"The US wanted compensation for security guarantees for Ukraine, says Zelenskyy
Nikita Shenderovsky, 24.12.25
The US plan to end the war in Ukraine included a clause compensating Washington for providing Kyiv with security guarantees, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters.
"It stated here: the US will receive compensation for security guarantees. We simply don't understand what that means, and we're raising this issue. Now it's been deleted," Zelenskyy said."
"The United States believes that Ukraine has failed to fulfill its obligations under the Minsk agreements, Zelenskyy said
Nikita Shenderovsky, December 24, 2025
Russia is questioning Ukraine's compliance with the peace agreement, believing Kyiv failed to fulfill its obligations under the Minsk agreements.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy expressed this opinion during a conversation with journalists, a UNIAN correspondent reports.
"You have to understand the Americans, who have been in a months-long dialogue with the Russians, who tell them: yes, but what's the point of what they sign or don't sign? They signed the Minsk agreements, but they didn't implement them. It's the common opinion of Americans and Russians that Ukraine didn't implement them. We're not debating whether this is true or not. We must defend our interests," Zelenskyy said.
He added that although the agreement was signed, it was impossible to implement.Some of its provisions were deadlocked.And Russia failed to fulfill those obligations that could realistically be fulfilled.
"Now they're saying Ukraine didn't fulfill them. But the agreement was designed to be impossible to implement; it was drafted and concluded that way. It's a stalemate. No one can do it. Neither side. But it's assumed that Ukraine signed it, meaning they were expected to fulfill it. Often, a little more is required of Ukraine," Zelenskyy added.
As a reminder, in 2023, former Russian presidential aide Vladislav Surkov stated that when drafting the Minsk agreements, the Russian leadership assumed they would not be implemented.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy previously noted that in order to conclude an agreement to end the war, Kyiv must receive reliable security guarantees.He also noted that no one believes in the Budapest Memorandum, Minsk II, or Minsk III, as new security guarantees must be legally binding and approved by parliament."
BERLIN — Far-right German politician Ringo Mühlmann has taken a
noteworthy interest in exposing information his political opponents say
could be of great interest to Russian intelligence.
Using the rights afforded to him as a lawmaker for the Alternative
for Germany (AfD) in the parliament of the eastern German state of
Thuringia — where the AfD is the strongest party — Mühlmann has
repeatedly asked the regional government to disclose intricate details
on subjects such as local drone defenses and Western arms transports to
Ukraine.
“What information does the state government have about the extent of
military transit transports through Thuringia since 2022 (broken down by
year, type of transport [road, rail], number of transits, and known
stops)?” Mühlmann asked in writing in September.
One day in June, Mühlmann — who denies he is doing Russia’s bidding — filed eight inquiries related to drones and the drone defense capabilities of the region’s police, who are responsible for detecting and fending off drones deemed a spy threat.
“What technical systems for drone defense are known to the Thuringian
police (e.g., jammers, net launchers, electromagnetic pulse devices),
and to what extent have these been tested for their usability in law
enforcement?” Mühlmann asked.
Such questions from AfD lawmakers on the state and federal
parliaments have led German centrists to accuse the far-right party’s
lawmakers of using their seats to try to expose sensitive information
that Moscow could use in its war on Ukraine and to help carry out its
so-called “hybrid war” against Europe.
“One cannot help but get the impression that the AfD is working
through a list of tasks assigned to it by the Kremlin with its
inquiries,” Thuringian Interior Minister Georg Maier, a member of the
center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), told German newspaper Handelsblatt.
“What struck me was an incredible interest in critical infrastructure
and the security authorities here in Thuringia, especially how they
deal with hybrid threats,” Maier subsequently told POLITICO. “Suddenly,
geopolitical issues are playing a role in their questions, while we in
the Thuringian state parliament are not responsible for foreign policy
or defense policy.”...
Tino Chrupalla, one of the AfD’s national leaders, strongly pushed
back against the allegations his party is attempting to reveal arms
supply routes to benefit the Kremlin.
“Citizens have legitimate fears about what they see and experience on the highways every evening,” he said in a talk show last month
when asked about Mühlmann’s inquiries. “These are all legitimate
questions from a member of parliament who is concerned and who takes the
concerns and needs of citizens seriously. You are making insinuations,
which is quite perfidious; you are accusing us of things that you can
never prove.”
Mühlmann, a former police officer, speaking to POLITICO, denied that
he’s following an assignment list “in the direction of Russia.”
Government ministers, while obligated to answer each parliamentary
inquiry, are not obliged to reveal sensitive or classified information
that could endanger national security, Mühlmann also argued.
“It is not up to me to limit my questions, but up to the minister to
provide the answers,” he said. “If at some point such an answer poses a
danger or leads to espionage, then the espionage is not my fault, but
the minister’s, because he has disclosed information that he should not
have disclosed.”
Flood of parliamentary questions
Marc Henrichmann, a conservative lawmaker and the chairman of a
special committee in Germany’s Bundestag that oversees the country’s
intelligence services, said that while the government is not obliged to
divulge classified or highly sensitive information in its answers to
parliamentary questions, Russian intelligence services can still piece
together valuable insights from the sheer volume and variety of AfD
inquiries.
“Apart from insignificant inquiries and sensitive inquiries, there is
also a huge gray area,” Henrichmann said. “And what I have regularly
heard from various ministries is that individual inquiries are not
really the problem. But when you look at these individual inquiries side
by side, you get a picture, for example, of travel routes, aid
supplies, and military goods to or in the direction of Ukraine.”
AfD factions in German state parliaments have submitted more than
7,000 security-related inquiries since the beginning of 2020, according
to a data analysis by Spiegel — more than any other party and about one-third of all security-related inquiries combined.
In Thuringia — where state intelligence authorities have labelled the AfD an extremist group — the party has submitted
nearly 70 percent (1,206 out of 1,738) of all questions filed this
legislative period. In the Bundestag, the parties parliamentary
questions account for more than 60 percent of all inquiries (636 out of 1,052).
The AfD’s strategic use of parliamentary questions is nothing new,
experts say. Since entering the Bundestag in 2017, the party has
deployed them to flood ministries and to gather information on perceived
political adversaries, experts say.
