Trump not betraying Ukraine – Pentagon chief

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The US president’s phone call with Vladimir Putin is “recognition” that Washington wants a “negotiated peace,” Pete Hegseth has said

US President Donald Trump is not “betraying” Ukraine and is instead pursuing peace by talking to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has said.

The comments followed the first known conversation between the US and Russian leaders since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict nearly three years ago.

In an interview with The Economist hours before the phone call between Putin and Trump on Wednesday, Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky suggested that any peace talks that excluded Kiev would be a dangerous betrayal.

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Hegseth dismissed those claims on Thursday ahead of a NATO defense ministers’ meeting in Brussels.

“There is no betrayal there. There is a recognition that the whole world and the United States is invested and interested in peace,” the Pentagon chief said.

After his 90-minute conversation with Putin, Trump said negotiations to end the Ukraine conflict would start “immediately,” adding that he would “probably” meet with Putin in Saudi Arabia for further talks. Moscow has neither confirmed nor denied the remarks on the possible location of the summit.

Putin supported Trump’s view that the time has come for Russia and the US to work together, the Kremlin stated in a press release following the phone call. The Russian president reiterated the need to address the root causes of the Ukraine conflict and agreed that a long-term settlement could be reached through peace talks.

Before the phone call, Hegseth outlined the US negotiating position, stating that Kiev must accept that returning to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders is “unrealistic.” He also acknowledged that NATO membership for Ukraine is not a feasible outcome of the negotiations and ruled out US peacekeepers in the country.

Following his call with Putin, Trump also phoned Zelensky to discuss the peace settlement, among other issues. The US president said the conversation with the Ukrainian leader had gone “very well,” and that Zelensky wanted to make peace.

READ MORE: Trump wants a deal with Russia – but can he deliver?

Zelensky previously insisted that any agreement must uphold Kiev’s territorial integrity. Last week, however, he suggested that he would consider a territory trade if Trump succeeded in bringing Ukraine and Russia to the negotiating table.

Russia has maintained that any peace negotiations must recognize the reality on the ground and has ruled out any territory swap with Kiev.

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