Zelensky
8 briefs
Both Sides Declared Ceasefires. Russia Launched 100 Drones Anyway.
The Victory Day truces were not failed negotiations. They were proof of concept for a tactic: announce peace to prevent counterstrikes, then keep attacking.
Two Countries, Two Ceasefires, Zero Agreement
Russia declared a ceasefire for its own Victory Day holiday. Zelensky declared a different ceasefire for an earlier date. Both sides framed the other as the obstacle to peace.
Putin's Victory Day Ceasefire Does Not Require Ukraine's Agreement. That Is the Point.
The Kremlin announced Russia will halt fighting on May 9 whether or not Kyiv agrees. Zelensky called it theater. Both men are right, and neither can afford to say what the gesture actually is.
Zelensky Picks Baku. Russia Does Not Need to Accept.
Ukraine's president made his first wartime visit to Azerbaijan, signed six defense and energy agreements, and proposed it as the venue for peace talks with Russia, knowing Putin will almost certainly say no.
Zelensky Agreed Three Times, Then Didn't
The $500 billion Ukraine mineral deal has become a negotiation theater where each party is performing commitment for a different audience.
The Truce That Never Was
Russia and Ukraine agreed to a 32-hour Easter ceasefire. Ukraine counted 2,299 violations. The ceasefire expired with both sides accusing each other and Trump's peace plan no closer than before.
32 Hours of Nothing
Putin announced a ceasefire for Orthodox Easter. Ukraine accepted. The war did not.
Zelensky Is Using the Iran Deal as a Mirror. Russia Doesn't Like What It Sees.
Ukraine's president publicly praised the U.S.-Iran ceasefire and immediately demanded Russia accept the same framework. It is the most sophisticated diplomatic move Zelensky has made in two years, and it works whether or not Russia agrees.