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Ukraine needs 'real security guarantees' before any peace talks with Russia, Zelenskyy tells Vance

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday, before a meeting with U.S. Vice-President J.D. Vance at the Munich Security Conference, that his country wants "security guarantees" before any talks with Russia, as the Trump administration presses both countries to find a quick endgame to the three-year war. 

Ukrainian president met with U.S. vice-president for talks at Munich Security Conference

More work needed to 'stop Putin,' says Ukraine's Zelenskyy

4 days ago
Duration 6:22
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he had a good conversation with U.S. Vice-President J.D. Vance and that more work is needed on a plan to end the war in Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday that his country wants "security guarantees" before any talks with Russia, as the Trump administration presses both countries to find a quick endgame to the three-year war.

Shortly before sitting down with U.S. Vice-President J.D. Vance for highly anticipated talks at the Munich Security Conference, Zelenskyy said he will only agree to meet in-person with Russian leader Vladimir Putin after a common plan is negotiated with U.S. President Donald Trump. 

The roughly 40-minute meeting between Vance and Zelenskyy produced no major announcements detailing the way out of the deadliest war in Europe since the Second World War. Zelenskyy made a plaintive statement about the state of play.

"We want peace very much," Zelenskyy said. "But we need real security guarantees."

Vance, for his part, said the Trump administration is committed to finding a lasting peace between Ukraine and Russia.

"Fundamentally, the goal is, as President Trump outlined it, we want the war to come to a close," Vance said. "We want the killings to stop. Not the kind of peace that's going to have Eastern Europe in conflict just a couple of years down the road."

A group of politicians sitting at a table.
U.S. Vice-President J.D. Vance, gesturing, sits with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, and U.S. special envoy for Russia and Ukraine Keith Kellogg, right, at the Friday meeting with Zelenskyy, on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

Trump upended years of steadfast U.S. support for Ukraine this week following a phone call with Putin, when he said the two leaders would likely meet soon to negotiate a peace deal. Trump later assured Zelenskyy that he, too, would have a seat at the table. 

'New sheriff in town'

Before his meeting with Zelenskyy, Vance lectured European officials on free speech and illegal migration on the continent, warning that they risk losing public support if they don't quickly change course.

"The threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia. It's not China. It's not any other external actor," Vance said in an address to the Munich Security Conference. "What I worry about is the threat from within — the retreat of Europe from some of its most fundamental values, values shared with the United States of America."

WATCH | Trump, Putin discuss ending Ukraine war in 'highly productive' call earlier this week:

Trump, Putin discuss ending Ukraine war in ‘highly productive’ call

6 days ago
Duration 2:11
U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to visit each other’s countries and begin talks to end the war in Ukraine in what Trump called a ‘highly productive’ call. Still unclear is whether Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy will even have a role in peace talks.

He warned European officials: "If you're running in fear of your own voters there's nothing America can do for you."
The speech and Trump's push for a quick way out of Ukraine have been met with intense concern and uncertainty at the annual gathering of world leaders and national security officials. 

The vice-president also warned the European officials against illegal migration, saying Europeans didn't vote to open "floodgates to millions of unvetted immigrants." 

He also referenced an attack Thursday in Munich that left more than 30 people injured, where the suspect is a 24-year-old Afghan who arrived in Germany as an asylum-seeker in 2016.

NATO defence spending

Earlier Friday, Vance met separately with German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte and British Foreign Secretary David Lammy. He used the engagements to reiterate the Republican administration's call for NATO members to spend more on defence. 

Currently, 23 of NATO's 32 member nations are hitting the Western military alliance's target of spending two per cent of their GDP on defence.