“From the outset, the AfD has used parliamentary questions to
obstruct, paralyze, and also to monitor political enemies,” said
Anna-Sophie Heinze, a researcher at the University of Trier.
With regard to the flood of inquiries related to national security,
the question of what is driving the AfD is largely irrelevant, said
Jakub Wondreys, a researcher at the Hannah Arendt Institute for
Totalitarianism Studies at the Technical University Dresden who studies the AfD’s Russia policy.
“It’s not impossible that they’re acting on behalf of Kremlin. It’s
also possible that they are acting on behalf of themselves, because, of
course, they are pro-Kremlin. But the end result is pretty much the
same. These questions are a potential threat to national security.”"
"I was 14 when Epstein recruited me. He demanded that girls show their school IDs
Susie Coen
Jeffrey Epstein demanded that young girls show their school IDs to prove they were underage.
Marina
Lacerda, who was abused by Epstein from the age of 14, said the
paedophile was “furious” when an 18-year-old was brought to him,
immediately sending her away.
Ms
Lacerda, now 37, was forced to recruit other victims, and told The
Telegraph that Epstein instructed her to only present him with girls who
had a student school ID.
Brazilian-born Ms
Lacerda said Epstein stopped abusing her when she was 16 or 17 because
he thought she was too old and she was not bringing him girls who were
young enough.
“I
did bring him somebody at the age of 18, and he booted her out... He
just looked at her and knew she wasn’t the age of 14, 15, or 16. And he
really, he was like, ‘Get the f--- out’... he was aggressive,” Ms
Lacerda said.
“He
turned to me, and he was like, ‘I’m done.’ He’s like, ‘You need to start
bringing me IDs when you bring girls here... I want school IDs.’”
After the partial release of the Epstein files,
Ms Lacerda accused the government of orchestrating a “cover-up” by
redacting swathes of documents and failing to release everything it held
to “protect” powerful men.
Ms Lacerda’s testimony
about being subjected to years of abuse was critical in securing the
2019 charges against the paedophile months before he died in jail.
She
is referred to as “Minor-Victim 1” in the 2019 indictment and spoke
publicly for the first time in September to call for the release of the
Epstein files.
She
said she had looked through some of the recently released files and saw
notes about Epstein demanding to see girls’ IDs, information that
appeared to be from her interview with the FBI in 2019, two months
before Epstein’s arrest.
On
Saturday, she also said the paedophile would “brag” to his powerful
friends that he was being massaged by a “beautiful girl” while on a
call, and make her say hello to them.
“We did speak to a lot
of people on the phone who were, you know, politicians, some were
princes... [they] were very important people,” she told The Telegraph.
He would “make it clear that he knew everybody and he owned everybody... he manipulated us,” she said.
After
lying down for a massage, Epstein would ring his contacts to “talk
business and would always bring up the fact like, ‘oh, you know, I have
this nice, young, beautiful girl giving me a massage.’”
He
would hand her the phone and tell her to “just say hello”, Ms Lacerda
said. She would tell the men something like “Hey, how are you?” but
would not discuss anything “deep”.
Ms Lacerda said Epstein never explicitly told the powerful men that she was underage...
“There’s a reason why everything’s redacted,” Ms Lacerda said, adding that it was “100 per cent a total cover-up”.
“It’s almost like a
joke, right? Like, we have to look at it as it’s like, this has to be a
comedy show. Like, why did you even put out all these files?”
She
added: “Who are we really trying to protect? Are we protecting
survivors, or are we protecting these powerful men?... We’re tired of
it. It’s gotten to the point where, you know, we’ve protected these
powerful men for a long time.”
Ms Lacerda met Epstein
in 2002 when she was recruited by a friend, who did not give her details
other than that she could make money massaging someone.
Ms
Lacerda, a Brazilian immigrant, was sharing a single bedroom with her
mother and sister at the time and saw it as an opportunity to support
her family.
“It got
to the point where I think I got really desperate for money,” she said.
However, she could not face working for him any more after being forced
to recruit young girls.
She said: “I didn’t want to bring any more underage girls, being 17 and having some knowledge of what was really going on there.
“You
had no choice but to bring him somebody because he’s so persistent and
just he wanted to have, you know, a new face, a new girl.”"
"‘Peace in Ukraine is impossible while Putin remains in power’
Roland Oliphant,
Speaking to The Telegraph’s Battle Lines podcast, Sir Laurie Bristow
said Vladimir Putin’s geopolitical ambitions ‘cannot be reconciled with
our interests’
A deal between Russia and Ukraine to end their war with each
other is impossible while Vladimir Putin is alive and in power, a former
British ambassador to Moscow has said.
Sir Laurie Bristow, who
served as British ambassador to Russia between 2016 and 2020, said the
idea that Putin could be persuaded to stop fighting in exchange for
territorial concessions was a “fantasy”, and that Western leaders must
accept that Moscow’s position would not change as long as he is in
office.
Sir Laurie, who later headed the UK mission in Kabul
during the evacuation from Afghanistan, also said British and other
Western governments should face up to the scale of that disaster.
“Specifically on Russia, it is: understand the nature of the problem,” he told The Telegraph’s Battle Lines podcast when asked how he would advise the Prime Minister if he were still a diplomat.
“The
key to thinking about how the war might end is first of all do away
with fantasies. There is not a deal to be done with Russia where you
trade some Ukrainian land for some other Ukrainian land and somehow
Putin’s happy and goes home. That isn’t going to happen.
“What [Putin] wants to do here is essentially assert the rights
as he sees them of a great power to a sphere of influence – essentially
an empire in central and eastern Europe – and that cannot be reconciled
with our interests.
“The second fantasy to do away with is that this conflict is resolvable
while Putin is in office. By which I think I mean while Putin is alive.
For the conflict itself to resolve, Russia has to fundamentally change
and that will not happen [while Putin remains in post].”...
Sir Laurie, for his part, said Putin’s own public statements made clear that he was not interested in compromise.
European
leaders, including Sir Keir Starmer, instead must accept they will have
to continue to arm Ukraine in order to deter Russia from pressing ahead
“not because we want the war to continue but because we want it to
stop”, he said.
“If the Americans decide their interests are
elsewhere, our interests are still in European security and there is no
escaping from that. This is fundamentally about the UK’s security,” Sir
Laurie added."
