U.S. President Donald Trump announced that he will sit down with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as tensions between the United States, Ukraine, and Russia heighten.Â
The meeting is at a time when there is international diplomatic efforts to bring an end to the war in Ukraine, which began in February 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine in full scale.
The announcement caps months of high-stakes diplomatic wrangling, as Trump repeatedly hinted at a willingness to end the war quickly in direct talks.Â
“I will probably meet with President Zelenskyy soon, possibly in Washington,” Trump said last week in a press conference. “We need to find a path forward that brings this conflict to a swift conclusion.”
U.S.-Ukraine Relationship Faces Strain as Trump Administration Shifts Stance
For his part, Zelenskyy has maintained that he must meet with Trump before there could be any kind of negotiations between the U.S. president and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Ukrainian authorities have indicated that such an order is necessary to ensure that the interests of Ukraine are well represented in any peace process.
But the two-country relationship between Zelenskyy and Trump has deteriorated. Trump has openly criticized the Ukrainian president, calling him in public a “dictator” and making statements that sound almost identical to Russian disinformation on the causes of the war.Â

Those remarks caused concern among Ukraine’s European partners, who perceived them as undermining Ukraine’s sovereignty.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio fanned the flames more recently by indicating that Trump is “very upset” with Zelenskyy.Â
“The President wants Ukraine to be duly thankful for the considerable support that America has provided,” Rubio told reporters. “This isn’t just about Ukraine—it is about global security and American interests.”
Ukraine’s Resources and Shifting Diplomatic Tides
Underlying these tensions are economic interests, in this case over Ukraine’s abundant natural resources. Trump has been looking for deals that would allow American firms access to Ukraine’s rare earth elements, framing such a deal as a security deal.Â
“Ukraine has incredible resources that can benefit both our nations,” Trump told an economic conference recently. “A strong economic relationship is part of our vision for lasting peace.”
Zelenskyy has been cautious with these offers, wishing to maintain Ukraine’s economic independence but also receiving the crucial American aid. At the same time, the Russian-American bilateral negotiations have gone on simultaneously, outside of direct Ukrainian participation, and causing concern in Europe.Â
The first session of the negotiations was held in Riyadh with a second session on February 25. Ukraine officially rejected any result from the negotiations, declaring that they were not part of the process.
European leaders complained that they had been left on the sidelines during these diplomatic forays. “Any durable peace must have Ukraine at the table and respect its sovereignty,” one European diplomat who spoke on background said.Â
European countries have doubled down on Ukraine, vowing ongoing military and economic aid independent of U.S. policy change.
On the ground, Russia is pushing its military campaign forward, and recent drone attacks on the key port city of Odesa make the need for a rapid diplomatic solution a necessity.
As Trump sits down with Zelenskyy, observers recognize that the stakes are greater. The meeting is a watershed moment that can usher in new channels of peace or add yet another layer of complexity to an already thorny problem.