Trump-Putin Summit Latest in Ukraine Peace Push

Trump-Putin Summit Latest in Ukraine Peace Push

A woman carrying a child walks at a memorial for fallen soldiers in Kyiv on August 4, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
A woman carrying a child walks at a memorial for fallen soldiers in Kyiv on August 4, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

August 11, 2025 9:42 am (EST)

A woman carrying a child walks at a memorial for fallen soldiers in Kyiv on August 4, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
A woman carrying a child walks at a memorial for fallen soldiers in Kyiv on August 4, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images
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Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

Welcome to the Daily News Brief, CFR’s flagship morning newsletter summarizing the top global news and analysis of the day. 

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Ukraine and its European backers are pushing for Kyiv to be part of peace talks as Trump and Putin plan to meet Friday in Alaska. Trump announced the summit last week and said that a peace settlement could include “some swapping of territories,” prompting a scramble of diplomacy. It will be Putin’s first visit to the United States in ten years and his first meeting with a U.S. president in more than four.

The latest. 

  • After meeting European officials Saturday, U.S. Vice President JD Vance said yesterday that Washington is also working on a trilateral meeting to include Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
  • Ukrainians are ready to work with Trump for “lasting peace” but “will not give their land to the occupier,” Zelenskyy wrote Saturday.
  • The leaders of Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the European Union (EU) said in a joint statement Saturday that “meaningful negotiations can only take place in the context of a ceasefire or reduction of hostilities.”
  • European leaders urged Trump to pressure Putin ahead of the summit with the threat of sanctions. The U.S. president has announced few details about his anticipated outcomes of the meeting. 

What comes next.

  • EU foreign ministers are holding talks today about the upcoming U.S.-Russia summit.
  • U.S. NATO ambassador Matthew Whitaker said that it was “certainly” possible Zelenskyy could attend the Alaska meeting; separately, Vance said that he did not believe that would be productive before Trump and Putin meet bilaterally. 
  • Vance also said that any peace deal would likely leave both Russia and Ukraine “unhappy.”

“We should want a sovereign and independent Ukraine; that is, a Ukraine that has the right to decide its own geopolitical orientation and has the right to develop sufficient military forces to guarantee its own security…That is not a matter simply for Moscow and Washington. That is clearly a matter where Kyiv has to be directly involved and also our European allies.”

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—CFR expert Thomas Graham at a CFR Media Briefing

Across the Globe

Armenia-Azerbaijan deal. The two countries signed a peace agreement at the White House on Friday that includes U.S. economic development rights in a planned transit corridor. EU leaders hailed the deal and called for the countries to move toward normalization. Iran, which has a border near the planned corridor route, criticized foreign involvement in the area.

U.S. chip deal. Tech firms Nvidia and AMD will pay 15 percent of the revenue from selling their chips in China to the U.S. government as part of an unusual arrangement that effectively makes the United States a business partner, multiple news outlets reported. While this degree of U.S. participation in an international business deal is rare, the Trump administration also took a financial stake in Nippon Steel’s recent investment in U.S. Steel.

Australia’s plan on Palestinian state. Australia will recognize a Palestinian state at next month’s UN General Assembly after hearing Palestinian Authority commitments to demilitarize Gaza and hold elections, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said. Australia joins Canada, France, and the United Kingdom in pledging to do so. Albanese said a two-state solution was the best hope for breaking “the cycle of violence in the Middle East” and to help end the war in Gaza. 

India’s immigration raids. Indian authorities have conducted widespread detentions of Muslims and Bengali-speakers since an April terrorist attack in Kashmir. Rights groups have criticized the raids as arbitrary; most people detained live hundreds of miles from Pakistan, which India’s government said was behind the attack. Thousands were expelled to Bangladesh, including some Indian citizens that India then readmitted.

U.S., Mexico cartel stances. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said that U.S. military action on its soil was “absolutely ruled out” after the New York Times reported that Trump secretly directed the Pentagon to start military operations against drug cartels it listed as terrorists. A White House spokesperson said Trump’s priority was “protecting the homeland.”

South Korea’s shrinking military. The country’s armed forces have shrunk by 20 percent over the last six years due mostly to the declining birthrate, a report from a ruling party lawmaker said yesterday. Military service is compulsory for men. The country is fifty thousand troops short for adequate readiness, the defense ministry said. 

Pakistani official in Washington. Pakistan’s military chief Asim Munir made his second visit to the United States in less than two months, state media reported Sunday. He held talks with the head of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff and invited him to visit Pakistan. The two countries are close to finalizing a trade and investment deal, a senior Pakistani economic official said today. 

Cholera on Chad-Sudan border. Cholera is spreading in Sudan’s Darfur region as well as a Chad refugee settlement near the country’s border, the UN refugee agency said Friday. More than 4,300 cases were reported in Darfur and 264 around Chad refugee settlement. The refugee agency said funding shortfalls were hampering its response and appealed for $130 million in aid.

What’s Next

  • Today, the UN Security Council holds a meeting on international maritime security in New York.
  • Today, Vietnamese leader To Lam is in South Korea for a state visit.
  • Tomorrow, a tariff pause between the United States and China is due to expire unless there is a deal to extend it.
  • Tomorrow, the United Nations marks International Youth Day.
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