Trump lashes out at Zelenskyy as Witkoff signals Putin’s wider security demands – Europe live | Ukraine

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Morning opening: What does Vladimir Putin want?

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

On Monday, several European leaders lined up to criticise Vladimir Putin for Russia’s continuing attacks on Ukraine, and sabotaging the peace efforts of the Trump administration in the US.

But the White House view remains distinctively different.

Speaking alongside El Salvador president Nayib Bukele, Trump once again took aim at Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy instead, saying:

“The mistake was letting the war happen. If Biden were competent. And if Zelenskyy were competent — and I don’t know that he is, we had a rough session with this guy over here.”

“You don’t start a war against somebody that’s 20 times your size and then hope that people give you some missiles.”

On Putin, his tone was distinctively different as he argued:

“And you take a look at Putin — I’m not saying anybody’s an angel, but I will tell you, I went four years, and it wasn’t even a question. He would never — and I told him don’t do it. You’re not going to do it.”

Ultimately, he concluded that Biden, Zelenskyy and Putin are all at blame for the war:

“And Biden could have stopped it, and Zelenskyy could have stopped it, and Putin should have never started it. Everybody’s to blame.”

But perhaps even more revealing were comments by Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff, who was in Moscow last week.

Speaking on Fox News, Witkoff said he was confident after his latest five-hour “compelling” meeting with the Russians that a deal with Putin was “emerging”.

“Towards the end, we actually came up with – I’m going to say finally, but I don’t mean it in the way that we were waiting; I mean it in the way that it took a while for us to get to this place – what Putin’s request is to get to, have a permanent peace,” he said.

But in comments that are likely to spook European partners by signalling Putin’s broader security demands, he said the peace deal is “about the so-called five territories, but there’s so much more to it: there’s security protocols, there’s no Nato, Nato Article Five, I mean, it’s just a lot of detail attached to it.”

“It’s a complicated situation … rooted in … some real problematic things happening between the two countries and I think we might be on the verge of something that would be very, very important for the world at large,” he added.

Witkoff also added that he believed “there is a possibility to reshape the Russian-United States relationship through some very compelling commercial opportunities that I think give real stability to the region too.”

So, what, back to business as usual? That’s certainly what Putin wants.

It all increasingly makes it look, as our Russia expert Luke Harding put it, that “the truth is that America either wants Russia to win, or doesn’t care if Ukraine loses.”

On that depressing note…

It’s Tuesday, 15 April 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

Key events

EU food, safety standards, digital regulation not part of negotiations with US, Commission says

And on trade talks with the US, the European Commission’s trade spokesperson Olof Gill just told reporters that the EU needed “an additional level of engagement from the US to keep the ball rolling forward.”

Our offers are still clearly and plainly on the table, zero for zero tariffs on industrial products, including cars, and we’re willing to look at a range of other areas,” he said.

Responding to Trump’s comments that the EU “have got to come to the table, and they’re trying to,” Gill said: “Mr President, we are at the table,” as he rejected the suggestion that the EU exploits the US by saying “the facts do not support this claim.”

Pushed on what is being discussed, he said that – despite Trump’s longstanding frustration with EU regulations – “EU standards, particularly as they relate to food, health and safety, are sacrosanct.

“That’s not part of the negotiation. It never will be, not with the US, not with anyone else,” he said.

He also added that “our regulation that applies to technology and digital markets, that’s not up for negotiation.”

These comments will particularly resonate with the US as there is growing anticipation that the EU should announce its first enforcement against Apple and Meta under the Digital Markets Act in the coming days and weeks.



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