HomeWorldThe Ukraine peace puzzle: What ending the war means to Trump, Putin and Zelensky, and why that’s a problem

The Ukraine peace puzzle: What ending the war means to Trump, Putin and Zelensky, and why that’s a problem

On the surface, all three leaders are talking about peace. But dig deeper, and it becomes clear that “peace” means very different things to each of them.

August 20, 2025 / 18:01 IST
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As the war in Ukraine drags into its fourth year, the world is once again watching a flurry of high-stakes diplomacy unfold. What makes this round different is that Donald Trump, back in the White House, has thrust himself into the centre of negotiations. In just a week, he has met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska and hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House, alongside key European leaders.

On the surface, all three leaders are talking about peace. Trump says he wants to end a war that has drained Western resources and unsettled global markets. Putin insists he is open to a “settlement” that secures Russia’s security and territorial ambitions. Zelensky, facing relentless Russian bombardment and domestic exhaustion, says stopping the bloodshed is urgent.

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But dig deeper, and it becomes clear that “peace” means very different things to each of them. For Zelensky, it’s a ceasefire that saves lives without sacrificing sovereignty. For Putin, it’s a formal treaty that cements Russia’s conquests and curbs Ukraine’s future alliances. And for Trump, it’s a grand bargain that ends the war quickly, even if it bends international law and Kyiv’s red lines.

Zelensky’s demand: A ceasefire, not surrender