Donald Trump’s actions have brought the end of the war “closer” in Ukraine, Sir Kir Stmper has said.
The Prime Minister’s statement comes despite the fact that the US President and Vladimir Putin failed to reach a ceasefire at a summit in Alaska on Friday.
He also said that “Path for Peace in Ukraine” cannot be decided without Ukraine’s President Volodmi Zelancesi, and that the UK’s “unwavering support” will continue until it takes.
The much awaited meeting between Trump and Putin was erected as an important step towards peace in Ukraine, but no concrete agreements were made.
In view of Anchor summitThe Prime Minister spent talking to Western colleagues on Saturday morning.
After the call, he said in a statement: “I welcome Ukraine’s openness with Europe to provide strong safety guarantee to Ukraine as part of any deal.
“President Trump’s efforts have brought us closer than ever to end the illegal war of Russia in Ukraine.
Sir Kir said, “His leadership should be appreciated in search of the end of the murder.”
As long as Putin stopped his “barbaric attack”, the collaborators “will tighten the screws with even more restrictions on his war machine”, he said.
A source in Downing Street told the BBC that any peace deal requires security agreements and “American participation is an important part of that”.
After a call with Trump on Saturday, Zelansky called for a permanent peace, “not just another break between the Russian invasions”.
Zelansky is due to flying to Washington DC on Monday to meet Mr. Trump, which aims to pave the way for further interactions.
He insisted that Kiev should be included in future discussions, and said that he hopes Russia in the coming days to “create more favorable conditions for interaction with global actors” to “increase pressure and attack”.
Prior to the incident, it was believed that Trump had expected to secure a peace deal from the talks in Alaska. Speaking to Fox News Radio on Thursday, Trump said that there was only 25% of the failure in the meeting.
Despite going away with any ceasefire and no overall deal, President Trump insisted that “some great progress” was made, Agreed with “many points” and “very little” remains,