After Alaska Summit, Putin’s Terms for Peace Remain Largely Unchanged
from Europe Program
from Europe Program

After Alaska Summit, Putin’s Terms for Peace Remain Largely Unchanged

Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses senior officials after a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses senior officials after a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump. Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool/Sputnik/Reuters

U.S. President Trump has spurred a new focus on how to end the Russia-Ukraine war, but Russia’s Putin shows little willingness to make concessions, while preserving hope for normalizing relations with the United States.

August 27, 2025 10:21 am (EST)

Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses senior officials after a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses senior officials after a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump. Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool/Sputnik/Reuters
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Thomas Graham is a distinguished fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Has the flurry of late-summer diplomacy changed Russia’s position in any substantive ways?

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Not yet—at least not publicly. Russian President Vladimir Putin continues to pursue the maximal positions he articulated more than a year ago, which would entail Ukraine’s subjugation to Russia, as well as Ukraine’s neutrality, demilitarization, and recognition of Russian sovereignty over the five Ukrainian provinces Moscow has officially annexed, among other things. Russia’s foreign ministry has denied that Putin offered the compromise on territory that U.S. President Donald Trump claims he did. That is, a ceasefire along the battle line in Ukraine’s Kherson and Zaporizhzhia provinces in exchange for Kyiv’s complete withdrawal from the Donbas region (the Donetsk and Luhansk provinces) and recognition of Crimea as Russian.    

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The War in Ukraine

Similarly, the Kremlin has dismissed the possibility of an early meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, for which Trump has been pressing. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said that no meeting can take place until certain conditions have been met—essentially, Ukraine’s agreement to surrender. He has also continued to raise doubts about Zelenskyy’s legitimacy. (His presidential term ended in May 2024, but he remains in office pending new elections, which under Ukrainian law cannot take place until martial law has been lifted.)

As for security guarantees for Ukraine, Putin is not opposed to the United States providing them along with other powers. But Russia insists that it must be among the guarantors, and that all guarantors would have to agree to the use of force to protect Ukraine against an aggressor, effectively giving Moscow a veto over the defense of Ukraine. European and Ukrainian leaders have rejected Russia’s proposal and are working on what they have described as “Article 5-like” guarantees,” which would be similar to NATO’s collective security provisions and directed against renewed Russian aggression.

It is not known, however, whether Putin has shown flexibility behind closed doors. And it is too soon to conclude that the recent flurry of diplomacy has been in vain. At a minimum, it has initiated a negotiating process and focused minds in Europe and Ukraine on the tough compromises that will have to be made to resolve the conflict. The question now is whether Trump has the patience and skill to advance the process he has started.

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How do you assess the current Trump-Putin relationship?

The relationship has been critical to diplomacy. Trump would never have begun the process if he did not believe that he had a special relationship with Putin that would enable him to persuade him to end the war, even as Russia was making grinding progress on the battlefield.  Putin believes that Trump is one of the rare U.S. leaders genuinely interested in normalizing relations. He has wagered that Trump would value bilateral ties and lucrative commercial deals over pressuring Russia, rather than Ukraine, to end the war. 

Each president has misread the situation. Trump has at times expressed frustration at Putin’s ramped up offensives, questioning whether he is genuinely interested in peace, and has periodically renewed threats of severe sanctions. Putin, meanwhile, has found that possible commercial deals have not persuaded Trump to abandon Ukraine. Nevertheless, neither leader appears ready to reassess their relationship. Trump came away from the summit meeting renewed in his belief that Putin wanted to make a deal with him to end the war. Most recently, even as he threatened “economic war” should Putin not move toward peace, Trump noted that he was “on very good terms” with Putin. The Russian leader, for his part, continues to talk about his hopes for progress in normalizing relations and has refused to publicly criticize Trump.

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This relationship is of deep concern to European and Ukrainian leaders. They are energetically trying to disabuse Trump of his belief that Putin is interested in an early end to the war and that he can be trusted to honor any agreement he signs on to.

Does the Kremlin take Trump’s recent sanctions threat seriously? How did Moscow react to Trump’s recent diplomacy in Russia’s ‘near abroad’?

During the past several weeks, the Kremlin has downplayed U.S. actions, which on the surface might appear harmful to Russia’s national interests. It has been careful not to challenge Trump directly, still hoping that it can work with him to end the Russia-Ukraine war on Russia’s terms and normalize U.S.-Russia relations.

For example, Russia’s reaction to Trump’s threat of heavy sanctions—should Putin not agree to an immediate ceasefire—was muted. The Kremlin says Russia has learned how to survive amid Western sanctions and raised doubts that Trump would ever act on his threats. With regard to Trump’s levying of stiff tariffs on India for its continuing purchases of Russian oil, both Russia and India underscored their commitment to maintaining strong bilateral relations, including ongoing Indian imports of Russian oil.

Similarly, the Russian Foreign Ministry responded positively to the United States’ recent brokering of a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan. But it then went on to stress that an enduring peace in the South Caucasus would be the work of the states of the region themselves and their immediate neighbors—Iran, Russia, and Turkey. The foreign ministry also reserved judgment on the transit corridor the United States agreed to develop with Armenia and Azerbaijan, arguing that it still had to study the implications for its trade agreements with the two states and the broader Eurasian Economic Community, to which both Armenia and Russia belong.    

The situation surrounding Trump’s recent call with Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko is somewhat different. The Kremlin will, of course, closely monitor any growing ties between Washington and Minsk. However, for the time being, Putin undoubtedly sees benefit in having Lukashenko stress to Trump that Russia’s interests have to be taken into account in any settlement of the war and that Putin is genuinely interested in peace.

What is the mood in Russia regarding the war? Is there ongoing public support?

There is nothing to suggest that Putin is under popular pressure to end the war. The Kremlin has in fact gone to great lengths to ensure that Russians have been spared the horrors of the war for the most part—the war is being fought largely by volunteers and standards of living have risen as the Kremlin pours money into the war economy. Visitors often remark on how normal life appears to be in Moscow.

To be sure, Russians may have grown tired of the war, and recent polls indicate that the majority would like to see it end soon—but only on Russia’s terms. There is little evidence that the population would approve of concessions that would rob Russia of the fruits of victory.

Public opinion polling in an authoritarian state like Russia needs to be treated with skepticism. But even the Levada Center, widely seen in the West as the most independent and reliable polling agency in Russia today, continues to find widespread support for the war and a high approval rating for Putin (above 80 percent). 

Although the Kremlin does pay close attention to public opinion, it is important to remember that popular will plays a much more limited role in the elite-based Russian system than it does in the democratic West. Changes in elite opinion can have a dramatic effect on Putin’s policy, but it is much more difficult to ascertain than public opinion. There is evidence of elite dissatisfaction, especially within the business community and among those charged with managing the economy, but there are no obvious leaders at the moment who could mobilize that discontent to compel Putin to reconsider his maximal goals.        

This work represents the views and opinions solely of the author. The Council on Foreign Relations is an independent, nonpartisan membership organization, think tank, and publisher, and takes no institutional position on matters of policy.

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