concessions.
“President Zelenskyy of Ukraine can end the war with
Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight,"
he wrote. "Remember how it started. No getting back Obama given Crimea (12
years ago, without a shot being fired!), and NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE.
Some things never change!!!"
Hammering out a plan for security guarantees
Article 5, the heart of the 32-member transatlantic military
alliance, says an armed attack against a member nation is considered an attack
against them all.
What needed to be hammered out at this week's talks
were the contours of any security guarantees, said Secretary of State Marco
Rubio, who also participated in the summit. Ukraine and European allies
have pushed the
U.S. to provide that
backstop in any peace agreement to deter future attacks by Moscow.
“How that’s constructed, what we call it, how it’s
built, what guarantees are built into it that are enforceable, that’s what
we’ll be talking about over the next few days with our partners," Rubio
said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
It was unclear, however, whether Trump had fully
committed to such a guarantee. Rubio said it would be “a huge concession."
The comments shed new light on what was discussed in
Alaska. Before Sunday, U.S. officials had offered few details even as both
Trump and Putin said their meeting was a success.
Witkoff also said Russia had agreed to enact a law
that it would not “go after any other European countries and violate their
sovereignty.”
“The Russians agreed on enshrining legislatively
language that would prevent them from — or that they would attest to not
attempting to take any more land from Ukraine after a peace deal, where they
would attest to not violating any European borders," he said on “Fox News
Sunday.”
Europe welcomes US openness to security guarantees
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen,
speaking in Brussels alongside Zelenskyy, applauded the news from the White
House as a European coalition looks to set
up a force to
police any future peace in Ukraine.
"We welcome President Trump’s willingness to
contribute to Article 5-like security guarantees for Ukraine and the ‘coalition
of the willing’ — including the European Union — is ready to do its share,” she
said.
Zelenskyy thanked the U.S. for signaling that it was
willing to support such guarantees but said much remained unclear.
“There are no details how it will work, and what
America’s role will be, Europe’s role will be and what the EU can do — and this
is our main task: We need security to work in practice like Article 5 of NATO,”
he said.
French President Emmanuel Macron said the substance of
security guarantees to secure any peace arrangement will be more important than
whether they are given an Article 5-type label.
At the White House meeting, Macron said European
leaders will ask the U.S. to back their plans to beef up Ukraine’s armed forces
with more training and equipment and deploy an allied force away from the front
lines.
“We’ll show this to our American colleagues, and we’ll
tell them, ‘Right, we’re ready to do this and that, what are you prepared to
do?’" Macron said. “That’s the security guarantee.”
Defending Trump's shift from ceasefire to peace deal
Witkoff and Rubio defended Trump’s decision to abandon
a push for a
ceasefire, arguing that the
Republican president had pivoted toward a full peace agreement because so much
progress had been made at the summit.
“We covered almost all the other issues necessary for
a peace deal,” Witkoff said, without elaborating. “We began to see some
moderation in the way they’re thinking about getting to a final peace deal.”
Rubio, appearing on several TV news shows Sunday, said
it would have been impossible to reach any truce Friday because Ukraine was not
there.
“Now, ultimately, if there isn’t a peace agreement, if
there isn’t an end of this war, the president’s been clear, there are going to
be consequences,” Rubio said on ABC’s “This Week.” “But we’re trying to avoid
that."
Rubio, who is also Trump's national security adviser,
also voiced caution on the progress made.
“We’re still a long ways off," he said. “We’re
not at the precipice of a peace agreement. We’re not at the edge of one. But I
do think progress was made towards one.”
Land swaps are on the table
Among the issues expected to dominate Monday’s
meeting: What concessions Zelenskyy might accept on territory.
In talks with
European allies after the summit, Trump said Putin reiterated that he wants the
Donetsk and Luhansk regions that
make up the Donbas, European officials said. It was unclear among those briefed
whether Trump sees that as acceptable.
Witkoff said the Russians have made clear they want
territory as determined by legal boundaries instead of the front lines where
territory has been seized.
“There is an important discussion to be had with
regard to Donetsk and what would happen there. And that discussion is going to
specifically be detailed on Monday,” he said.
Zelenskyy has rejected
Putin’s demands that
Ukraine give up the Donbas region, which Russia has failed to take completely,
as a condition for peace.
In Brussels, the Ukrainian leader said any talks
involving land must be based on current front lines, suggesting he will not
abandon land that Russia has not taken.
“The contact line is the best line for talking, and
the Europeans support this,” he said. “The constitution of Ukraine makes it
impossible, impossible to give up territory or trade land.”
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