News 'Take the offer!' Donald Trump issues Vladimir Putin ceasefire ultimatum as Volodymyr Zelensky's White House return looms

Eliana Silver

Guest Reporter
Donald Trump has issued Vladimir Putin a ceasefire ultimatum after Russia continued to launch destructive strikes against Ukraine last night.

Trump is expected to call Putin this week after saying “it takes two to tango” as Ukraine agreed to lay down its arms in the first ceasefire since the invasion over three years ago.



After over eight hours of talks in Saudi Arabia yesterday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed the “ball is now in Russia’s court,” and stressed that he hoped “Russia will answer yes as quickly as possible”.

Rubio added: “If they say no, then we’ll know unfortunately what is the impediment to peace here”.


U.S Secretary of State Marco Rubio, U.S National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha, Ukrainian Head of Presidential Office Andriy Yermak, and Ukrainian Minister of Defense Rustem Umerov


On Tuesday, ahead of the talks, Ukraine launched its largest ever drone attack on Moscow, while Russia struck several regions in Ukraine with “massive shelling”.

During negotiations in Riyadh, Ukraine expressed its preparedness for peace after the US agreed to restart military aid and intelligence sharing.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was not present at the talks, said the agreement showed that Kyiv was ”ready for peace”.

He said: “Russia must show its readiness to end the war or continue the war. It is time for the full truth."

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The Ukrainian leader made sure to thank the US, after previously landing in hot water with Trump for allegedly not being “grateful” enough to the superpower.

“I want to thank President Trump for the constructiveness of our teams’ conversation,” he said, adding that the US must work to “convince” Putin to sign the deal.

The US ceasefire proposal would not only stop “missile, drone and bomb attacks” and the Black Sea conflict, but also end the fighting “along the entire frontline”.

Speaking to The Telegraph, Ukrainian MP for Odesa Oleksiy Goncharenko said: “We need peace, it’s a real breakthrough. The most important thing is that we have a real result in military aid and intelligence being resumed.”


Zelensky and Trump


Goncharenko added that he had “no confidence” Putin would sign a deal.

He said: “Now we will see the true face of Putin, I am sure he doesn’t want peace. If he starts to play games with Trump, it will be time for Trump to put pressure on him. He only understands force.”

Commenting on the ceasefire deal, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer called it an “important moment for peace in Ukraine”.

“We now all need to redouble our efforts to get to a lasting and secure peace as soon as possible,” he added. “As both American and Ukrainian delegations have said, the ball is now in the Russian court. Russia must now agree to a ceasefire and an end to the fighting, too.”

Trump also announced he had invited Zelensky back to the White House, adding: “Hopefully Russia will agree [to the deal]."



At the close of the talks in Saudi Arabia, a joint US-Ukraine statement announced that the leaders of the two countries would sign a mineral resources deal as soon as possible.

Meanwhile, at a meeting of over 30 members of the UK-France “coalition of the willing” in Paris, French President Emmanuel Macron told military chiefs they had to “move from a concept to a plan” for “creditable security guarantees” for Ukraine.

He added: “This is the moment when Europe must pull out all the stops, for Ukraine, and for itself.”

Trump’s Middle East Envoy, Steve Witkoff, will travel to Moscow later this week to meet with Putin.

However, sources have said that Putin does not appear to want to bend on his “maximalist” goals of dismantling Ukraine’s regime.


\u200bPresident Putin


US Senator Lindsey Graham said that America should increase sanctions on Russia if Moscow refuses to agree to the deal.

Earlier this month, Trump said Putin would accept a European peacekeeping force in Ukraine after a peace deal was agreed.

However, Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov rejected the idea on Tuesday.

He said: “What will the peacekeepers protect? The remnants of the Kyiv Nazi regime?”

Former Russian army commander Viktor Sobolev said he believed Putin would reject the proposal.

He said: “The US will rearm Ukraine in 30 days of ceasefire and start the war anew – Russia will not go for it. I think that this is completely unacceptable.”

However, spokeswoman Maria Zakharova for the Russian foreign ministry, told RIA Novosti: “We will not rule out contacts with US representatives over the next few days.”

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