Wednesday briefing: Does the new US plan put Ukraine and Russia on the path to peace?
Good morning. On Tuesday, Vladimir Putin welcomed Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff to Moscow for talks on ending the war on Ukraine, nearly four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion. The summit came amid intense diplomatic activity. Two weeks ago the US presented a 28-point peace plan to Kyiv that was widely seen as favourable to Moscow. Since then US and Ukrainian officials have met in Geneva and in Florida to rehash the plan. That revised offer was to form the basis of discussions at the summit. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said the updated proposal “looks better” but emphasised “it was not over yet”. The White House said it was “very optimistic” about reaching a deal. By Tuesday evening, though, there was no sign of progress as Witkoff departed Moscow and the Kremlin said the two sides were “neither further nor closer to resolving the crisis in Ukraine. There is a lot of work to be done.” European leaders had hoped this week could prove “pivotal” for the US-brokered peace talks, but admitted fears that the Putin-Witkoff summit could pile pressure on Ukraine to make concessions. Most analysts believe any substantial change to the original 28 points is unacceptable to the Kremlin. Moments before the talks began, Putin made hawkish remarks accusing European governments of sabotaging the peace process. He added: “Russia does not intend to fight Europe, but if Europe starts, we are ready right now.” To unpick the rehashed plan, and whether any real progress is on the cards, for today’s newsletter I spoke to Pjotr Sauer, Russian affairs reporter for the Guardian. But first the headlines. Five big stories UK news | The families of those who died in the 1989 Hillsborough disaster have said it is a “bitter injustice” that no police officer will ever be held accountable for failings set out in the final report of the police watchdog after a 14-year investigation. The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) found that 12 officers would have faced proceedings if they had not since retired. Royal family | The public accounts committee is to launch an inquiry into the crown estate and its leases on properties to members of the royal family after questions over the letting of Royal Lodge to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Justice | David Lammy has been accused of making a “massive mistake” by Labour MPs and peers after announcing radical plans to cut thousands of jury trials across England and Wales. Policing | A quarter of police forces in England and Wales are yet to implement “basic policies for investigating sexual offences”, an official report has found. Gender | Trans girls will no longer be able to join Girlguiding, the organisation has announced, saying it has made the decision after seeking legal advice as a result of the supreme court ruling on gender earlier this year. In depth: ‘Everything points to the fact that Russia is not going to accept any revisions’
While Ukraine has signalled it is ready to move towards peace, Putin has shown little appetite for compromise. From the start, the optics for progress did not seem favourable. On Monday, the night before the Putin-Witkoff summit, Russian TV showed carefully curated pictures of Putin in military fatigues. From a command post, he delivered a speech claiming Russian forces had taken control of the strategic city of Pokrovsk in Ukraine. Yesterday, Ukraine denied Pokrovsk had fallen, saying its forces remained in control of the northern part of the city. For more on the 18-month battle for Pokrovsk, read Dan Sabbagh’s excellent feature from the scene. “The message was: we’re winning this war, so it’s better to pressure Ukraine into peace,” said Pjotr. “Or, you know, wait for us to continue fighting, and then Ukraine will be in an even worse situation.” Ahead of the talks, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov had signalled that while Putin and Witkoff would discuss the “understandings” reached between Washington and Kyiv, Russia would insist on achieving the goals of its “special operation”. Those goals – including deep cuts to Ukraine’s armed forces, a ban on western military assistance, limits on political independence and the handover of Ukrainian territory in the east that Russia does not hold – would severely erode Ukraine’s sovereignty. Moscow has also been insisting that Ukraine pledge never to join Nato and accept caps on the size of its armed forces. Putin’s remarks on Europe, moments before the talks, appeared to be an attempt to drive a wedge between Washington and Europe, which have backed Kyiv in proposing revisions to the initial 28-point peace plan that favoured Moscow. “European demands are not acceptable to Russia,” Putin declared – but did not clarify exactly which European demands on Ukraine he found unacceptable. *** What is Putin planning? The Russian president early on said the original draft proposal “could form the basis for future agreements”. But towards the end of last week, he said that even if both sides do agree a peace deal, it still isn’t possible because Russia doesn’t consider Zelenskyy to be a legitimate leader. “His thinking is actually relatively consistent,” said Pjotr. “Yes, they’re open for a peace deal, but one that would be completely on Russia’s terms. “Obviously, Ukrainian officials sat together with US officials over the weekend in Florida, and they rehashed this plan. But I think everything points to the fact that Russia is not going to accept any revisions. “The Russians see this as a win-win situation,” said Pjotr, where either the plan they want goes ahead or they “just keep on fighting”. And Putin has said he is perfectly happy to do just that. In this piece, Pjotr said that the Russian newspaper often described as “Putin’s favourite”, Komsomolskaya Pravda, implied that Moscow views the latest US-Ukrainian talks as a dead end, claiming Kyiv is refusing to capitulate. “The US has tried for the third time in the past 10 days to pressure Ukraine, and Washington has once again failed,” it said. *** Will Witkoff have put any pressure on Putin? If Russia