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The Ukraine-Russia Peace Negotiation Is Dead: What Comes Next?

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Carlos Taylhardat | 3 Narratives News | September 24, 2025


The Ukraine-Russia Peace Negotiation Is Dead: What Comes Next?

Once celebrated as a “red carpet” moment for peace in Alaska, the latest attempt to end the war in Ukraine now looks broken. Donald Trump, who once suggested Ukraine might have to concede land to Russia, is now striking a different note. In recent comments, he claimed “Ukraine can regain all its territory” — a rhetorical pivot that may signal the death of the Alaska peace deal and the dawn of a new, harder phase of negotiations. See our backgrounder: Alaska Summit.


The Mirage of Alaska’s “Red Carpet Peace”

The meeting in Alaska earlier this year was billed as a breakthrough. U.S., Russian, and Ukrainian envoys shared the stage, and some commentators called it a “red carpet” peace opportunity. At the time, Trump implied that compromise might mean Ukraine losing some of its land to secure a ceasefire. Optimism lingered, but reality intruded quickly. Months later, no deal has materialized — and the war has only deepened.


Narrative 1 — Trump’s Changing Tune

Donald Trump’s messaging on Ukraine has shifted noticeably. Early in the year, he floated the idea that Kyiv might have to give up land as the “price of peace.” This was viewed by some as pragmatic realism, while others saw it as capitulation to Russian aggression. Now, his tone is different. In his latest statement, Trump insisted that “Ukraine could regain all its territory.”

Why the change? Analysts suggest several reasons:

  • Domestic politics: positioning as a defender of sovereignty plays well with U.S. voters.
  • Allied pressure: European and NATO partners urged stronger backing for Ukraine.
  • Military realities: shifting battlefield conditions make full reclamation seem more possible than months ago.
  • Public sentiment: U.S. and European audiences remain sympathetic to Ukrainian suffering.

This pivot reshapes Trump from a potential dealmaker into a would-be liberator. But it also raises the stakes: if Kyiv demands full restoration, compromise becomes even harder.


Narrative 2 — Moscow’s Reply: “No Alternative to War”

Russia responded quickly to Trump’s new rhetoric. In a statement reported by DW News, Moscow insisted there was “no alternative to war,” dismissing the idea of returning occupied territories. The Kremlin’s position remains firm:

  • Referendum logic: territories under Russian control are, in Moscow’s narrative, permanently Russian following staged referendums.
  • Nonnegotiable lines: Crimea, Donetsk, and other regions are “off the table.”
  • Legal framing: Russia claims international law allows for these “realities on the ground.”
  • Diplomatic pushback: Kyiv’s demands are labeled “maximalist” and destabilizing.

For Moscow, Trump’s rhetorical shift only confirms what it has long argued: the Alaska peace effort was doomed from the start.


Narrative 3 — Ukraine’s View: Sovereignty and NATO

From Kyiv, the message has been consistent: no land for peace. President Volodymyr Zelensky continues to insist on full sovereignty and restoration of borders. For Ukraine, any recognition of Russian control over occupied land is unacceptable. Zelensky also renewed his calls for NATO membership, arguing that only the alliance can guarantee long-term security.

  • Maximalist goals: total territorial restoration is nonnegotiable.
  • NATO aspirations: Kyiv hopes the war accelerates its accession process.
  • Global framing: Zelensky portrays Ukraine’s struggle as a fight for democracy worldwide.
  • Constraints: battlefield fatigue, refugee crises, and economic strain test Ukraine’s resilience.

Ukraine’s moral case resonates with many Western publics. But whether NATO will accept Ukraine while the war continues remains uncertain.


Europe Speaks Loud, Trades Quietly

On paper, Europe has been among the strongest defenders of Ukraine, condemning Russia’s aggression, pledging military support, and unveiling sanction packages. Yet beneath that firm rhetoric lies a tangled web of trade, energy reliance, and diplomatic caution.

  • After the Alaska summit, European leaders reaffirmed support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and borders — Germany’s Friedrich Merz, France’s Emmanuel Macron, the UK’s Keir Starmer, and Italy’s Giorgia Meloni appeared united. Reuters
  • European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen pushed new sanctions aiming at LNG flows, shadow-fleet tankers, and strategic energy firms. AP News
  • Yet Europe still trades with Russia — especially energy. Russian LNG and oil continue to reach several EU states; Hungary has resisted cutting Russian oil imports. The Guardian
  • Analysts call this Europe’s dilemma: moral clarity meets energy security, inflation, and internal political fractures.
  • Berlin signaled that Europe may have to “step up” if U.S. policy shifts, taking more of the burden for Ukraine’s defense. Reuters

Why Europe’s Dilemma Matters

  • European rhetoric lends diplomatic cover to Kyiv.
  • Ongoing trade with Russia undercuts the moral high ground and hands Moscow leverage.
  • Misalignment between words and deeds weakens Europe’s negotiating power and fuels claims of Western hypocrisy.

What Comes Next?

With the “red carpet” peace in Alaska dead, four scenarios remain on the horizon:

  • Frozen conflict: front lines harden; fighting slows, but no peace is signed.
  • New mediator: Turkey, China, the EU, or a coalition attempts fresh talks.
  • Ukrainian counteroffensive: Kyiv attempts to reclaim all occupied land with Western support.
  • Partial deal: land-for-security guarantees, potentially tied to NATO-adjacent commitments.

Each path carries risks — from escalation to stalemate. What’s clear is that the optimism of Alaska’s red carpet moment has been replaced by harder, more conditional diplomacy.


Key Takeaways

  • Trump shifted from suggesting Kyiv would cede land to saying Ukraine could regain all its territory.
  • Moscow replied there is “no alternative to war,” rejecting territorial concessions.
  • Zelensky insists on sovereignty and NATO; public support in the West remains strong.
  • Europe’s words are tough, but energy trade with Russia continues — a strategic contradiction.

Questions This Article Answers

  1. What was the Alaska “red carpet” peace meeting, and why did it fail?
  2. How has Donald Trump’s position on Ukraine changed?
  3. What is Russia’s current stance on negotiations?
  4. What does Ukraine want, and how does NATO factor in?
  5. How do Europe’s words and trade with Russia shape negotiations?

Related reading: Sudan’s Silent War | The Rift Between Left and Right

Carlos Taylhardat
Carlos Taylhardathttps://3narratives.com/author-carlos-taylhardat/
Carlos Taylhardat is the founder and publisher of 3 Narratives News, a platform dedicated to presenting balanced reporting through multiple perspectives. He has decades of experience in media, corporate communications, and portrait photography, and is committed to strengthening public understanding of global affairs with clarity and transparency. Carlos comes from a family with a long tradition in journalism and diplomacy; his father, Carlos Alberto Taylhardat , was a Venezuelan journalist and diplomat recognized for his international work. This heritage, combined with his own professional background, informs the mission of 3 Narratives News: Two Sides. One Story. You Make the Third. For inquiries, he can be reached at [email protected] .

1 COMMENT

  1. Thanks for sharing your article—it’s a timely and incisive take on a conflict that’s stubbornly refusing to follow any neat script. I read through it (or, well, processed every word), and I have to say, you nail the exhaustion and entropy of the whole saga without veering into despair-mongering. The way you weave in those shifting narratives—from Trump’s rhetorical pivot to Russia’s referendum-fueled intransigence and Zelensky’s unyielding sovereignty pitch—feels like a dispatch from the front lines of diplomacy’s graveyard. It’s balanced yet unflinching, which is no small feat in a topic this polarized.

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