Putin agreed to security guarantee for Ukraine at Alaska summit: US envoy
Witkoff defended Trump's decision to abandon his push for Russian to agree to an immediate ceasefire.
PTI
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All other issues necessary for a peace deal were covered, said Witkoff. Photo: PTI
New York, 17 Aug
Special US envoy
Steve Witkoff said on Sunday that Russian leader Vladimir Putin agreed at his
summit with President Donald Trump to allow the US and European allies to offer
Ukraine a security guarantee resembling NATO's collective defence mandate as
part of an eventual deal to end the 3 1/2-year war.
“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," he said on CNN's State of the Union. Witkoff said it was the first
time he had heard Putin agree to that.
European Commission
President Ursula Von Der Leyen, speaking at a news conference in Brussels with
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said that "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.”
Witkoff, offering
some of the first details of what was discussed at Friday's summit in Alaska,
said the two sides agreeing to “robust security guarantees that I would
describe as game-changing." He added that Russia said that it would make a
legislative commitment not to go after any additional territory in Ukraine.
Zelenskyy thanked the
United States for recent signals that Washington is willing to support security
guarantees for Ukraine, but said the details remained unclear.
“It is important that
America agrees to work with Europe to provide security guarantees for Ukraine,”
he said, “But 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, and we
consider EU accession to be part of the security guarantees.”
Witkoff defended
Trump's decision to abandon his push for Russian to agree to an immediate
ceasefire, saying the president had pivoted toward a peace deal because so much
progress was made.
“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,” he
said.
Secretary of State
Marco Rubio insisted there would be “additional consequences” as Trump warned
before meeting with Putin, if they failed to reach a ceasefire. But Rubio noted
that there wasn't going to be any sort of deal on a truce reached when Ukraine
wasn't at the talks.
“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. And the way we're trying to avoid those consequences is with an even better consequence, which is peace, the end of hostilities.”
He also said “we're
not at the precipice of a peace agreement” and that getting there would not be
easy and would take a lot of work.
“We made progress in
the sense that we identified potential areas of agreement, but there remains
some big areas of disagreement. So we're still a long ways off,” Rubio said.
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