Trump may walk away from "Anchorage understandings" – Axios

Iryna Kutielieva, STANISLAV POHORILOV — 27 June, 20:00
Trump may walk away from Anchorage understandings – Axios
Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump. Photo: the White House

US President Donald Trump signalled during the G7 summit in France last week that he may walk away from the so-called "Anchorage understandings" – a term the Kremlin has used to describe its belief that the US supports the transfer of all of Donbas to Moscow's control in exchange for a temporary freeze of the front line.

Source: US digital news outlet Axios, as reported by European Pravda

Details: The American leader, who met his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the summit and had previously spoken with Kremlin ruler Vladimir Putin, noted that Ukraine is currently "doing pretty well" in the war.

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Officials who were present at the summit said Trump expressed frustration with Putin and even hinted that he might abandon the "Anchorage understandings", according to which the US supposedly agreed to Russia's demand for control over the whole of Ukrainian Donbas as part of any peace deal.

"Trump was sceptical about everything regarding Putin, and talked about pressure on Russia, but other leaders do not believe he will actually do something about it," one official told Axios.

Background:

  • Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov have accused the United States of betraying the "spirit of Anchorage".
  • Senior Russian officials have claimed that the US has walked away from commitments it allegedly made during the Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska in August last year.
  • Lavrov also recently argued that US actions indicate Washington is abandoning its claim to be an impartial mediator in efforts to resolve Russia's war against Ukraine.
  • In response, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that no agreements on Ukraine were reached during last year's summit between Trump and Putin.
  • The phrase "spirit of Anchorage" (also referred to as the "Anchorage understanding") has long served as a key element of Russian diplomacy and propaganda. The Kremlin has used the term to promote its belief that Trump supported Russia's main demand: the handing over of the whole of Donbas to Moscow in exchange for freezing the line of contact. Although the US has never officially confirmed that any such agreement existed, Russia has repeatedly used the phrase to create the impression that Washington accepted these terms.

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