Donald Trump said he did not want a “wasted meeting” after abandoning plans for direct talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the war in Ukraine. Speaking at the White House on Tuesday, the US president said Moscow’s refusal to stop fighting along the current front line blocked any meaningful progress.
White House halts Budapest summit
A White House official confirmed there were “no plans” for a Trump-Putin meeting “in the immediate future.” The announcement came just days after Trump had said both leaders would meet in Budapest within two weeks.
This week exposed widening gaps between Washington and Moscow over peace proposals, ending hopes for a breakthrough summit. Trump and Putin last met in Alaska in August during a hastily arranged session that produced no results.
Officials said the White House cancelled the second meeting to avoid repeating that failure. “The Russians wanted too much, and it became clear there would be no deal for Trump in Budapest,” a senior European diplomat told Reuters.
Diplomacy moves to phone calls
A planned meeting between US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was also cancelled. The White House said both officials had a “productive” phone call instead, making face-to-face discussions unnecessary.
On Monday, Trump backed a ceasefire proposal supported by Kyiv and European leaders to freeze fighting along the current battle line. “Let it be cut the way it is,” Trump said. “Cut and stop at the battle line. Go home. Stop fighting, stop killing people.”
Kremlin rejects front line freeze
Russia has repeatedly rejected proposals to freeze the current line of contact. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the idea had been raised multiple times but “Russia’s position remains consistent.” Moscow continues to demand the full withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from the eastern regions.
Foreign Minister Lavrov said Russia sought a “long-term, sustainable peace,” arguing that freezing the front line would only create a temporary ceasefire. He added that the “root causes of the conflict” must be resolved — a phrase referring to Moscow’s demands for sovereignty over the Donbas and Ukraine’s demilitarisation. Kyiv and European leaders have firmly rejected those terms.
Europe and Kyiv call for first steps
European leaders joined Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Tuesday in a joint statement urging that peace talks begin with freezing the current front line. They accused Russia of not being “serious” about ending the war.
Zelensky called front-line discussions “the beginning of diplomacy” and said Moscow was avoiding talks. He added that only continued deliveries of long-range weapons could make Russia “pay attention.”
Rising tensions as talks falter
Trump discussed a potential Budapest summit with Putin by phone one day before meeting Zelensky at the White House. Reports described the call as tense, with sources saying Trump urged Zelensky to surrender parts of the Donbas in a potential deal.
Zelensky has repeatedly refused to give up any Ukrainian territory, warning that Russia could later use it to launch new attacks.
Putin’s surprise call with Trump last Thursday followed reports that Washington was preparing to send Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine, capable of striking deep inside Russia.
Zelensky said the missile talks forced Moscow to re-engage diplomatically. Although he left Washington without concrete commitments, he called the discussions a “strong investment in diplomacy.”