Soldiers riding aboard a tank in eastern Ukraine.
Ukrainian soldiers ride aboard the top of a tank in Ukraine's Donetsk region last Sunday. (Oleksandr Klymenko/Reuters)

But European leaders are pushing back that the White House's characterizations of a dependent Europe doesn't play out in the data. The continent has rallied to get behind Ukraine since Putin launched the February 2022 invasion. The U.S. has poured more than $66 billion US in weapons and military assistance into Ukraine, while European and other allies have sent $60 billion in weaponry to Kyiv.

"We have put in place hard-hitting sanctions, substantially weakening Russia's economy," EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in remarks to the conference. "We have broken one taboo after another and smashed our reliance on Russian gas, making us more resilient permanently. And we are about to do more."

Chernobyl drone strike

Hours before Vance and Zelenskyy were set to meet, a Russian drone with a high-explosive warhead hit the protective confinement shell of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Kyiv region, the Ukrainian president said. Radiation levels have not increased, Zelenskyy and the UN atomic agency said. 

Zelenskyy told reporters that he thinks the Chernobyl drone strike is a "very clear greeting from Putin and Russian Federation to the security conference."

WATCH | Surveillance video shows strike on Chernobyl: 

Chornobyl radiation cover damaged by drone, Ukraine blames Russia

4 days ago
Duration 0:37
Surveillance video circulated by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on social media shows a strike on the outer protective shell of the nuclear plant.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Friday denied Ukraine's claims. And Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said the Munich organizers haven't invited Russia for several years.

Trump has been vague about his specific intentions for Ukraine and Russia — other than suggesting that a deal will likely result in Ukraine being forced to cede territory that Russia has seized since it annexed Crimea in 2014.

Ukraine's bid to join NATO 

Trump's musings have left Europeans in a quandary, wondering how — or even if — they can maintain the post-WWII security that NATO afforded them or fill the gap in the billions of dollars of security assistance that the Democratic Biden administration provided to Ukraine since Russia's invasion. 

Trump has been highly skeptical of that aid and is expected to cut or otherwise limit it as negotiations get underway.

WATCH | Hegseth signals shift in U.S. stance on ending war in Ukraine:

U.S. defence secretary signals shift in approach to war in Ukraine

6 days ago
Duration 1:56
Pete Hegseth says that NATO membership, pre-2014 borders are not realistic for Ukraine in any ceasefire negotiations and that Europe must shoulder more expense for Ukraine's defence.

Both Trump and U.S. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth this week undercut Ukraine's hopes of becoming part of NATO, which the alliance said less than a year ago was "irreversible," or of getting back territory captured by Russia, which currently occupies close to 20 per cent including Crimea.

"I don't see any way that a country in Russia's position could allow … them to join NATO," Trump said Thursday. "I don't see that happening."

Zelenskyy, in his own remarks during the conference, said the United States, including the Biden administration, never saw Ukraine as a NATO member.

Possible sanctions against Russia

Vance, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, said the U.S. would hit Moscow with sanctions and potentially military action if Putin won't agree to a peace deal with Ukraine that guarantees Kyiv's long-term independence.

The warning that military options "remain on the table" was striking language from a Trump administration that's repeatedly underscored a desire to quickly end the war.

Vance's team later pushed back on the newspaper's report, saying he "didn't make any threats."

"He simply stated the fact that no one is going to take options away from President Trump as these negotiations begin," said Will Martin, Vance's communications director.

WATCH | Trump says he may meet soon with Putin: 

Skepticism surrounds Trump’s plan to broker end to war in Ukraine

2 days ago
Duration 2:08
Multiple world leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reacted with skepticism over U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan to broker an end to the war through discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The track Trump is taking also has rocked Europe.

French Deputy Foreign Minister Benjamin Haddad described Europe as being at a turning point, with the ground shifting rapidly under its feet, and said Europe must wean itself off its reliance on the United States for its security. He warned that handing a victory to Russia in Ukraine could have repercussions in Asia, too.

"I think we're not sufficiently grasping the extent to which our world is changing. Both our competitors and our allies are busy accelerating," Haddad told broadcaster France Info on Thursday.