Trump hopes for extension to agreed 3-day Ukraine-Russia ceasefire

Trump hopes for extension to agreed 3-day Ukraine-Russia ceasefire

Donald Trump welcomed the ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia and hoped it would be extended, marking the beginning of the end of the war.

Donald Trump
President Donald Trump has grown increasingly frustrated by the lack of progress in ending the Ukraine-Russia war. (EPA Images pic)
WASHINGTON:
Russia and Ukraine confirmed on Friday that they had agreed to a US brokered three-day ceasefire that will run from May 9 to May 11, and US President Donald Trump said he hoped it would be extended.

Trump’s announcement of the temporary ceasefire on Truth Social earlier in the day also said each country, locked in more than four years of conflict, would exchange 1,000 prisoners of war.

“I’d like to see a big extension,” Trump told reporters on Friday evening. “It could be.”

Both Kyiv and Moscow have accused the other of violating ceasefires declared separately this week as Russia readies to hold a Victory Day parade on May 9 that marks the 1945 Soviet victory over Nazi Germany.

Trump has grown increasingly frustrated by the lack of progress in ending the Ukraine-Russia war, and a halt in fighting offers a bit of good news for the US president, whose war against Iran with Israel has hurt his domestic approval rating. Efforts to end the Iran war, now in its third month, appeared stalled amid new flare-ups in fighting in the Gulf.

The Ukraine-Russia ceasefire would include a suspension of all “kinetic activity” and a swap of 1,000 prisoners from each country, Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

“This request was made directly by me, and I very much appreciate its agreement by President Vladimir Putin and President Volodymyr Zelensky. Hopefully, it is the beginning of the end of a very long, deadly, and hard fought War,” he said in the post.

Trump added that talks were continuing to move towards an end of the war “and we are getting closer and closer every day”.

Zelenskiy, writing on Telegram, confirmed the ceasefire had been arranged as part of US negotiating efforts and that humanitarian issues remained a key priority.

“That is why today, within the framework of the negotiation process mediated by the American side, we received Russia’s agreement to conduct a prisoner of war exchange in the format of 1,000 for 1,000,” Zelenskiy wrote.

Zelenskiy also issued a tongue-in-cheek decree “allowing” Russia’s May 9 military parade to proceed and saying Ukrainian weapons would not target Red Square. Russia has warned that any attempt by Ukraine to disrupt the Red Square parade on Saturday would trigger a massive missile strike on Kyiv.

Friday’s news followed what Zelenskiy described as substantive talks between US and Ukrainian officials in Miami, with US envoys due to visit Kyiv in coming months.

Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov, speaking to reporters on Putin’s behalf, said Russia had also agreed to Trump’s initiative.

“An agreement on this matter was reached during our telephone discussions with the US administration,” he said.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said air defenses had intercepted Ukrainian drones headed for the capital over a seven-hour period ending around 8pm local time (1700 GMT). Since Trump announced the ceasefire, Moscow has issued one such notice.

Separate ceasefires

Putin had unilaterally declared a two-day ceasefire on Friday and Saturday to cover the Victory Day commemorations – Russia’s most revered national holiday.

Kyiv responded that a ceasefire just for the holiday was inappropriate and called instead for an indefinite truce to begin two days earlier, which Moscow ignored.

The Soviet Union lost 27 million people in World War Two, including many millions in Ukraine, but pushed Nazi forces back to Berlin, where Adolf Hitler killed himself and the red Soviet Victory Banner was raised over the Reichstag in May 1945.

This year’s parade in Moscow – usually a show of Russian military might with intercontinental ballistic missiles and tanks – will have no military equipment on display.

Moscow’s troops have been fighting in Ukraine for well over four years – longer than the Soviet involvement, from 1941-45, in what Russians refer to as the Great Patriotic War.

Russia, which controls about 19.4% of Ukraine, has seen its advances slow this year, taking just 700 square km in the first four months of the year, according to pro-Ukrainian maps.

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