Former Russian President Casts Doubt On Trump’s Pledge To End Ukraine Conflict


Russia will have a greater say than the United States on how the conflict with Uktraine ends, according to former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev.

Medvedev, who is deputy chair of the Russian Security Council, has suggested that Washington would be mistaken to believe that the Russia-Ukraine conflict would end purelt on US terms.

RT reports: US House Speaker Mike Johnson has argued that giving Kiev more taxpayers’ money would not be necessary should the Republican candidate Donald Trump win the election, because he would end the conflict.

“If President Trump wins, I believe that he actually can bring that conflict to a close. I really do,” Johnson told Punchbowl News. “I think he’ll call [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and tell him that this is enough.” 

Commenting on Johnson’s quote on Friday evening, Medvedev indicated that Putin might have a say in the matter.

“And what if Putin says: ‘Not yet. Ukraine must capitulate. And no joining NATO’,” the former president and prime minister of Russia wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Trump has repeatedly said the Russia-Ukraine conflict would not have happened had he’d stayed in the White House, and that he had a plan to end it within a day, even before inauguration. While Trump has not offered any details of his peace proposal himself, his running mate J.D. Vance did.

In an interview last month, Vance outlined a plan according to which the current line of contact would become a demilitarized zone, “heavily fortified so Russia doesn’t invade again,” Ukraine would remain an independent state, but would have to provide Russia with a guarantee of neutrality and a pledge not to join NATO.

“I think that’s ultimately what this looks like,” Vance said at the time, adding that Russia was “scared” of Trump.

In June, Putin outlined the conditions under which Moscow might agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine, saying that Kiev would have to cede the four regions that voted to join Russia in 2023, and to officially renounce NATO membership.

For an actual peace agreement, Ukraine would also have to become a “neutral, nonaligned and nuclear-free state,” agree to demilitarize, denazify and guarantee full rights to its Russian-speaking citizens, Moscow’s ambassador in Washington, Anatoly Antonov, said at the time. The West would also have to lift all of its sanctions against Russia, he added.

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