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24.11.2025 - 19:30
Zelensky revealed what changed in the “peace plan” after the meetings in Geneva
24.11.2025 - 23:30The 28-point peace plan developed by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump no longer exists.
According to Oleksandr Bevz, adviser to the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, the document has been completely reworked.
He said that some points of the plan were removed and others amended, and that none of Kyiv’s comments were ignored.
In turn, Financial Times sources specified that the plan now contains 19 points.
Sources speaking to Bloomberg said that the clause on the use of frozen Russian assets has been removed from Trump’s peace plan. It had envisaged sending 100 billion dollars to a Ukraine Reconstruction Fund, with the United States receiving 50 percent of the profits and the remaining funds to be used for joint U.S.–Russian projects.
Nonetheless, so far only members of the Ukrainian delegation have publicly stated that the plan has been significantly changed. Washington has not yet confirmed this.
The U.S. peace plan was presented to Kyiv on November 20. Among the initial conditions were: Ukraine’s renunciation of NATO membership, and recognition of Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk as Russian.
However, giving up territory and reducing the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) are red lines for Kyiv, said Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Ruslan Stefanchuk. He also stressed that Ukraine’s membership in the European Union and NATO must be part of the security guarantees for Kyiv and any peace plan.
Russia, for its part, considers Kyiv’s red lines to be negotiable. First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs Alexei Chepa emphasized that Moscow will primarily insist on resolving the issues related to the causes of the conflict, and that only these will serve as reference points for everyone involved.
Many provisions of the U.S. peace plan that Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed in Alaska are acceptable to Russia. This was stated by Russian presidential aide for international affairs Yury Ushakov.
He noted that Moscow has also seen the European peace plan on Ukraine, but that it does not suit Russia. According to Ushakov, there are currently “many different” proposals circulating on how to resolve the conflict in Ukraine, in addition to the U.S. plan received by Moscow.
At the same time, Ushakov stressed that the draft plan on Ukraine will be modified and reworked by Russia, Ukraine, the U.S. and Europe. He added that no one has yet held substantive talks on the plan with the Russian side. Moscow is familiar with one of Washington’s versions of the peace plan, but there have been no concrete negotiations on it.