"Putin’s army of influencers selling pipe dreams of a Russian Mariupol
Iona Cleave
Elizaveta Chervyakova poses in front of a high-rise building in occupied Mariupol that is being rebuilt into a block of luxury apartments.
She ignores the fact that the building was once home to hundreds of Ukrainians before it was obliterated by Russian bombs during Moscow’s three-month siege in 2022.
In videos that garner
thousands of views, the 21-year-old blogger paints a rosy picture of the
coastal city returning to life as part of a Putin-era mega project of
“magical” new apartment complexes, shopping centres and neighbourhoods.
In an interview, Ms Chervyakova insists that the Russian-occupied city is not a “ghost town” and that she wants to “dispel any myths” that it is not a good place to live.
But a Telegraph investigation has found she is one of a growing number
of social media influencers who are becoming increasingly key to a
co-ordinated Kremlin-led propaganda campaign to promote the
Russification of the city and of life flourishing under Russian rule.
Elizaveta Chervyakova says she wants to ‘dispel any myths’ that Mariupol is not a good place to live - Instagram
Moscow’s 85-day offensive against the city
on the Sea of Azov killed between 20,000 and 88,000 civilians and
damaged or destroyed 90 per cent of the city’s residential buildings.
Hundreds of thousands of people fled, leaving just 100,000 of its
original residents.
Since then, Moscow has poured billions of roubles into remaking the city
in a Russian mould by 2025, a plan significantly behind schedule as a
result of the scale of devastation its military inflicted. The local
influencers are key to pumping out positive updates and pro-Kremlin
narratives.
Four influencers living in Mariupol explained how their aim was to show Vladimir Putin’s “amazing” development of the city and dismissed accusations of them being propagandists, instead presenting themselves as truth tellers.
It
is unclear if all the influencers receive direct funding or guidance
from Russian authorities. None of those interviewed would discuss such a
link.
One blogger,
Kirill Sazonov, is accused of selling properties that belong to
Ukrainians who fled the war, a claim that he strongly denies. The houses
he tries to sell are often older and found in poorer, run-down
districts, clearly distinct from the new developments.
Mr Sazonov, 37, originally from Donetsk, said the real estate business
was “good, growing gradually”. Shrugging off the criticism he receives
online, he said: “If I’m making videos, if I’m popular, of course
there’s hate.”
The influencers fail to mention why the city needs to be rebuilt or the
dire conditions the residents living under Russian occupation face. The
remaining Ukrainians suffer from a chronic housing shortage, a collapsed
medical system, a persistent water crisis and the absence of critical
workers.
In her videos, Ms Chervyakova is determinedly upbeat and admiring of the changes the new city administration is making.
“The
city is developing,” she said. “It has its challenges, but so does
every city…Yes, there are still some buildings that are still destroyed
that spoil the view.”
As part of his mega project in Mariupol,
Putin signed a decree in late November instructing officials to use
“media and internet resources, including social networks, video hosting
sites, instant messengers and blogs” to disseminate content aimed at
“strengthening civil unity” in the occupied territories.
The new “blogging
schools”, opening across occupied territories that have the clear
patronage of Russian-installed administrations, appear to be a result of
this.
The Donbass
Media Center (DMC) opened a blogging school in Mariupol in September
2024, following similar schemes in the cities of Donetsk and Luhansk and
later Melitopol. It offers free two-week courses for those aged 16-25
on how to build an audience on Russian platforms. Ms Chervyakova is a
graduate.
One of its instructors is Pavel Karbovsky, 24, who is known as “Donbas
Cosmonaut” online. He has racked up millions of views online encouraging
people to visit the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic, portraying
Mariupol as a beach, food and clubbing destination.
Pavel Karbovsky encourages people to visit the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic
Mr
Karbovsky, who grew up in Donetsk region, said his aim was to show the
city’s “amazing” development. He unequivocally states in his videos that
Mariupol and Donetsk are part of Russia.
Through
his work at the DMC, “a lot of talented kids have emerged thanks to us…
we taught them how to film, how to create great content”, he told The
Telegraph.
Mr
Karbovsky said he did not know whether it was funded by the Russian
government – but it would be “cool” if it was. His name appears on
Ukraine’s unofficial database of “enemies” of the state accused of
colluding with Moscow.
The organisation that
runs the DMC is partnered with “Russia – Land of Opportunities”, a
Kremlin-funded presidential programme that invests in bloggers
throughout Russia and the “new regions”.
Its
2025 winner was Irina Mishina, a pro-Russia blogger from occupied
Luhansk, who said her goal was to “show real life of our republic: not
through politics or conflicts, but through people’s stories, through the
revival of our cities, and through the eyes of our youth”.
Mr
Sazonov, who also has ties to the DMC, has tens of thousands of
followers and posts about reconstruction efforts in Mariupol and
encourages Russians to invest in real estate.
He posted videos from
inside and outside a property believed to have belonged to Ukrainians
who fled during their siege. Their belongings, including paintings on
the walls and furniture, remain.
The
United Nations estimates that out of 38,000 homes identified as
abandoned in the occupied territories, nearly 12,800 are in Mariupol.
Experts argue that the overall goal is to seize the homes in order to
facilitate the transfer of Russian citizens to the captured cities and
towns.
But behind
the Potemkin facade, exiled city officials and human rights groups argue
that just like the fake villages once built to impress Catherine the
Great, it is little more than a propaganda exercise.
Elina Beketova, a
fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), whose research
focuses on occupied territories, said: “All the bloggers appear to have
been given the same task – to emphasise the redevelopment work Russia
is doing.
“The
same information circulates on social media channels and it looks like
the same co-ordinated effort to show how much better it is to live under
Russian control than Ukrainian.”
Petro
Andriushchenko, a former adviser to the Ukrainian mayor of Mariupol and
the head of the Centre for the Study of the Occupation, said the
overwhelming “culture of surveillance” in the occupied territories meant
“it is impossible to tell the truth in public”.
“People think they are
seeing independent opinions from bloggers on social media channels, but
it’s impossible to be independent,” he told The Telegraph.
“Every
single person making content, blogs, vlogs, from the occupied
territories is somebody under Russian control,” he added, arguing that
if they were not, they would be quickly detained or brought to heel.
