Trump and Putin envoys say Davos meting on Ukraine was 'very positive' and 'constructive'


U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and U.S. businessman Jared Kushner walk, on the day of the 56th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting, in Davos, Switzerland, January 20, 2026. REUTERS/Romina Amato

DAVOS, Jan 20 - Envoys for ‌U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that their meeting in Davos on ‌a possible future peace deal to end the Ukraine war had been "very positive" and "constructive".

The United States has ‌held talks with Russia, and separately with Kyiv and European leaders, on proposals for ending the war in Ukraine, but no deal has yet been reached despite Trump's repeated promises to clinch one.

Ukraine's European allies, currently arguing in public about Trump's threats against Greenland, are concerned the United States could demand ‍Ukrainian accept territorial concessions.

"Dialogue is constructive and more and more people understand ‍the fairness of Russian position," Putin envoy Kirill ‌Dmitriev said after talks with Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump's son in law Jared Kushner in the "USA House" at Davos.

Witkoff ‍said: "We ​had a very positive meeting," Russia's RIA news agency reported.

The meeting lasted for two hours, a source who spoke on condition of anonymity said.

At stake is how to end the deadliest war in Europe since World War Two, ⁠the future of Ukraine, the extent to which European powers are sidelined ‌and whether or not a peace deal brokered by the United States will endure.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting ⁠in eastern Ukraine, triggering ‍the biggest confrontation between Moscow and the West since the depths of the Cold War.

Russia controls about 19% of Ukraine, including the Crimea peninsula which it annexed in 2014, as well as most of the eastern Donbas region, much of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, and ‍slivers of four other regions.

Russia says Crimea, Donbas, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia are ‌now parts of Russia. Ukraine says it will never accept that, and almost all countries consider the regions to be part of Ukraine.

Ukraine and European leaders say that Russia cannot be allowed to achieve its aims after what they cast as an imperial-style land grab. If Russia wins, European powers say, then it will one day attack NATO. Moscow says such claims are ridiculous and that it has no intention of attacking a NATO member.

Russia says that European leaders are intent on scuttling the peace talks by introducing conditions that they know will be unacceptable to Russia, which took 12 to 17 square km (4.6-6.6 square miles) ‌of Ukrainian territory per day in 2025.

Putin casts the war as a watershed moment in relations with the West, which he says humiliated Russia after the Soviet Union fell in 1991 by enlarging NATO and encroaching on what he considers Moscow's sphere of influence.

He has repeatedly said he ​is open to peace but one based on the realities of the battlefield.

The United States says a total of a million Russian and Ukrainian men have been killed or injured in the war. Russia and Ukraine do not publish losses.

(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

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