Ukrainian negotiators to meet US team on Thursday, Zelensky says

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky attends a joint press conference following his meeting with Nordic and Baltic states leadears in Kyiv on February 24, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 25 February 2026
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Ukrainian negotiators to meet US team on Thursday, Zelensky says

  • Zelensky said the US wanted to find a way to end as soon as possible Europe’s biggest conflict
  • “The problem lies in the political will to end this war and in the issue of territories“

KYIV: Ukrainian negotiators will meet US officials on Thursday to discuss post-war reconstruction, including a “prosperity package,” ahead of a new round of trilateral talks with Russia expected in March, President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Zelensky said the US wanted to find a way to end as soon as possible Europe’s biggest conflict since World War Two. But Moscow and Kyiv remain far apart in their positions.
“In my opinion, the difficulties are not at the military level right now. The problem lies in the political will to end this war and in the issue of territories,” Zelensky told a joint news conference with visiting Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas ⁠Gahr Stoere.
“I think ⁠that trilateral talks will be held in early March. Tomorrow, economic documents will be prepared at a bilateral meeting between Ukraine and the United States.”
Zelensky also said that Russian claims on Tuesday that
Kyiv was trying to obtain nuclear weapons were an attempt to exert political pressure on Ukraine during the ongoing talks.
He reiterated that Ukraine had no nuclear weapons and called on the US to react to what he ⁠described as dangerous rhetoric by Russia.

UKRAINIAN, US TEAMS TO MEET IN GENEVA
Rustem Umerov, the secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, and head of Ukraine’s negotiating team, will meet in Geneva on Thursday with US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law. Proceeding with the reconstruction of Ukraine after the destruction wrought by Russian aerial strikes and frontline combat has become a major element in broader talks on how to end the war, which entered its fifth year this week.
Kyiv hopes to attract about $800 billion of public and private funds over the next 10 years to rebuild the country. The latest assessment from the World Bank released on Monday showed ⁠that rebuilding Ukraine’s ⁠economy will cost an estimated $588 billion. The assessment is based on data from February 24, 2022, through December 31, 2025.
Ukrainian officials are pitching Ukraine as a future European Union member and a lucrative investment destination but any funds depend on a ceasefire and a peace deal that remain elusive.
Zelensky said Ukrainian and US negotiators would also discuss on Thursday the details of prisoner-of-war exchanges between Ukraine and Russia.
Ukrainian and Russian negotiators met last week in Geneva for their third US-mediated meeting so far this year but failed to reach any breakthrough on key sticking points, including territory.
Russia says Ukraine must cede the final 20 percent of the industrialized and heavily fortified eastern region of Donetsk that it still controls. Ukraine says it will not relinquish territory that thousands have died to defend.


Russia to free two Hungarian-Ukrainian POWs, Putin says

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Russia to free two Hungarian-Ukrainian POWs, Putin says

  • Ukraine accused the two countries of having “manipulated the sensitive issue of prisoners of war“
  • “You will be able to take them with you on the plane you arrived on and the plane you will return to Budapest on,” Putin told Szijjarto

MOSCOW: Russia will free two Ukrainian-Hungarian nationals captured while fighting for Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin said Wednesday, after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban appealed for their release in a phone call.
Ukraine accused the two countries of having “manipulated the sensitive issue of prisoners of war” and of staging the release as a PR stunt ahead of parliamentary elections in Hungary in April.
In a meeting with Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto in Moscow, Putin said the two soldiers were “forcibly conscripted” by Ukraine and that he personally made the decision to release them.
“As the prime minister requested, you will be able to take them with you on the plane you arrived on and the plane you will return to Budapest on,” Putin told Szijjarto.
Hungary is one of the few European countries to maintain close ties with Russia amid its Ukraine offensive and has consistently opposed military aid for Kyiv.
Ukraine is home to a large Hungarian minority, most of whom live in the western Zakarpattia region and hold dual citizenship.
The Russian defense ministry published a video last week purporting to show a dual Hungarian-Ukrainian citizen prisoner of war, alleging he had been forced to enlist in the Ukrainian army.
During their meeting, Szijjarto also urged Moscow not to raise energy prices, after fighting in the Middle East spurred by joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran sent markets into turmoil.
“I came here... to be assured and obtain a guarantee that even in the midst of the current crisis, the quantities of natural gas and crude oil necessary for Hungary’s energy security will be available, and that they will be delivered to Hungary from Russia at the same price,” Szijjarto said.
Putin said Russia was happy to discuss the issue of energy.
“Not everything depends on us, but, I repeat, we have always been reliable suppliers,” Putin told Szijjarto.
Hungary is the European Union’s biggest importer of Russian fossil fuels, having maintained purchases and secured exemptions from sanctions despite pressure from Brussels amid the Ukraine war.
Budapest was already facing disruption from the closure of the Druzhba pipeline, which transports Russian oil to Hungary and which Ukraine says was damaged in a Russian strike in January.
Both Hungary and Slovakia, as well as the Kremlin, accuse Kyiv of deliberately stalling its reopening. Kyiv says the threat of another attack is holding up repairs.