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Zelensky says Russia 'doesn't want peace' ahead of meeting Trump in Florida

Rachel Muller-Heyndykand
Adam Goldsmith
Reuters U.S. President Donald Trump welcomes Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White HouseReuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will meet his US counterpart Donald Trump in Florida on Sunday, for the latest round of talks aimed at ending nearly four years of war with Russia.

The pair will discuss an updated version of a US-brokered peace plan, which Moscow has yet to support, as well as separate proposals for US security guarantees.

Their meeting at the US president's Mar-a-Lago home follows intense Russian bombardment of Kyiv over the weekend, which Zelensky said was evidence that Moscow "doesn't want peace".

On Friday night, a 10-hour missile and drone barrage targeting Ukraine's capital killed two people and left 32 others injured, local authorities said.

There were further Russian strikes on Saturday night.

At the meeting in Florida, Zelensky is expected to raise security guarantees for Ukraine and territorial concessions, both issues that Russia has previously been unwilling to compromise on.

They will also discuss the new 20-point peace plan, a revised version of an earlier 28-point plan drafted by US special envoy Steve Witkoff that was widely seen as being too favourable to Russia.

Control of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region has been a major sticking point so far, but Zelensky has now said a "free economic zone" could be an option.

Moscow currently controls about 75% of the Donetsk region, and around 99% of the neighbouring Luhansk. The regions are collectively known as the Donbas.

The Kremlin has not commented on Zelensky's offer to withdraw troops from the Donbas if Russia pulls back too.

But on Saturday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Ukraine was "in no hurry to resolve this conflict peacefully", according to state-owned news agency Tass.

Putin added that if Kyiv did not want to resolve the conflict peacefully, Russia would accomplish its objectives militarily.

The Ukrainian president has voiced optimism about the new peace plan draft, describing it as "a foundational document on ending the war".

On Friday, he told reporters that it was 90% complete: "Our task is to make sure everything is 100% ready."

But Trump warned in an interview with Politico that Zelensky "doesn't have anything until I approve it".

Trump added that he was expecting to see the new draft on Sunday.

"I think it's going to go good with him. I think it's going to go good with Putin," he said in the interview, adding that he expects to speak to Russia's president "soon".

Following meetings with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Zelensky said Moscow's latest attack on Kyiv was "Russia's answer [to] our peace efforts and this really shows that Putin doesn't want peace".

Zelensky also took a call with European leaders to discuss diplomatic "priorities" ahead of his meeting with Trump, adding that "strong positions are needed" to move forward with the plan.

Kyiv has the "full support" of European and Nato leaders, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said.

Russia launched attacks on Ukraine over the weekend - the most destructive of which happened Friday night into Saturday morning.

Ukrainian officials said Russia's attacks on Kyiv caused significant damage to energy infrastructure, with 40% of residential buildings in Kyiv and nearby districts left without heating.

Russia's defence ministry said long-range precision weapons were used to target energy facilities, which it claimed were being used "in the interests of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and enterprises of the Ukrainian military-industrial complex".

Russia directed almost 500 drones and 40 missiles towards Kyiv, targeting energy and civilian infrastructure, according to Ukrainian officials.

Pictures showed gaping holes in apartment buildings and homes on fire following the strikes.

The apartment block of BBC journalist Anastasiya Gribanova was struck, leaving some homes on the higher levels of the high-rise building in flames. Gribanova, who was in the building's lift at the time, was unharmed.

The attack saw Poland, which shares a 530km-long (320 miles) border with western Ukraine, ready its fighter jets, ground-based air defence systems and radar reconnaissance.

Later on Saturday morning, it concluded that there had been no violation of the country's airspace.

Russia's defence ministry said its air defence systems had intercepted and destroyed almost 200 Ukrainian drones over several Russian regions, including eight over Moscow.

A smaller number of missiles were fired at Ukraine on Saturday night into Sunday, Ukraine's General Staff of the Armed Forces said.

It said the army had repelled 30 drones in the north, south and east of the country. No casualties were reported.


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