On April 17, US Presidential Envoy Steve Witkoff presented a proposal to end the Russian-Ukrainian war to European officials in Paris, which includes the recognition of Russia’s control over several Ukrainian territories occupied by Russia.
Reuters published the full text of the proposal.
The United States has presented European officials with a draft agreement to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. The document contains clear conditions that are Washington’s “final proposal” to both sides. Note that the American side provided this list to its partners “verbally” rather than in the form of an official document. Nevertheless, the parties are using the list of US proposals set out on paper.
The text mentions the difference between the “de jure” recognition of Russian control over Crimea by the United States and the “de facto” recognition of control over the Luhansk region (referred to in the document as “Luhansk”) and parts of the Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Kherson regions occupied by Russia. The US does not specify the meaning of these terms.
Ukraine, according to their plan, regains control over the occupied parts of the Kharkiv region, as well as over the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and the Kakhovka dam—the latter detail has not yet been mentioned in media accounts of the US proposal.
In addition, Ukraine regains control over the Kinburn Spit and unimpeded navigation on the Dnipro River.
Truce:
Security guarantees for Ukraine:
Territory:
Economy:
Earlier, the media reported that the Trump administration handed over a one-page document to Ukraine in Paris, which was presented as a “final proposal” for a peaceful settlement. Among other things, the US is ready to recognize Russia’s control over Ukrainian Crimea and ease sanctions against Moscow.
On April 24, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that the United States had proposed its strategy for Ukraine’s territories during talks in London, but, according to him, “another paper appeared after the US proposal.”
The Telegraph has published details of a new negotiation document on ending the war—Ukraine hopes to deprive Russia of official international recognition of its sovereignty over Crimea and other occupied territories as part of peace negotiations.
By portraying Vladimir Putin as the only actor able to “ensure security” and “restore legitimacy”…
Freedom of speech in Lithuania has become the centre of an unprecedented civic mobilisation, as…
The question sounds almost abstract at first, like a numbers game. But it is not.…
European outlets synchronized a three-stage disinformation campaign that turned Russia's military defeat in Kupiansk into…
Russian leader Vladimir Putin has once again raised the spectre of a large-scale war in…
Across Europe, Russia’s information strategy has evolved from centralized messaging to local translation—re-tailored for national…