According
to Yulia Gorbunova, a senior Ukraine researcher at Human Rights Watch,
the social media campaign “is part-and-parcel of Russian propaganda
efforts to erase Ukraine’s history, replace its art, language and
historical landmarks, and influence the young”.
Streets have been
renamed, monuments removed, the tricolour flag drapes from buildings,
only Russian-speaking television is shown, number plates have been
changed and the Russian curriculum imposed on schools.
On
top of that, there is a “whole range of occupation-related abuses”, Ms
Gorbunova said, including illegal home seizures, unlawful conscription
of civilians into the Russian military, coercing remaining residents to
obtain a Russian passport and the indoctrination, militarisation and
deportation of children.
Several months after
capturing the city, Moscow produced a “master plan” for the city, which
was widely discovered to be plagiarised from an outdated Ukrainian plan
for 2016 and ignored the city-wide destruction caused by the Russian
bombardment.
Critics
argued that it focused on just regeneration in the historic city centre
and the Azovstal steelworks, instead of the levelled residential
districts, where most lost their homes.
“Literally
everything in the city is being updated – from the master plan to the
dog shelter, from transportation to bus stops, from the theatre to city
parks and beaches,” the statement said.
“Literally everything
in the city is being updated – from the master plan to the dog shelter,
from transportation to bus stops, from the theatre to city parks and
beaches,” the statement said.
Analysts
have argued that this is not a long-term development plan but something
more sinister: an attempt to pave over essential evidence of alleged
war crimes.
In 2024,
a Human Rights Watch report said Russia’s refusal to allow independent
investigators into the city before demolishing large swaths of it
“effectively erased the physical evidence at hundreds of potential crime
scenes across the city”.
‘Dancing on the bones of murdered people’
But
there are other long-term goals at play, indicated by the endless
billboards advertising the city as a relocation destination and the
incentives of cheap mortgage rates and higher salaries for Russian
citizens.
So far, analysts believe more than 50,000 Russians have relocated there, with the aim of pushing out Ukrainian residents.
As
Christmas approaches, many of the social media influencers have been
showing redeveloped parts of the city lit up by festive displays. A
14-metre tree, drenched in lights, stands outside the new Mariupol Drama
Theatre.
They do
not mention that it was rebuilt after being destroyed by two Russian
bombs in 2022, killing an estimated 600 sheltering civilians. It remains
one of – if not the worst – single atrocity of the entire war.
Mariupol’s
exiled city council said Russia was trying to “restore the imaginary
‘normality’ of life through attention to the holidays”.
It
accused the occupying authorities of “dancing and singing on the bones
of the murdered people of Mariupol” in a statement on Telegram.
“However, local Mariupol residents remember the truth,” it added.
"A loan that enraged the Kremlin: why the EU decision was a bigger blow than sanctions
By allocating $90 billion to Ukraine, the European Union eliminated Kyiv's key financial risk and bet on a war of attrition that Russia will find increasingly difficult to sustain.
Anders Nielsen, a military analyst at the Royal Danish Defence College, shared his opinion on the EU's $90 billion loan to Ukraine.
Yigal Levin has compiled a summary of the expert's key points.
European media have greatly underestimated the significance of this step.For some reason, it's portrayed as a sign of weakness, as if European countries couldn't agree on the seizure of frozen Russian assets.In practice, there's little difference: the loan implies that it will be repaid by the Russians through post-war reparations, not by the Ukrainians.
The allocation of funds was critical for Ukraine: Kyiv was facing enormous problems balancing its budget for the following year.It's quite likely that Ukraine would have lost within six months.However, Ukraine now has the financial reserves to continue the war of attrition.
The Russian leadership's rhetoric clearly reveals their disappointment with the decision.Putin's talk of "European piglets" is a direct result of the loan to Ukraine.Of course, the Kremlin's plans haven't changed, and won't change anytime soon—the Russian leadership still believes it can win the war, despite the enormous problems in its own economy.However, it at least recognizes that it will now have to invest even more in the current war, and that it will drag on even longer.
What's also important is that the decision to provide the loan has marked Europe as a strategic player on the global stage.Previously, Europe was portrayed as a collection of countries that would follow in the wake of American policy.This is precisely what allowed the Americans and Russians to meet without the Europeans and decide on the future of European security.
It's worth noting that the American leadership was also upset by this decision.They, too, have started talking again about European warmongers who are hindering peace.However, this means that Europe is acting in its own interests, and no matter how upsetting this may be to other "great powers," it forces them to consider it as an equal."
"Portnikov explained why the Ukrainian Armed Forces' advance to the 1991 borders will not end the war
Journalist Vitaly Portnikov rejected the possibility of a ceasefire in the foreseeable future and provided arguments to support his belief.
"I don't think there would have been any peaceful dialogue even in the first year of the war. This is another illusion. I don't think there will be any peaceful dialogue if Ukrainian troops succeed in counterattacking on Russian positions," Vitaly Portnikov confidently stated.
The political analyst voiced his position on the NTA television channel's YouTube channel.
"I keep explaining: even if Ukrainian troops theoretically managed to reach the 1991 state border, that wouldn't be the end of the war. It would mean moving the front line to the Russian-Ukrainian border, with continued Russian attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure and the transformation of Ukraine itself into uninhabitable territory," the publicist warned Ukrainians.
Portnikov also emphasized an important nuance: "In this situation, the front line doesn't matter if we know the Russians' desire to render the entire territory of Ukraine unviable. Therefore, the only real condition that would force Putin, historically speaking, to abandon the continuation of the war with Ukraine is the exhaustion of Russia's financial and demographic resources, creating threats to the very existence of its repressive regime itself."
"If such exhaustion doesn't occur and there are no threats, the war will continue for as many years as Putin needs, especially since the majority of Russians fully support the war's central idea, so to speak, 'returning historical lands to Moscow's control.' I have no doubt that Russians would like the war to end, but they understand the idea of this war perfectly well," the journalist concluded."
