In a blaze of diplomatic theater, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy touched down in Paris on Monday for talks with Emmanuel Macron, part of a flurry of diplomacy propelled by a US-led peace framework born from back-channel negotiations between Washington and Moscow. Kyiv and its European allies have signaled guarded optimism even as Washington hammers out revisions to the 28-point plan, which Kyiv critics say is too weighted toward Russian demands. The arrival follows a tense round of talks in Florida, where US officials described the session as productive, and where Kyiv pressed for terms that could deter further Russian aggression while preserving Ukraine’s security and sovereignty.
Ahead of their meeting, Macron’s office signaled that the leaders would discuss conditions for a fair and lasting peace, including a proposed security architecture that some call a ‘reassurance force’—air, sea, and land-based guarantees meant to deter a renewed assault. The political temperature was heightened when former U.S. officials publicly cast doubt on the original framework, and President Donald Trump publicly dismissed the plan as a mere ‘concept’ to be fine-tuned, underscoring how fragile consensus remains among Kyiv’s allies and Washington’s partners. In parallel, Kyiv’s European partners have worried that concessions or delays in NATO membership could come at a steep price, even as Washington argues for a balanced approach that keeps Kyiv aligned with Western security guarantees.
Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed that Vladimir Putin would meet with the U.S. presidential envoy Steve Witkoff on Tuesday, amid a flurry of back-channel activity that has raised questions about where negotiations really stand. Washington and Moscow have both downplayed fresh disclosures that Witkoff once coached Putin’s foreign policy adviser on how to pitch Trump on the peace plan, but the intimacy of those negotiations underscores how the fate of a ceasefire now hinges on a delicate balance of guarantees, sanctions, and military posture. The mix of public rhetoric and private maneuvering has created a tense atmosphere in Paris, where Zelenskyy’s team insists on a robust security commitment while Western partners seek a path that avoids surrender or capitulation.