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What do we know about the US plan to end Ukraine war?

A Ukrainian flag is seen attached to a burned car at the site of a heavily damaged residential building following Russian airstrike
A Ukrainian flag is seen attached to a burned car at the site of a heavily damaged residential building following Russian airstrike

The United States has presented a plan to Ukraine with a list of sweeping concessions Kyiv could make to potentially end the war with Russia, a proposal that appears to echo many of Moscow's maximalist demands.

Here's what we know about it:


Territory

Details of the plan, shared with AFP by a senior source familiar with the matter, suggest Ukraine is being asked to give in to some of Russia's key demands - including concessions Ukraine has previously ruled out as tantamount to capitulation.

At the same time, the source told AFP it was "unclear" what commitments Russia would make in return.

On territory, the plan calls for the "recognition of Crimea and other regions that the Russians have taken", the source said.

Russia's army occupies around a fifth of the country - much of it ravaged by years of fighting.

In 2022, the Kremlin annexed four Ukrainian regions - Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson - despite not having full control over them.

A Ukrainian rescue personnel battles a blaze at a heavily damaged residential building following Russian air strike in the city of Ternopil, on November 19, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The number of people killed in a Russian missile and drone strike on the western Ukrainian city of
Emergency services extinguish a fire following a Russian strike on a residential building in Ternopil

Russia also annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in 2014.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has previously demanded Ukraine completely withdraw its troops from Donetsk and Lugansk and offered to freeze the front line in the southern Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, according to Turkey's foreign minister, who mediated three rounds of peace talks earlier this year.

Ukraine has said it will never recognise Russian control over its land but has conceded it might be forced to get it back through diplomatic means.

Ceding territory in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions that Ukraine still controls could leave Ukraine vulnerable to future attack by Russia.

"It is a matter of our country's survival," Mr Zelensky said recently.

Army and weapons

The plan calls for Ukraine to reduce its army to 400,000 personnel, cutting its military by more than half, the same source told AFP.

Ukraine would also be required to give up all long-range weapons.

That fits with other Russian demands put to Ukraine at talks in Istanbul earlier this year when Russia called for a reduction in troop numbers, a ban on mobilisation and a halt to the flow of Western weapons.

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (right) and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky shake hands
President Volodymyr Zelensky met with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan yesterday

Russia has also repeatedly said it will not tolerate any NATO troops on Ukrainian soil.

By contrast, Ukraine wants concrete Western-backed security guarantees, including a European peacekeeping force, to prevent Russia from re-invading in the future.

Whose plan?

US media outlet Axios reported the plan had been drawn up by the Trump administration in secret consultation with Russia.

Many elements appear to echo Russia's demands for how the conflict should end.

"It seems that the Russians proposed this to the Americans, they accepted it," the senior source told AFP.

"An important nuance is that we don't understand whether this is really Trump's story" or "his entourage's", the official added.

Since returning to the White House, US President Donald Trump's position on the Ukraine war has shifted dramatically back and forth.

Over 2025, he has gone from calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky a "dictator" to urging Ukraine to try to reclaim all the land captured by Russia and hitting Russia with sanctions.

The source said it was also "unclear" from the plan what commitments or concessions Russia would make in return.

Reactions

There has been no official reaction to the plan in Ukraine.

The Kremlin said it had nothing to say when asked about the reports.

The EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said any peace settlement must have the agreement of both Kyiv and Brussels.

"For any plan to work, it needs Ukrainians and Europeans on board," Kallas told reporters ahead of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels.

"We have to understand that in this war, there is one aggressor and one victim. So, we haven't heard of any concessions on the Russian side," she added.