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How Russia and Ukraine are fighting to shape Trump’s view of the war

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • 3 hours ago
  • 5 min read
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine with President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., Dec. 28, 2025. Though discussions with President Donald Trump produced little tangible progress, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine at least avoided the type of setbacks that have blighted earlier meetings. (Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times)
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine with President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., Dec. 28, 2025. Though discussions with President Donald Trump produced little tangible progress, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine at least avoided the type of setbacks that have blighted earlier meetings. (Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times)

By CONSTANT MÉHEUT


As President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine traveled back from Florida on Monday, he could breathe a sigh of relief. His meeting with President Donald Trump to discuss a peace plan seemed to have passed without drama — Trump had neither berated him nor echoed Kremlin talking points, at least publicly. By the standards of past encounters, that counted as progress.


But while Zelenskyy was en route home, President Vladimir Putin was on the phone with Trump, introducing a new twist. Putin claimed that a Ukrainian drone attack had targeted one of his residences in Russia overnight. “I don’t like it,” Trump later told reporters, as he recounted the call. “It’s not the right time to do any of that. I was very angry about it.”


The accusation was just the sort that could derail Ukraine’s diplomatic effort. Zelenskyy swiftly denied it, describing the claim on social media as “a complete fabrication” designed “to undermine all achievements of our shared diplomatic efforts with President Trump’s team.” He reinforced the denial in a voice message to reporters in an online chat group, and his foreign minister also weighed in.


Meanwhile, several Russian officials relayed the accusation publicly, saying Moscow would toughen its stance in the negotiations as a response.


The flurry of statements from Ukraine and Russia over the claim, which so far lacks any clear-cut evidence, underscored an information war that has taken on outsized importance in the peace talks: the battle to shape Trump’s thinking.


Both sides in the war see Trump as their key leverage in negotiating a future peace settlement. For months, they have strived to shape his perception of the battlefield. That has included Russia claiming the capture of cities that have not yet been taken and Ukraine not immediately acknowledging when a city has fallen. Ukraine and Russia have also accused each other of refusing to compromise to reach a peace deal and of trying to upend the talks.


Trump’s views on the war remain unclear after nearly a year of failed efforts to end it. Russia has held the upper hand in the battle to shape his perception, according to analysts. Trump has sided with Moscow several times this year, partly because of Russia’s advantage on the battlefield, which aligns with the president’s repeated belief that the strongest side would prevail.


Zelenskyy has often been left scrambling to salvage diplomatic efforts by engaging frequently with the U.S. side and rallying European allies to steer Trump toward a less pro-Russian position.


“Zelenskyy has this challenge in appealing to Trump that Putin doesn’t have,” said Harry Nedelcu, a senior director at Rasmussen Global, a research organization, noting that Putin has a closer relationship with Trump than the Ukrainian president does. Putin can typically talk to Trump shortly before Trump meets with Zelenskyy — which is what happened Sunday — to press his case directly and shape the negotiations.


Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesperson, reiterated Tuesday that Russia would toughen its negotiating stance, without specifying how Moscow would change its demands. He told reporters that Russia would “continue the negotiation process and dialogue primarily with the Americans.”


Local Russian authorities in the Novgorod region, the area that includes the residence that was allegedly attacked, reported a Ukrainian drone attack early Monday morning. But the attack and its potential impact could not be independently verified.


With the negotiations at an impasse over territorial issues, much of the narrative battle in recent weeks has centered on which side is gaining ground on the battlefield.


In early December, Putin invited journalists to come and “see for themselves” that Russian forces had captured the northeastern city of Kupiansk. Instead, it was Zelenskyy who came about 10 days later and filmed himself by the entrance sign of the city to announce that it was mostly under Ukrainian control — a fact confirmed by battlefield maps made by independent groups.


On Monday, Putin met with senior commanders in the Kremlin and said that Russian troops were only about 9 miles from the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, a major industrial center. He ordered his forces to capture the city “in the near future.” But Russia has not taken any major city since 2022 and military analysts say it lacks the forces to do so.


Still, Russian troops have made advances in recent weeks — a reality that Ukraine has sought to play down. Ukraine’s top military leaders, for example, were slow to acknowledge that the eastern town of Siversk had fallen to Russia last week.


On Monday, Ukraine’s top commander, Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky, offered a rather optimistic account of the situation in Pokrovsk, a strategic city in the eastern Donetsk region, claiming that Russian forces controlled only half of it. But the battlefield maps compiled by independent groups show that roughly two-thirds of Pokrovsk is under Russian control, and Ukrainian soldiers on the ground have acknowledged the city is nearly lost.


Trying to control the narrative over advances in Donetsk matters to both sides because one of the Kremlin’s key demands for ending the war is that Ukraine cede the quarter of the region that it still controls — a nonstarter for Ukraine.


Russia has argued that its progress in the area is inevitable and that Ukraine should settle now, even if it means ceding land, rather than losing more men trying to defend Donetsk. Trump echoed that argument Sunday after meeting with Zelenskyy, saying that Ukraine would be “better off taking a deal rather than losing it on the battlefield in the coming months.”


Ukraine has sought to counter that argument by stressing that Russia’s advance has been slow and that it would take many more months for Moscow to capture the rest of Donetsk. At an Oval Office meeting in August with Trump, Zelenskyy used a map of the battlefield to make his case. Over the 1,000 days before that meeting, he said, Russia had managed to seize less than 1% of Ukrainian land.


Both sides have also tried to appeal to Trump’s business-oriented mindset, dangling potentially lucrative deals that could be part of a settlement.


A peace plan that one of Russia’s top negotiators, Kirill Dmitriev, head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, drafted with U.S. representatives last month included a provision that the United States would enter into a long-term economic cooperation with Moscow in sectors as varied as energy, artificial intelligence and mineral extraction.


Ukraine’s negotiating position includes a financial package to support the country’s postwar reconstruction and American involvement. Zelenskyy has said that it would include “the entry of American business, special conditions for Ukraine’s development and reconstruction, and the development of a free-trade agreement with the United States.”


On Sunday, as he greeted Zelenskyy at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Trump marveled at the money that could be made from rebuilding Ukraine. “There’s a lot of wealth to be had,” he said.

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