Ukraine began the day with diplomatic momentum, celebrating a landmark mineral framework agreement with Washington. The deal promises U.S. investment in Ukraine’s recovery, in exchange for access to future profits from the country’s vast natural resources, energy infrastructure, and oil and gas reserves.
This moment of progress coincided with a cautiously optimistic first round of peace talks in Paris, involving American, European, and Ukrainian officials. Hopes were high—until U.S. President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a stark warning: without rapid results, Washington would withdraw from ceasefire negotiations altogether.
For Kyiv, this was a sobering reminder that U.S. patience is thinning—not just with Russia, but with Ukraine as well. Instead of ratcheting up pressure on Moscow, the Trump administration appears more focused on compelling compromise, even if that means dialing back support for Ukraine.
Russia, meanwhile, continues its brutal assault. Recent missile strikes in Kharkiv injured over 100 civilians and claimed at least one life. Yet these attacks drew no formal condemnation from the White House. Instead, Washington has paused military aid to Kyiv while subtly engaging Moscow, hoping both sides will align with America’s appetite for peace.
Ukraine has responded by agreeing to a full ceasefire, but Moscow has not reciprocated. Its demands remain unchanged: more territory and the removal of President Volodymyr Zelensky. The Trump administration’s hardline stance may be intended to accelerate diplomacy—but to many, it feels like abandonment.
On the Black Sea, where Ukraine has managed to push back Russian naval forces using drones and restored a key shipping corridor, 26-year-old naval commander Mykhailo reflects on the broader stakes. “If Russia takes all of Ukraine, who knows? In 10 or 15 years, they’ll move on to Poland, Lithuania, Estonia…”
With American military aid dwindling and Congress unlikely to approve new packages, Ukraine may soon have to rely solely on European allies—whose combined strength may not be enough to deter Russia’s ambitions.
The mineral deal, while symbolically important, now risks being viewed as a commercial transaction rather than a strategic partnership. Trump’s threat casts a shadow over Washington’s true intentions: is the U.S. committed to defending Ukraine’s sovereignty, or merely protecting its own economic stake in the outcome?