In another interview - for the CEO Club Ukraine YouTube channel, Portnikov stated: "I hope that Ukraine will survive as an independent sovereign state. I don't know with what territory or population, but I believe that Russia still lacks the strength to conquer all of Ukraine, and the West has no desire to hand over all of Ukraine to Putin, because that would be a defeat for the West. The main thing is to wait until Russia no longer has the ability to continue destroying this country and its people... I never thought it would be easy.If you think I'm deeply disappointed, no, I'm not.I knew perfectly well how difficult it would be, because I've always understood the Russians' intentions perfectly. I worked in Russia for twenty years, and there were no secrets to me about what would happen.I knew that as soon as Ukraine separated itself from Moscow, what happened would happen, and there was one day in my life in 2014 when I realized it had begun.When I realized the annexation of Crimea was beginning, that Russian troops were entering, I realized a global conflict had begun.It was a difficult day for me, because I saw everything that would happen."
""Between 5 and 10 million Ukrainian citizens with the right to vote live in Russia, and if elections are held, we have the right to demand that they be granted the right to vote in the Russian Federation," Putin said.
Firstly, you have no right to demand anything.
Secondly, naturally, there are no 5-10 million Ukrainian citizens in Russia.
According to the 2021 census, 884,000 Ukrainians lived in Russia.
Also, after the Russian invasion, 1.97 million Ukrainians (including 19,500 deported children) left or were deported from Russia, but calculating the actual number is very difficult because many left through Russia in transit, and many were forcibly Russified.
Putin is also obviously referring to Ukrainians living in the occupied territories, who by hook or by crook hold on to their Ukrainian passports, and who were forced at gunpoint to vote in the "referendums" of the fall of 2022.
Therefore, if they want to fabricate 5-10 million ballots, it won't be difficult for them.
Naturally, voting on enemy territory is as legally nonsensical as "referendums" in territories Putin hasn't yet seized.
But the question here is how good Trump will think this is.Ukraine and Europe will have the added headache of explaining to the American president why this is impossible.
This is simply another manipulation to complicate the elections and thereby pit Trump against Zelensky again or create preconditions for their own non-recognition.
A manipulation that would not have been possible in principle if the White House hadn't fallen for it.
P.S.Putin also added that he is ready to cease long-range strikes on election day, but this will absolutely not allow the elections to be held, since troops on the front lines won't be able to vote.Only a complete ceasefire for the ENTIRE election campaign."
Ukraine has learned that frozen lines mean little without enforcement.
By Dmytro Kuleba
Dmytro Kuleba was Ukraine’s foreign minister from 2020 to 2024.
There is a temptation in every ceasefire negotiation to treat geography
as the main variable. Diplomats sweat over where the front line freezes,
which towns change hands and which lands are labeled “temporarily
occupied.” Yet the central question in these talks is not simply whether
Ukraine might give up a portion of Donbas, the ravaged region on the
nation’s eastern border with Russia, under a negotiated formula. It is
what comes next. What prevents Russia from turning a “ceasefire” into a
means of finishing the job?
This is not merely a theoretical question. Ukraine learned some hard lessons in 2015 that have left it understandably cautious.
That
year, the second Minsk agreement was signed to stop the war in eastern
Ukraine. The ceasefire was set to begin on Feb. 15. As the diplomatic
ink dried, officials spoke hopefully of de-escalation. But on the
ground, the fighting did not stop. Russian forces and their proxies
continued their assault on Debaltseve, a key rail and road junction.
Only after the city fell and Ukrainian troops were forced to withdraw on
Feb. 18 did the ceasefire truly take hold. In practice, the ceasefire
served as diplomatic cover for Russia to seize what it wanted before the
line froze.
Worse,
despite the fact that Russian forces continued to violate the
ceasefire, Germany and France insisted on talking about compliance.
Rather than declaring the effort dead, they leaned hard on Ukraine,
which was largely reacting to Russia’s provocations, to keep up its side
of the deal. This was not due to naiveté. It was due to the
gravitational pull of process when enforcement is weak. The side that
violates the terms creates new facts on the ground; the side that
complies is pressed to keep complying — to “save the deal” and to avoid
being blamed for collapse.
Ukraine rightly fears a repeat of this dynamic. If Ukrainian forces
withdraw from certain areas, what physically prevents Russia from moving
into the newly vacated territory under whatever pretense they come up
with? Even if the United States and Europe threaten consequences for
such breaches, everyone understands the grim asymmetry: Sanctions can be
reimposed, weapons deliveries can be accelerated, diplomatic isolation
can deepen, and statements of condemnation can be issued. But no Western
army is going to storm a town in eastern Ukraine to evict Russian
troops after the fact.
A durable ceasefire now hangs on two questions.
First, will Russia accept an agreement in which many of its demands are
satisfied only nominally — on paper, partially or conditionally? It
might, if cornered. President Vladimir Putin’s speech on Wednesday
suggests his full goals remain unchanged. But Moscow has long treated
incremental concessions at negotiations as partial wins to pocket. A
ceasefire that reduces Russia’s immediate costs while preserving the
option to escalate later is not a concession for Putin; it is his
strategy.
Second, how will compliance be enforced in a way that actively blocks
opportunistic advances rather than merely punishes them after the fact?
If the answer is only “we will respond,” then Ukraine is being asked to
trade territory for promises — and to trust that Russia will not test
those promises. Ukraine has no trust left to give.
This is precisely what worries Zelensky and holds him back — and why his
caution is not stubbornness but responsibility. A ceasefire that simply
shifts the battlefield into a slower, dirtier gear — with ongoing
Russian provocations, creeping annexation, acts of sabotage and attempts
at political destabilization — is not a meaningful ceasefire at all...
In negotiations like these, you can traverse nearly the entire distance
and still be forced to stop at the final step. Because it’s at the final
step that risk concentrates and illusions collapse."
"Russia is spying on Nato. We can’t do anything to stop it
Putin exploits weak maritime laws as West threatened by surveillance and sabotage
Adrian Blomfield,
At one level, European defence officials insist, the case against the crew of the Eagle S was unimpeachable.
For
more than six hours on Christmas Day last year, the ramshackle oil
tanker deviated from established sea lanes and dragged its anchor along
the seabed for more than 50 miles, severely damaging five cables carrying power and data across the Gulf of Finland.
It
was mere coincidence, they swore, that the ship had altered course to
pass over a narrow corridor of critical undersea infrastructure clearly
marked on nautical charts.
And it was simply a misunderstanding that, when challenged, they claimed
their anchor was secured and they had failed to notice the drag that
slowed the vessel to a crawl.
