Poging GOUD - Vrij

No deal, no peace but just by turning up, Putin proves the winner in Alaska

The Observer

|

August 17, 2025

The Russian leader has tightened his grip on power at home by avoiding an end to the war in Ukraine

- Giles Whittell

En route to Alaska, Vladimir Putin stopped at a fish oil plant in what used to be the capital of Stalin's Siberian gulag. Putin packed in four other local visits then flew on to attend to US-Russia relations, his spokesman said, almost as if they were an afterthought.

They were anything but. For more than eight months, the Kremlin has planned meticulously to resolve a potentially disastrous tension between the need to accommodate a new US president determined to garland himself in the laurels of a peacemaker and the need to go on fighting until Putin can claim victory in Ukraine. So far, he has succeeded on both fronts.

Putin and Donald Trump have been speaking on the phone on average once a month since January. In February, their foreign ministers met in Riyadh to agree on the Arctic and energy as potential areas of cooperation. In April, Kirill Dmitriev, head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund and a key go-between with the new US administration, flew to Washington for private talks with Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy.

Throughout, according to the author Simon Shuster, Trump was in touch with the Kremlin via a second and more surprising - interlocutor, Alexander Lukashenko, the president of Belarus.

It was to Lukashenko often called "Europe's last dictator" - that Trump placed one of his final calls on Friday before touching down outside Anchorage at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson. Ostensibly, the point of the call was to thank his counterpart for releasing 16 political prisoners. For Lukashenko, the point, as ever, was to insist Putin was serious about peace, however much his drone and rocket attacks on Ukraine suggested otherwise.

The Observer

Dit verhaal komt uit de August 17, 2025-editie van The Observer.

Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.

Bent u al abonnee?

MEER VERHALEN VAN The Observer

The Observer

Reeves needs to call time on dodgy stats

On Friday, the latest retail sales numbers for the British economy were due to be published.

time to read

1 min

August 24, 2025

The Observer

Lucy Connolly isn't a hero. Justice doesn't mean a verdict you approve of Kenan Malik

Lionising a woman who pleaded guilty to stirring up racial hatred is a moral failure by the right

time to read

4 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

We can't shrink from Palestine Action

There is one part of the UK where terrorist flags and placards have rarely been off the news.

time to read

3 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Politically acceptable UK racism is on the rise. And, worse, this is under 'progressive' Labour rule

As I wrote these words last autumn: \"We have made progress... even though that progress remains fragile and insufficient\", little did I realise just how right I was.

time to read

3 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

We want peace – but not on Putin's terms, Ukrainians say

Weary of Russia's war, the citizens of Ukraine are nevertheless wary of a settlement that might give away too much, or that doesn't carry a security guarantee, reports Liz Cookman in Kyiv

time to read

4 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

Take tougher line on asylum human rights, judges told

Labour will order judges to reinterpret parts of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) early next month as the government grapples with the asylum appeals backlog that has sparked the current crisis.

time to read

2 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

Musk flies a drone fleet over the capital. (Luckily, it's not Elon)

News that a Musk-owned fleet of drones is flying over London this weekend might be enough to prompt fears of a new Blitz.

time to read

1 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

Ganges river dolphin

The dark is my delight.

time to read

2 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

Jerome Powell

If anyone can stand up to Trump, it's the affable and decisive Fed chair, writes Matthew Bishop

time to read

4 mins

August 24, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

'We're hiding some very dirty secrets'. The scandal of fake foreign honey

An investigation by Jon Ungoed-Thomas reveals the worldwide honey fraud that begins in China and ends with allegations of adulterated jars on UK supermarkets shelves

time to read

5 mins

August 24, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size