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Half-baked Alaskan summit will be a Ukrainian carve-up
The Independent
|August 13, 2025
Sam Kiley looks at the art of the deal versus the art of the steal, ahead of Friday's pivotal meeting on the Ukraine war
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Donald Trump is set to meet with Vladimir Putin in Alaska in what the US president has said may be little more than a “look see” but in truth may prove to be a meeting that defines Europe, and global security, for decades.
From Trump’s perspective, the summit may be part of his drive for a Nobel Peace Prize by ending Putin's war against Ukraine using the “art of the deal”. Putin, however, is likely to prevail and his agenda is the art of the steal – specifically a massive grab of his neighbour's land.
Missing from the meeting is the country most affected – Ukraine itself. Led by Volodymyr Zelensky, it has held out against the Kremlin for 11 years.
Trump, Putin, and many others (including parts of the media) seem to think that Ukraine's future can be decided by the two nuclear powers and then presented to Kyiv as a done deal.
Europe, the region most affected by what happens in Ukraine, has worked hard to underline that that is neither true nor sensible – while simultaneously keeping the mercurial Us president “on side” when every indication is that he's firmly in Russia's camp.
Here's how things now stand.
Background
In 1994, Ukraine gave up its nuclear arsenal in return for written guarantees from Russia, the US and the UK to respect Ukrainian sovereignty.
In 2014, Russia ignored those guarantees and invaded the Crimean Peninsula, claiming the land for itself and the right to protect Russian-speaking people in eastern Ukraine.
Russia annexed Crimea illegally, sponsoring “rebels” and sending troops into eastern Ukraine to capture large areas of Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts (provinces). The US, Europe and the UK did nothing to help or protect Ukraine, even banning lethal arms exports to the embattled nation.
This story is from the August 13, 2025 edition of The Independent.
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