Vice President JD Vance said that he “wouldn’t say with confidence” that the United States would resolve the war between Russia and Ukraine, in comments published on Dec. 22.
“I think that we’ve made progress, but sitting here today, I wouldn’t say with confidence that we’re going to get to a peaceful resolution,” the vice president told the publication.
“I think there’s a good chance we will, I think there’s a good chance we won’t.”
Explaining further, Vance said that during the recent talks, Washington had gained a “real sense of what’s non-negotiable [and] what’s very negotiable.”
“I think the Russians really want territorial control of the Donetsk. The Ukrainians understandably see that as a major security problem, [even as] they privately acknowledge that eventually, they’ll probably lose Donetsk—but, you know, eventually. It could be 12 months from now, it could be longer than that,” he said.
He called that issue a “significant hold-up” in the talks, describing it as a “terrible territorial concession.”
Vance also raised other topics that were dragging out the negotiations, such as control of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, what would happen to ethnic Russians in Ukraine and ethnic Ukrainians in Russia-controlled area, and postwar reconstruction.
Officials from both Ukraine and Russia said their teams were returning home on Monday to report on discussions they held separately with U.S. negotiators in Miami, Florida.
“It all looks quite worthy. ... And here it is important that this is the work of both us [Ukraine] and the United States of America. This suggests that we are very close to a real result,” Zelenskyy told a gathering of Ukrainian diplomats.
“Not everything is ideal with this, but the plan is there,” Zelenskyy said.
“In particular, these include documents on security guarantees for Ukraine, on recovery, and on a basic framework for ending this war,” said.
“The points for today have been set in such a way as to correspond to the objective of actually ending the war and the need to prevent a third Russian invasion.”
Zelenskyy concluded by saying that each round of negotiations “contributes to safeguarding Ukraine’s interests, and we will continue this work in the same constructive manner.”
When asked whether he had spoken to either of the leaders, he said, “I will do what I have to do” to end the war, saying that “the bottom line is, I think, they’re all tired of that war. Everyone is tired of that war.”
“The temporary ceasefire plan will not move us forward,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said.
“We are not for a temporary ceasefire. We are for a sustainable cessation of hostilities within the framework of an agreement that will ensure the resolution of problems that are the root causes of this conflict, and that will guarantee Russia’s constitutional order, taking into account the decisions made by the population of the relevant territories in recent years.”