Personnel aboard the Eagle S have form when it comes to wounded
bewilderment. During earlier inspections in Danish waters, crew members
were reportedly at a loss to explain the presence of suitcases
containing specialised equipment capable of monitoring Nato ships and
warplanes – or the identity of a mysterious, unlisted passenger with no
apparent knowledge of seafaring.
It remains unclear whether
suspicions that the vessel had also been deploying seabed sensors in the
English Channel – to spy on British submarines and map the UK’s
critical undersea infrastructure – were ever put to the crew. It is,
however, a safe bet that they would have denied it.
In October, however, the Helsinki District Court dismissed
criminal charges against the crew – two Georgians and an Indian – in a
ruling that has unsettled European governments, who fear it amounts to
an open invitation for Russia to unleash anarchy at sea.
The judges ruled less on the merits of the case than on jurisdiction.
The suspected sabotage had taken place not in Finland’s territorial
waters but in its exclusive economic zone.
Under international
maritime law, they held, the crew should therefore be tried not in
Finland but by the state under whose flag the Eagle S sailed: the Cook
Islands.
A sparsely inhabited archipelago in the South Pacific,
the Cook Islands are better known for coconut palms and turquoise
lagoons than for waging hybrid warfare against Nato.
The
Polynesian state had merely – if controversially – lent its flag to a
vessel suspected of being part of Russia’s sanctions-busting shadow
fleet, used to transport energy exports and wage a “grey-zone war” of
espionage, sabotage and intimidation against the West.
Russia, Western officials argue, has been able to exploit weak and
outdated maritime laws to threaten and undermine Europe. Moscow could
now escalate its campaign following the collapse of the Eagle S case,
emboldening shadow fleet vessels to ignore orders to enter territorial
waters for inspection.
“It sends a rather chilling effect to coastal state authorities,”
said Alexander Lott, a specialist in the law of the sea at the Arctic
University of Norway.
“Next time we have an anchor-dragging ship
making its way through a maritime area which is full of critical
underwater infrastructure, it may simply refuse to comply and continue
in its way and continue dragging its anchor.”
Law is ‘really, really weak’
For
decades, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
has underpinned international maritime order, protecting freedom of
navigation on the high seas and guaranteeing transit through choke
points and territorial waters.
Russia is now accused of turning
those protections into a shield. When vessels operate outside
territorial waters, UNCLOS – which is notoriously difficult to amend –
gives Nato limited power to intervene, even if ships are spying on
undersea infrastructure, sabotaging cables or launching drones at the
behest of a hostile state.
“The legal frameworks we have to be
able to board ships on the high seas are really, really weak,” Adml Sir
Keith Blount, the alliance’s deputy supreme commander Europe, told the
IISS Manama Dialogue security conference last month. “In ports it’s
easy. In territorial waters it’s easier. But on the high seas it becomes
very, very difficult … as the Finns found out.”..."
***
Apparently the correct move is not to arrest but to submerge these vessels - and I would not mind if no efforts are wasted in rescuing their super innocent crews.
The ongoing peace talks are a diplomatic game.Yaroslav Hrytsak, a historian and professor at the Ukrainian Catholic University, explained its purpose in an interview with Telegraf.
"The conditions at the beginning of this year and at the end are different. In words, the parties agree to certain concessions. This, of course, doesn't mean there will be a ceasefire, because the distance between the two sides is too great. As diplomats say, this is the so-called corridor strategy, in which Trump wants to force Ukraine and Russia into a narrow corridor where they will converge," he said.
However, Gritsak emphasized, for this to happen, Trump must be more demanding of Russia.This isn't happening yet.He explains that the Trump administration wants to separate Russia from China.This is precisely why Trump's stance toward Russia is "much softer than toward Ukraine."Furthermore, Trump, who respects only force, believes that "Russia has force, and Ukraine hasn't."
"Peace is impossible as long as Putin exists. I often use the analogy of the Korean War: negotiations began in 1949 and ended only after Stalin's death. That is, the condition [for the completion of negotiations] was the death of Stalin himself," he recalled.
He also analyzed China's actions, which, in his view, is interested in continuing the war, which weakens the West.Trump, however, isn't "hindering, but rather helping."
"Trump's calculations are naive. And Russia has its own interests, even more pressing than China's: to weaken the West as much as possible," the historian said.
He added that the West's weakening could be predicated on Ukraine's defeat and NATO's disunity.Moreover, judging by the new US national security strategy, Russia has "almost succeeded" in the latter.
"But where Putin is struggling is in Ukraine. It is Ukraine that is preventing the implementation of Putin's plan, nor the Chinese, nor the American ones," Gritsak emphasized.
He explained that Putin, for several reasons, refuses to accept Trump's terms for Russia's withdrawal from the war.First, he is "not a rational politician":
"His position on Ukraine is particularly irrational. It can be described in one word: obsession. He simply cannot tolerate the existence of a separate Ukrainian state, a separate nation. He wants to do everything to ensure that it either ceases to exist or is weakened to such an extent that it becomes of no use to anyone, not even Ukrainians."
The second reason Putin refuses Trump's terms is that he will wage war throughout his life in power.He noted that peace with Putin is impossible."A truce with Putin would be possible if he felt his position was weakening. Does he feel weak now? Unlikely. He thinks it's not he who's weak, but the West, and that he'll push them to the limit," he said.
As the interviewers recalled, Hrytsak had long stated that Ukraine's partners would pressure it to conclude a ceasefire with Russia.He also warned of the "risk of civil war" that proponents of such a plan could provoke.He added that he hoped for common sense in Ukrainian society..."
Ukraine is currently effectively defending Europe from Russia, but neither Kyiv nor Brussels has a clear strategy for victory, which is effectively a long and slow path to defeat.This opinion was expressed by historian and professor at the Ukrainian Catholic University Yaroslav Hrytsak in an interview with Telegraf.
He disagreed with the widespread thesis that Europe currently benefits from a protracted war in Ukraine.He argued that "Europe is rather helpless," having become "scared" of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, albeit briefly.
"There was an initial shock, but European governments survived it. Moreover, the resistance of Ukrainian society helped. Many people in Europe said, 'Well, okay, the Ukrainians are holding out, there's no threat,'" the historian explained.
According to him, US President Donald Trump "really scared" Europe by saying that he was no longer interested in it.
