Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed his readiness to hold bilateral talks with Vladimir Putin following what he described as his “best” meeting yet with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday to discuss ending the three-and-a-half-year-long war.
Speaking to reporters outside the White House following a day of high-stakes talks with both the US president and seven European leaders, Zelensky said he had made it clear to Trump that he was “ready for a bilateral meeting with Vladimir Putin”, after which they would expect a trilateral meeting with the US president.
“We are ready for any formats at the level of leaders, because only at the level of leaders can we resolve all those complex, painful issues”, Zelensky said.
Trump, who in a Truth Social post described the talks as “very good” and said that the leaders in attendance were “very happy about the possibility of peace”, confirmed that he had called Putin afterwards to begin the “arrangements for a meeting, at a location to be determined, between President Putin and President Zelensky”, which would then be followed by a trilateral meeting with him.
The Kremlin did not immediately confirm Putin’s participation in any future meetings with Zelensky, but said that the Russian leader had held a “frank and very constructive” call with Trump in which the two men voiced their support for continuing “direct negotiations” between Moscow and Kyiv and discussed the prospect of “raising the level of the representatives” involved in future talks.