Donald Trump has signaled a pivot in his approach to the war in Ukraine, claiming he is ready to broker a deal between Moscow and Kyiv. The President-elect held separate conversations with both Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelenskiy this week, marking his first direct diplomatic maneuvers since winning the election.
The phone calls follow months of campaign rhetoric where Trump repeatedly promised to end the conflict within 24 hours of taking office. He has yet to provide a specific blueprint for how he intends to bridge the divide between the two leaders, both of whom remain entrenched in starkly different conditions for peace.
Zelenskiy confirmed the call on Wednesday, describing it as “productive.” The Ukrainian leader is under immense pressure to secure continued U.S. military support as Russian forces make steady gains on the eastern front. For Kyiv, the “deal” Trump envisions is the primary point of anxiety; Ukrainian officials fear a solution forced by Washington could involve significant territorial concessions.
Putin, meanwhile, has maintained that any peace agreement must recognize “territorial realities”—a euphemism for the four Ukrainian regions Russia currently occupies and claims to have annexed. The Kremlin has historically been wary of Western interference, yet analysts suggest Putin may be testing whether a Trump-led administration is more willing to abandon the Biden-era commitment to “nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine.”
Trump’s strategy appears to rely heavily on his personal rapport with both men. By positioning himself as the ultimate dealmaker, he is attempting to bypass the traditional diplomatic channels that have defined the conflict for nearly three years. However, the reality of the battlefield remains unchanged. Russian artillery continues to dominate, and Ukraine’s defensive lines are increasingly strained by manpower shortages and dwindling ammunition.
The challenge for the incoming administration is the fundamental contradiction in the demands of both sides. Zelenskiy is seeking security guarantees and the restoration of sovereignty, while Putin is demanding a neutral, demilitarized Ukraine that stays out of NATO.
Trump’s intervention creates a new, unpredictable variable. Whether he can leverage U.S. aid—or the threat of withholding it—to force a compromise is the question currently dominating the corridors of power in both Kyiv and Moscow. For now, the calls have opened a door that remained firmly shut during the final months of the Biden presidency, but they haven’t moved the front lines.