doesn’t make any progress on peace then it would seem “logical” to exert pressure, reminding Putin he may face consequences from the US, said Pjotr. However, Witkoff – a former property developer recently exposed for coaching Russian officials on how to win Trump’s favour – is unlikely to get involved in that. Other meetings between the two have been “quite friendly”, in sharp contrast to the often “quite intense” US meetings with the Ukrainians where Zelenskyy and his negotiators have been put under pressure “every time”. “Witkoff is not ideological, he’s a purely transactional person who has no diplomatic experience,” Pjotr said. “The Russians themselves realise Witkoff isn’t an experienced diplomat.” A phone call leaked to Bloomberg last week between Witkoff and the Kremlin, in which the Trump envoy was coaching Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov on the best way to get into the US president’s favour, was interpreted by many as being proof of Witkoff’s closeness to the Russian position during negotiations. The leak showed Witkoff is “sympathetic” to the Russian position, said Pjotr. “He thinks: ‘If only Ukraine just gives up this land, then we can get a deal with everyone.’ That’s Witkoff’s philosophy.” *** What will Trump be looking for? Over the past few months, it appeared that Trump “realised it was Putin who was the main obstacle” to any peace, Pjotr said. But that shifted again after this 28-point peace plan was put forward. Trump started blasting the Ukrainians again, calling them “ungrateful”. “It is difficult to predict,” Pjotr said. Russia has been “walking a diplomatic tightrope” between not coming off as rejecting a peace plan, which would anger Trump, and not accepting a peace plan that does not explicitly favour Russia. “There is a danger that Russia says: ‘Listen, we are on paper, ready for peace. If only Ukraine does this, this and this.’ Then Witkoff might go back to Trump saying, well, if peace is to be reached, Ukraine has to give up land and compromise on a few other points.” *** Can the US find a peace plan that works for everyone? “That’s a really difficult question,” said Pjotr. “Ukraine is ready to compromise. But Russia thinks ‘Why compromise now? In two, three months, our position will be stronger.’ That’s what they believe. It’s hard to know, but they are capturing cities slowly.” Trump’s approval ratings at home are at a historic low. After delivering what the president said was a peace plan in Gaza, he believed that he could do the same with Russia and Ukraine – but it has turned out to be much harder. “At some point he might just walk away,” said Pjotr. “That is not something that Russia is scared of. Russia would not shed a tear. But it would leave Ukraine quite vulnerable and exposed.” What else we’ve been reading
Life Invisible is a new Guardian documentary following Cristina Dorador as she seeks discoveries to aid the fight against superbugs in the driest place on Earth. Martin This collection of “most loved’ and “most hated” Christmas hits of “professional” Santas, as told to Dave Simpson, made me smile. Karen A deeply worrying read from Sally Weale about the growing prevalence of the use of “nudify” apps to generate deepfake sexual images in schools. Martin The House of Lords, which will examine the assisted dying law this month, should argue it should not be implemented until a promised and much-needed overhaul of end of life care, says Gordon Brown. Karen Cullen Poythress chatted with Henry Rollins for Huck magazine in a nostalgic look back at how the worlds of punk and skateboarding collided. Martin Sport
Premier League | Erling Haaland scored his 100th Premier League goal and Phil Foden added a double as Manchester City beat Fulham 5-4 after leading 5-1. Cristian Romero scored an unlikely double with his injury-time overhead kick snatching a 2-2 draw for Tottenham at Newcastle. More results Football | An early goal from Lucia Kendall, who earned praise from Sarina Wiegman, and a late penalty from Alessia Russo gave England a 2-0 win against Ghana in their friendly. Cricket | The former England cricketer Robin Smith has died at the age of 62, with his former county Hampshire saying they were devastated by his loss. The front pages
The Guardian splashes on “‘A bitter injustice’: no officers will face discipline over Hillsborough”. “No justice” is the Mirror’s main headline, under the banner “Hillsborough: police shame” and the i has “Still no justice”. “Lammy: the jury’s out” – that’s the Metro on proposed reforms to court trials. Elsewhere in politics the Financial Times runs with “Farage tells Reform donors he expects tie-up with Tories before next election” and the Telegraph has “Treasury mandarin dragged into OBR row”. An OECD assessment of the Reeves budget leads the Times: “Economists warn of low growth and higher bills”. The Mail’s top story is “‘Cut-price’ royal rents under fire”. The late Sarah Everard is on the front of the Express with a quote from a damning report, urging action to prevent violent deaths like hers: “No better time to act than now as there are lives at stake”. Today in Focus
The 27-year-old white supremacist radicalising Maga Where is Nick Fuentes trying to lead the Republican party? J Oliver Conroy reports Cartoon of the day | Ella Baron
The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad
Four years ago, workers at a Starbucks store in Buffalo, New York voted to unionise – a move that defied intense resistance from the coffee chain and opened the floodgates for hundreds of stores to follow. Initially a local organising effort, about 2,500 workers across 120 stores and 85 cities are striking during the American coffee chain’s crucial holiday season. A promised reset under the new CEO, Brian Niccol, has instead unravelled into deepening tensions, with workers accusing Starbucks of fighting their efforts at every turn. Despite the company claiming that less than 1% of its coffee houses have been affected by the action, Starbucks Workers United insists it is prepared to escalate unless meaningful concessions are made – a sign, they say, that after years of pushback, “we’re not going anywhere”. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply