The Kremlin said on Aug. 7 that Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet with U.S. President Donald Trump “in the coming days.”
“At the suggestion of the American side, it has been agreed in principle to hold a bilateral meeting at the highest level in the coming days,” Yuri Ushakov, Putin’s foreign affairs adviser, told reporters.
Ushakov said the target date for a summit is next week. Putin later said the United Arab Emirates (UAE) would be a suitable host country for the meeting.
On Aug. 7, Putin met with Emirati leader Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in Moscow.
The proposed summit would be Trump’s first meeting with Putin since he returned to the White House earlier this year.
“We had some very good talks with President Putin today, and there’s a very good chance that we could be ending [the war],” Trump said, when asked in the Oval Office about the chance of a meeting with Putin and Zelenskyy in the near future.
“That road was long and continues to be long, but there’s a good chance that there will be a meeting very soon.”
Trump had said he would implement “severe tariffs” on Russia if it did not make progress on peace talks with Ukraine by Aug. 9.
The sanctions threatened by the Trump administration could include secondary tariffs targeting countries that buy oil and gas from Russia, including China and India.
It was not clear how the announcement of the meeting would affect Trump’s deadline.
For months, Ukraine has been urging an immediate cease-fire, but Russia has said it wants a lasting settlement, not a pause.
“The main thing is for Russia, which started this war, to take real steps to end its aggression,” he said. “The world has leverage over the aggressor and the means to verify whether promises are being kept. I’m grateful to everyone who is firmly committed to bringing this war to a dignified end.”
The Ukrainian leader said he spoke with Trump on Aug. 6 and planned to speak to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and other European leaders on Aug. 7.
A survey in Ukraine published on Aug. 7 showed that support for a negotiated deal has gone up.
Gallup did not ask respondents what territory they would be willing to concede to Russia in a negotiated settlement.





