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Trump and Putin to have one on one meeting before wider meeting with delegations, says Kremlin – Europe live | Friedrich Merz

More details on Trump-Putin talks emerge, with plans for joint press conference

We are getting a bit more details about the Trump-Putin summit in Alaska, coming from the Russian side, via Reuters.

A stuffed bear greets visitors at a shop along 4th Avenue in downtown Anchorage, Alaska.
A stuffed bear greets visitors at a shop along 4th Avenue in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph: Richard Ellis/Alamy

The meeting will begin 11:30am local time in Alaska, so 20:30 BST, 21:30 CEST.

Yuri Ushakov, the Kremlin’s foreign policy adviser and former Russian ambassador to the US, briefed the media that the two presidents will have a “one on one meeting” with translators, but also hold a “wider meeting” with delegations and a working breakfast.

Ushakov said that Ukraine will be the “central topic” of the conversation, but the pair will also discuss trade and economic cooperation.

The Russian delegation will include foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, defence minister Andrey Belousov, finance minister Anton Siluanov, head of Russian sovereign fund Kirill Dmitriev, and Ushakov, he said.

The two leaders are also expected to give a joint press conference at the end of the summit, he said, which should be a big, big moment.

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Key events

Germany’s Merz gets measured praise for Ukraine diplomacy, but Nato’s Rutte gets most credit

Deborah Cole

Deborah Cole

in Berlin

German chancellor Friedrich Merz’s stab at heading up Ukraine diplomacy has received measured praise at home, with a perception that Donald Trump’s declarations after Wednesday’s video conference sounded slightly less alarming to European ears than before.

Screenshot of the call of the Coalition of the Willing on 13 August, involving US VP JD Vance, published by the Luxembourgish PM Luc Frieden. Photograph: Luc Frieden/X

News outlet Der Spiegel has a multi-sourced play-by-play from the call initiated by Merz in which it credits the much-criticised Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, with making the penny drop for Trump on a key point.

Rutte received flak in June after a Nato summit at which he showered the US president with compliments over his actions on Iran and bizarrely referred to him as “daddy”.

More recently he raised eyebrows by acknowledging even before Friday’s summit that Ukraine may ultimately have to accept de facto Russian control over parts of its occupied territory as part of a future peace agreement.

But Spiegel said participants hailed Rutte’s constructive role in the talks with Trump on Wednesday, using clear, direct language to explain that if Russia were allowed to permanently control cities in the eastern Donbas as part of a land swap, it would open up “a motorway to Kyiv” for Russian troops to take control of the capital.

Participants recounted watching the “light go on” for Trump, who then reportedly conveyed he did not intend to negotiate territorial concessions.

US president Donald Trump meets with Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte at the White House last month. Photograph: Nathan Howard/Reuters

Spiegel quoted members of Merz’s team as saying that they were “relieved” by the “very constructive” tone taken by Trump and his vice-president JD Vance.

The Ukrainian delegation, which was present in the room when Merz and (president Volodymyr) Zelenskyy spoke with Trump on the phone, is said to have applauded loudly at the end of the conversation,” Spiegel said.

German officials had sought to impose discipline on participants to accommodate Trump’s limited attention span: “A clear structure was planned for the approximately one-hour telephone call: Merz would present his case concisely, the others would respond briefly, and there would be no lengthy monologues,” the officials told Spiegel.

Zelenskyy was also strongly encouraged “not to allow himself to be provoked” by the Americans to avoid any repeat of February’s disastrous Oval Office clash.

“Zelenskyy followed this advice,” participants told Spiegel.

Merz’s aides hailed the fact Trump reiterated some of their key points: the meeting in Alaska was only a kind of preliminary discussion, and only after that could proper peace negotiations take place, in which the Ukrainian president would also have to participate.

The Europeans had previously told Trump Putin would only budge if the US increased the pressure.

Trump listens to whoever talks to him last: for now, this little psychological trick seems to be working,” Spiegel said.

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