Current News

/

ArcaMax

Zelenskyy asked Trump for 50-year security guarantee for Ukraine

Olesia Safronova and Daryna Krasnolutska, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he asked Donald Trump for U.S. security guarantees lasting as long as half a century to help deter any future Russian invasion.

Current proposals under discussion as part of a peace plan set out a 15-year term with the possibility for an extension, though “I would like the guarantee to be much longer,” Zelenskyy said Monday in an audio message to reporters. “We would like to consider the possibility of 30, 40, 50 years and then it will be a historic decision by Trump.”

U.S. security guarantees that had been confirmed by Congress would combine with pledges by nations in the so-called Coalition of the Willing to form an effective protection for Ukraine, Zelenskyy said. European Union membership would also be part of the security arrangements for his country, he said.

“Monitoring the ceasefire — our partners will provide it, technical monitoring and presence. All these details will be in the security guarantees,” Zelenskyy said. Both negotiating teams had agreed on the need for “strong” U.S. security guarantees for Ukraine, he said.

The comments came after Zelenskyy and Trump held talks at the U.S. president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Sunday. While Trump said “a lot of progress” was made toward a deal to end Russia’s almost four-year full-scale war on Ukraine, both leaders acknowledged that key issues remained unresolved.

They included the status of territories in the east of Ukraine, and the fate of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant that’s occupied by Russia.

Zelenskyy said no consensus was reached at his talks with Trump on Russian President Vladimir Putin’s demand for Ukraine to withdraw from the Donbas region that’s partially occupied by Moscow’s troops. There was a lack of clarity over U.S. proposals to create a demilitarized or free economic zone in the area of eastern Ukraine, including on who would control the territory.

Trump said he was confident a deal was “getting a lot closer” though it might take a few weeks to conclude and there’s no set timeline. Zelenskyy said Sunday the peace plan was “90% agreed.”

Trump said he held “very productive” phone talks with Putin shortly before he met with Zelenskyy. The U.S. and Ukrainian presidents spoke with European leaders after their discussion.

Putin and Trump will hold another phone call “very soon,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday.

Ukraine seeks a meeting with European partners and Trump in January, Zelenskyy said, followed by a separate meeting with Russian officials “in one format or another.”

 

The Coalition of the Willing group will meet in early January to discuss its support for Ukraine, French President Emmanuel Macron said in a post on X on Monday.

After nearly a year of U.S. efforts to end the war failed to yield a deal, Trump had said he would only meet with the Ukrainian and Russian leaders again if an agreement were imminent. So far, the warring sides have been negotiating mainly with Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

Zelenskyy said Monday that Ukraine “does not care” about the format of negotiations with Russia, but wants Putin to demonstrate his willingness to reach a deal by ceasing attacks on Ukraine.

“These actions do not coincide with the peaceful vocabulary that he uses in dialogue with the U.S. president,” Zelenskyy said. “I told Trump this.”

Putin has continued to press his maximalist demands, including for Ukraine to cede territories in the country’s east that Moscow’s troops have failed to capture in Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II.

Ukrainian officials have toiled over the last few weeks to revise a 28-point draft plan originally proposed by the U.S. but seen as overly favorable to Russia. The latest version has 20 points, but Moscow has warned that the plan includes elements it won’t accept, including on the size of Ukraine’s post-war military.

Russia also wants guarantees against future eastward expansion by the NATO military alliance and on Ukraine’s neutral status if it joins the E.U., as well as clarity on the removal of sanctions and on hundreds of billions of dollars of Moscow’s frozen state assets in the West, according to a person close to the Kremlin.

---------

—With assistance from Maxim Edwards.


©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus