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** NEW MERCH ** Jackets & Sweatshirts, Thermo Mugs!! Daniel Davis Deep Dive Merch: Etsy store https://www.etsy.com/shop/DanielDavis... SEE ALEX OF HISTORYLEGENDS: Ukrainian soldiers say NATO training USELESS and Outdated • Ukrainian soldiers say NATO training USELE... American, European, and Ukrainian officials are meeting in Geneva in a major push to reach a negotiated end to the Russia-Ukraine war. Public statements from all sides are mixed—some hopeful, others hostile—reflecting deep divisions within the Western camp and a lack of unified strategy. Trump has hinted that progress might be happening but warns not to believe anything until a deal is finalized. Meanwhile, Zelensky continues to take a hard line publicly, insisting that borders cannot be changed by force, that Russia must pay for the war, and that Ukraine will not surrender occupied territories. His tone clashes with the fact that Ukraine is currently in the weaker military position, and his remarks act more like ultimatums than compromise. Putin, for his part, has also escalated rhetoric. He claims Ukraine’s government is an illegitimate, criminal clique and reaffirms that Russia will achieve all military objectives. He stresses that negotiations can happen only if Ukraine accepts Russia’s previously stated conditions. Those Russian terms—repeated recently by Lavrov—include: Complete Ukrainian withdrawal from all four annexed regions (even areas Ukraine still controls) Demilitarization to a tiny force “Denazification” Permanent neutrality and no NATO membership These are considered draconian for Ukraine but remain the only terms Russia says it will accept. Despite a reported seven-day deadline given privately by the U.S. to push Ukraine toward a deal, Zelensky has publicly rejected concessions, encouraged in this stance by Europeans who insist Ukraine must decide its own security future. With both Zelensky and Putin doubling down rhetorically, neither side is signaling readiness for real compromise. Still, U.S. officials in Geneva—such as Secretary of State Rubio—claim that negotiations have made the most progress seen in months, even though key issues remain unresolved.