Zelensky says he is ready to work on US-backed plan to end war in Ukraine

Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky will meet with top Pentagon officials in Kyiv on Thursday, his office said, as details emerge of a US plan to end the war with Moscow on terms favorable to the Kremlin. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 November 2025
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Zelensky says he is ready to work on US-backed plan to end war in Ukraine

  • “Our teams — Ukraine and the USA — will work on the points of the plan to end the war,” Zelensky wrote
  • “There are contacts, of course, but there is no process that could be called consultations,” Peskov said

KYIV: President Volodymyr Zelensky said after talks with a top US Army official on Thursday that he was ready to work with Washington on a plan to end the war in Ukraine, and he expects to discuss it with President Donald Trump in coming days.
European countries are pushing back against the US-backed plan, which sources said would require Kyiv to give up more land and partially disarm, conditions long seen by Ukraine’s allies as tantamount to capitulation.
But Zelensky, whose office said he had received a draft of the plan, said after meeting US Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll in Kyiv that Ukraine and the United States would work together on elements of the plan.

KYIV READY FOR ‘CONSTRUCTIVE’ WORK
“Our teams — Ukraine and the USA — will work on the points of the plan to end the war,” Zelensky wrote on Telegram. “We are ready for constructive, honest and prompt work.”
Zelensky’s office did not comment directly on the content of the 28-point plan, which has not been published, but said the Ukrainian leader had “outlined the fundamental principles that matter to our people.”
“In the coming days, the President of Ukraine expects to discuss with President Trump the existing diplomatic opportunities and the key points required to achieve peace,” it said.
Trump and Zelensky clashed in front of television cameras in a disastrous meeting for the Ukrainian leader at the White House in March, but talks went more smoothly when he visited the White House this summer.
The White House said senior Trump administration officials had met Ukrainian officials in the past week to discuss the plan.
Spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and US special envoy Steve Witkoff were involved in the meetings and that Washington was having good conversations with both sides about how to end the war.

GENERAL SAYS RUSSIA CONTROLS KUPIANSK
The acceleration in US diplomacy comes at an awkward time for Kyiv, with its troops on the back foot on the battlefield and Zelensky’s government undermined by a corruption scandal. Parliament fired two cabinet ministers on Wednesday.
Moscow played down any new US initiative.
“Consultations are not currently under way. There are contacts, of course, but there is no process that could be called consultations,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
He said Russia had nothing to add beyond the position President Vladimir Putin laid out at a summit with US President Donald Trump in August, adding that any peace deal must address the “root causes of the conflict,” a phrase Moscow has long used to refer to its demands.
With another winter approaching in the nearly four-year-old war, Russian troops occupy almost one-fifth of Ukraine and are slowly advancing while bombarding Ukrainian energy supplies and cities as the cold winter sets in.

The Kremlin said on Thursday Putin had visited the command post of the Russian forces’ “West” grouping where he met the chief of Russia’s general staff, Valery Gerasimov, and other top military brass.
Gerasimov told Putin that Russian forces had taken control of the Ukrainian city of Kupiansk, a city Moscow sees as an important target in its westward push through central and eastern Ukraine. Reuters could not independently verify his statement.
Russian forces are also poised to capture the ruined eastern railway hub of Pokrovsk. Video released by Russia’s defense ministry on Thursday showed its troops moving freely through the southern part of Pokrovsk, patrolling deserted streets lined with charred apartment blocks.

’PEACE CANNOT BE CAPITULATION,’ SAYS FRANCE
European Union foreign ministers meeting in Brussels did not comment in detail about the US plan, but indicated they would not accept demands for Kyiv to make punishing concessions.
“Ukrainians want peace — a just peace that respects everyone’s sovereignty, a durable peace that can’t be called into question by future aggression,” said French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot. “But peace cannot be a capitulation.”
Rubio said earlier on X that Washington would “continue to develop a list of potential ideas for ending this war based on input from both sides of this conflict.”
“Achieving a durable peace will require both sides to agree to difficult but necessary concessions,” Rubio said.


Bulgarian parliament approves resignation of ruling coalition

Bulgaria’s Prime Minister Rossen Zhelyazkov delivers a speech following his government’s resignation in Sofia on Thursday. (AFP)
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Bulgarian parliament approves resignation of ruling coalition

  • The 240-seat chamber voted 127-0 to accept the resignation

SOFIA: Bulgarian parliament has approved the resignation of the coalition government of Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov amid nationwide anti-corruption protests, and weeks ahead of the country’s scheduled euro zone entry.
Protesters, many of them young Bulgarians, have been protesting in the tens of thousands across the nation for weeks. 
The direct trigger was a proposed budget for next year that would have increased taxes and social security contributions to finance more state spending. 
The deeper cause, however, was rising anger over a perception of widespread corruption among the political elite and a sense that justice does not prevail for ordinary citizens.

BACKGROUND

The protests and the fall of the ninth government in five years underscored Bulgaria’s political instability.

The protests and the fall of the 9th government in five years underscored the country’s political instability as it plans to join the common European currency.
The 240-seat chamber voted 127-0 to accept the resignation. 
The Cabinet will continue performing its duties until a new government is elected.
Zhelyazkov’s minority government survived six votes of no confidence since it was appointed in January, but this time the large turnout of protesters on the streets changed the game.
The prime minister announced his resignation on Thursday, saying it was a direct response to the growing public pressure and that the demand for the government to step down had become impossible to ignore.
“Vox populi, vox Dei,” Zhelyazkov said, using a Latin expression meaning “the voice of the people is the voice of God.”
In the next step, President Rumen Radev must allow the largest parliamentary group to form a new government. If that fails, the second-largest grouping will get a chance before the president chooses a candidate.
If all attempts fail — which is likely — Radev will appoint a caretaker Cabinet until a new election is held. Political analysts expect that another election — the eighth since 2021 — will likely produce a deeply fragmented parliament, making it difficult to form a stable government.
The Balkan country of 6.4 million people is due to make the switch from its national currency, the lev, to the euro on Jan. 1, to become the euro zone’s 21st member. 
Bulgaria joined the EU in 2007.