"This means that Europe is deprived of protection, and in this situation, oddly enough, Ukraine is Europe's greatest defense right now because it holds the eastern front. Ukraine is buying time for Europe. The only question is whether this time will be enough for Europe to restructure itself and make some radical changes," the professor asserts.
At the same time, he says, this doesn't mean Europe will stop helping us.He says, "The problem is rather that neither Europe nor Ukraine has a strategy for victory":
"And the absence of such a strategy, as the textbooks tell us, is a long and slow path to defeat.""
"Zelenskyy explained why Ukraine doesn't need to change the Constitution regarding NATO
Vitaliy Saenko, 12/18/25
The President believes that Ukraine deserves security guarantees such as membership in the Alliance.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy believes that the Ukrainian people should decide what changes to make to the Constitution.However, regarding the issue of seeking NATO membership, the Constitution should not be amended simply because Russia opposes Ukraine's Euro-Atlantic integration.According to a UNIAN correspondent, Zelenskyy stated this at a press conference in Brussels, where a summit of EU leaders is taking place today.
Specifically, the president was asked whether it was correct to understand that Ukraine was abandoning its aspirations for NATO membership, and whether the corresponding amendments would be made to the Ukrainian Constitution.
"I don't know how my words were interpreted," Zelenskyy said.
He recalled that, from the very first days of his interaction with former US President Joe Biden, he asked whether Ukraine could gain membership in the Alliance.Because Ukraine aspired to it and understood that it would provide real security guarantees.
"This was before the [full-scale] war. President Biden told me, 'No, you won't be in NATO.' I approached this issue every time, and it's already elicited smiles from someone in the White House, along with all sorts of reactions. They always said I was tough. I don't know why. And frankly, I don't understand it when a country says, 'We're not against it, but you won't be there.' I believe you won't be there because someone is against it. And we need to be frank about who's against it, and then resolve these issues, or not resolve them," Zelenskyy noted.
"Frankly, I don't think we need to change our country's Constitution. First of all, it's the Constitution of Ukraine, and let the Ukrainian people decide what to do with our Constitution, not someone else. Certainly not because of calls from the Russian Federation or anyone else. This is our Constitution. And this is our course. We wanted these security guarantees. We believe we deserve them," the Ukrainian leader emphasized.
At the same time, he said, US policy is consistent and unchanged regarding Ukraine's prospects for NATO membership.The president added:
"They don't see us there. For now. Look, it's all part of our lives for now. Maybe in the future, the position will change. Maybe someone will realize that a strong Ukrainian army strengthens NATO, and not vice versa. It's a matter of politics. The world changes. Some live, some die. That's life. And we are fighting for security guarantees. Today, they are the ones we are discussing."
He believes his words cannot be interpreted any other way.
The President reiterated that he is not the one deciding the NATO membership issue, and that this matter is solely within the purview of the Alliance's member countries.
"Their desire to see us there, or their reluctance. Their agreements with Russia—or rather, not agreements—are a little different. Our position remains unchanged—we deserve it. We would like to have such security guarantees. And the position of our partners, for now, remains unchanged. And let them be responsible for these changes, or lack thereof. In my view, this is fair," Zelenskyy asserted.
As UNIAN reported, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte stated that Hungary, the United States, Slovakia, and possibly several other countries do not support Ukraine's membership in the Alliance.
The first draft of the "peace plan," which the United States handed over to Ukraine in November, included a clause requiring Ukraine to enshrine its refusal to join NATO in its Constitution."
"This week, a decision is being made: is the world heading toward global war or will it finally find the will to stop it?Interview with Bessmertny
Roman Pryadun, December 18, 2025
The Berlin talks revealed the central dilemma of the moment: the West wants a quick result, Ukraine wants a high-quality and irreversible one, and Russia wants further war.
Ukrainian diplomat and politician Roman Bessmertny shared his thoughts on these and other issues in an exclusive interview with OBOZ.UA.
–Volodymyr Zelenskyy noted: "We have not agreed to any territorial concessions."Meanwhile, the Americans are officially demanding the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops in exchange for security guarantees.American media, citing the White House, report that the Ukrainians have been given time to go home to "discuss proposals," and are expected in Miami at the end of the week.Another meeting is possible.
To begin with, I'd like to ask everyone to pay attention to the remark by Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov, who said that the Americans allegedly promised to return "Russian lands."What does this indicate?No such decisions were ever made, of course, and no one made any promises.But the topic itself was raised.And it was clearly raised both in Anchorage and during conversations with Whitkoff.This is already obvious, as it was once mentioned in an interview with Tucker Carlson, when he spoke with Whitkoff.In other words, the essence of the problem wasn't simply some abstract territories, say, the Donetsk region, part of which is now controlled by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the legitimate Ukrainian government.It was about "Novorossiya."And rest assured: this is only an interim stage.
Now, talk is one thing, and facts and events are quite another.Given that I haven't seen and don't see peace as Moscow's option for resolving the situation, I understand perfectly well that Putin, in the current situation, is motivated by Donald Trump's efforts to take another step forward in the occupation of Ukraine.And this is only an interim stage.
Now let's temporarily put ourselves in the shoes of President Zelenskyy, who has enough facts not only to confirm what we've discussed repeatedly but also to look ahead.Clearly, intelligence has operational data on the Russian General Staff's developments, understands what operations will be planned next, and so on.In the current situation, Zelenskyy faces a choice: buy a ticket on an installment plan for two or three months, or not worry about it at all and simply accept that peace is fundamentally not on the horizon.
–But Ukraine and Europe aren't rejecting Trump's plan, continuing "peace talks."Is this to avoid irritating Trump, hoping for another epiphany?
This means that in fact a choice is made between tactical tools.The main thing is that this is a maneuver aimed at eliciting Moscow's response.After all, they are interested in capitulation, not any compromises, even those that would be painful for Ukraine.This has been obvious for a long time.
– Is there a chance of making Donald Trump even a formal mediator?
No. He's effectively in the Kremlin's hands, and the Kremlin is manipulating him.I've always supported the position we discussed back in the summer: the time had come to thank Trump for his participation and say: if you can help or sell, then do so.If not, please keep your advice to yourself.Because the maneuvers we're seeing now in Washington and Europe, if you read the primary sources and documents, aren't conducive to peace.They're encouraging the aggressor.He sees that he's succeeding in pressuring the situation through Trump and even some Europeans.
