Turkey Proposes to Host Trump-Putin-Zelensky Summit
- Turkey proposed hosting a summit with US President Trump, Russian President Putin, and Ukrainian President Zelensky to end the three-year war.
- The proposal comes after Russia and Ukraine held face-to-face discussions in Istanbul on May 16, their first direct interaction in more than three years.
- Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said the summit could cap these talks under President Erdogan's direction, after meetings with leaders in Moscow and Kyiv.
- Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan expressed confidence that the initial two rounds of face-to-face discussions in Istanbul could be concluded with a summit involving Presidents Trump, Putin, and Zelensky, coordinated by President Erdogan.
- However, Kremlin dismissed the face-to-face meeting idea, while fighting and diplomatic stalemates continue, leaving Kyiv undecided about attending the next Istanbul talks.
56 Articles
56 Articles
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky supports the proposal of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to organize a joint meeting with US President Donald Trump and Russian neighbor Vladimir Putin.
Erdogan proposes new Putin-Zelenskyy-Trump meeting in Turkiye
ANKARA: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday reiterated his willingness to host a meeting between the American, Russian and Ukrainian leaders in an effort to end the war in Ukraine. © New Straits Times Press (M) Bhd


Turkey is prepared to host a meeting between Ukrainian President Zelensky, Russian President Putin and US President Trump, Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan said during a visit to Kyiv. The meeting should take place after further talks between delegations from Ukraine and Russia. Russia has proposed to hold further talks in Istanbul next Monday. Ukraine has said that it wants to see a document with new Russian proposals for a ceasefire before sendi…

Turkey proposes to host Trump-Putin-Zelensky summit
Turkey on Friday proposed hosting a summit with the leaders of Russia, Ukraine and the United States as it strives to broker an elusive deal to end Russia's three-year invasion -- an invitation swiftly dismissed by the Kremlin.
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