According to Merza, the goal of Sunday’s negotiations in Geneva, where there are representatives of Ukraine, the USA and European countries, is to create a proposal acceptable to Ukraine, which will be based on the American plan and can be used for talks with Russia.
The AFP agency wrote that Merz is skeptical that an agreement will be reached by Thursday, by which time Trump demands that Kyiv agree to his plan. On Saturday, however, the American president admitted that the proposal may still undergo changes.
The plan, prepared by the United States after consultations with Russian officials, foresees, among other things, that Ukraine will lose a significant part of its territory, limit its army to a maximum of 600,000 soldiers, and undertake not to join NATO.
A number of Western countries and experts therefore consider the proposal to be very pro-Russian. Today, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk apparently alluded to this in his statement on the X social network, who wrote that before work begins on modifying the twenty-eight-point plan, “it would be good to know for sure who is the author of the plan and where it was created.”
