The United States has set a June target for ending the Russia-Ukraine war and proposed hosting peace negotiations in Miami next week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced. This marks a significant escalation in Washington’s diplomatic engagement on the conflict.
Speaking to reporters in comments released early Saturday, Zelensky explained that the US proposal to hold talks in Miami represents a first—never before have Ukrainian and Russian negotiating teams been invited to meet on American territory. The move suggests the United States is prepared to invest greater resources and political capital in achieving a diplomatic resolution. “They say that they want to do everything by June,” Zelensky noted.
The Miami meeting would be the third round of US-brokered negotiations, following two previous sessions in Abu Dhabi that commenced in January. While the Abu Dhabi talks successfully arranged a major prisoner exchange, they failed to resolve the fundamental territorial disagreements that perpetuate the conflict. Russia currently maintains military control over approximately 20 percent of Ukrainian territory and is insisting on formal control over additional land in the Donetsk region.
Kyiv has unequivocally rejected Russian territorial demands, arguing that ceding territory would violate Ukraine’s sovereignty and set a dangerous precedent for international law. Moscow has stated that its territorial requirements are non-negotiable and has threatened renewed military escalation if negotiations do not deliver satisfactory territorial outcomes. This impasse over borders and sovereignty continues to prevent meaningful progress toward peace.
The push for peace occurs alongside ongoing military operations. Zelensky announced on Saturday that Russia had attacked facilities essential to the operation of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants the previous night. The strikes resulted in reduced power generation at several nuclear reactor units, with one unit undergoing an automatic emergency shutdown. Zelensky condemned the attacks as unprecedented acts of terrorism and insisted Russia must demonstrate commitment to the negotiation process by ceasing strikes on vital civilian infrastructure.
Zelensky Says US Proposes Miami Summit as Clock Ticks Toward June Deadline
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