Please note: just a week ago, Europe, through Czech President Petr Pavel, declared that there would be no border changes because this is a war in Europe.But in the statement signed on the evening of December 15th by the leaders of individual European states and the EU, two positions emerged.The first was no border changes by force.The second was that the decision on the territories rests with President Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine.
And Washington continues to pressure Ukraine.This means that all the illusions about "something human" that Chancellor Merz spoke of are groundless.There was, is, and will be nothing human there.Hoping for a compromise with Putin or his clique is pointless.In this situation, only force works.
"Peace through strength" has been the obvious answer from the very beginning.But if Trump interprets this as pressure on Ukraine, he's only accelerating the path to continental, and then global, war.
Today, we find ourselves at a point where, within a week, a decision is effectively being made: is the world heading toward global war or will it finally find the will to stop it?This is precisely what we're talking about.
– You said back in the summer that we should have thanked Donald Trump for all the good things and minimized his involvement in this process as much as possible.Why wasn't this done, and why does the Berlin talks once again give the impression that the most important thing is to keep Trump from getting irritated?
Some European leaders simply lack the political will to make such a decision.And, excuse me, but those familiar with the eve of the First and Second World Wars know very well: this isn't the first time Europe and the world have experienced such a moment.However, the solutions are readily available.The question isn't about preparing for war in 2030. The question is that we need to be prepared now.
Pay attention to the words of the new head of British intelligence.Taking office precisely at the time when meetings between Americans, Europeans, and Ukrainians were taking place in Europe, she stated absolutely clearly: this is Moscow's pressure to seize Ukraine now and then continue the war against Europe.
Is this accepted in Washington?Are European capitals accepted?No. The logic here is: if you haven't had your fill, you can't have your fill.The illusion is that this means a few more days of peace, a few more days without war.But in reality, this is not a reprieve.It is an invitation to the aggressor.
–Don't you think that's exactly what Trump is aiming for? For Putin to invade some European country. Then Europe would be colossally frightened, and Europe's dependence on the United States would become even greater.
For Donald Trump, a war in Europe is, if you will, a dream.He knows very well what the United States once relied on.It's no coincidence that the situation has escalated precisely when Trump began complaining that Europe has begun buying fewer American weapons.We've discussed this: modernizing the European defense industry and increasing domestic production will lead to Europeans stopping buying from the United States.And for him, whether the conflict is large or small doesn't matter.What matters to him is the dollar...
The "national security strategy" story has already triggered serious developments.Now Europe will have to make another choice.Either thank Trump for his efforts and say: keep your recommendations to yourself.
– But this decision must be pan-European. Will it be finalized?
That will depend on the decisions made in Brussels on December 18-19. We'll have some possible answers around Christmas, but not a final one. Because Trump continues to maneuver: he introduces tariffs, then delays them, then talks about sanctions against Lukoil, then delays them. The license to purchase Lukoil's foreign assets has already been delayed twice. But this only reveals Trump. It reveals the shadowy part of his dialogue with Moscow, which he doesn't want to discuss, but which is in fact key. And sooner or later, this information will surface. And then it will become the final argument for the rift between Europe and the United States on the issue of countering Russian aggression.
– The Ukrainian President noted that the United States wants to end the war quickly.They claim that 90% of the issues have already been agreed upon, leaving territories and security guarantees.According to Western media, the Americans have given Ukraine an ultimatum: here are your security guarantees, they're excellent, everyone's happy.If not, things will only get worse.Why is the United States in such a rush?
This is pure blackmail.All this rhetoric about "guarantees on the table"—take them or they'll disappear—is really just a smokescreen.The Ukrainian side, having announced about elections and NATO, proposed moving on to a substantive discussion of security guarantees.The Americans, however, are talking not about guarantees, but about assurances.And the entire discussion mentally harks back to 1994, to the configuration of the Budapest Memorandum.There's no talk of any real guarantees.That's precisely why the president is asking: if Russia attacks, which units and what exactly will you do?
–And in response, zero specifics...
Exactly. So please take your 'platinum new guarantees' back where you got them. Because no guarantees exist today. Now imagine: they tell you to withdraw your troops from a fortified region that has a strategic advantage. Reduce your army. And we'll still have to think about what assurances to give you. That's precisely why Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian negotiating team are acting the way they are. They're demonstrating to Trump a constructive spirit and a willingness to engage in dialogue. This is an absolutely correct tactical move, so that both Whitkoff and Trump hear Russia's 'no.'But it won't be voiced publicly. Because then the whole theater will fall apart.
–So you believe there won't be any real security guarantees that could stop Russia's next invasion. Because if you look at it logically, the Americans are loudly saying, 'No NATO, we won't fight Russia, a nuclear power.'And then suddenly they're offering us guarantees that envision war with Russia, a nuclear power. Well, that seems strange, to put it mildly.
The Europeans themselves have already suggested everything.Their statements clearly state: the United States will monitor, manage the process, and provide information.You won't find the word "force" anywhere in them.No units.Not even a mention of air control.The entire force component is coming from Europe.So, it's clear to me: all these "platinum," "gold," and any other guarantees are just talk.It's just empty talk.And it's no coincidence that I'm recalling 1994. I remember that story very well...
– So all these positive statements – like, we’ve worked on something, there are security guarantees, Congress is ready to support it, to legally enshrine it – this, in essence, means nothing?
Absolutely.If they really wanted to provide guarantees, they would have taken the law on relations with Taiwan or Israel, put it on the table, changed the country's name, and that would be it.But that's not even being discussed.Somewhere they write about Senate ratification, somewhere else – Congress.This is all aimed at people who don't distinguish between assurances and guarantees.It's a play on words.There have been no guarantees from Trump, and there are none.He kept silent for a long time, and now he supposedly "put" something on the table.But there's nothing behind it.
A telling moment: did the Europeans present their guarantee mechanisms?They didn't present anything, and rightly so.Because they weren't just talking to representatives of the US president, but to actual Russian intelligence.That's why neither the British nor the French General Staff announced anything.And rightly so.Because the last thing they needed was for Europe to lay out its work, which had been in the works since March, to the people who will pass it on.
Europe has its own problems.But they have nothing in common with the blatant lies we are currently facing from Donald Trump and his administration..."