Zelenskyy Calls U.S.–Russia–Ukraine Abu Dhabi Talks 'Constructive,' Signals Possible Follow‑Up Meeting
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said two days of U.S.–Russia–Ukraine trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi, hosted by the UAE, were "constructive," with direct Russia–Ukraine engagement and the status of Donbas — Moscow’s key territorial demand — remaining the central unresolved issue; parties agreed to report back to capitals and military representatives flagged items for a possible follow‑up meeting as soon as next week. The Abu Dhabi sessions followed a four‑hour Kremlin meeting in which Trump envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff briefed Vladimir Putin, and they occurred amid renewed Russian drone and missile strikes as Zelenskyy pressed for U.S. monitoring and security guarantees.
📌 Key Facts
- Abu Dhabi hosted the first U.S.–Russia–Ukraine trilateral talks since 2022, personally hosted by UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed; delegations included U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Josh Gruenbaum, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and EUCOM commander Gen. Alexus Grynkewich, Ukraine’s Rustem Umerov, Kyrylo Budanov, Serhii Kyslytsia, Andrii Hnatov and Davyd Arakhamia, and a Russian team led by GRU chief Adm. Igor Kostyukov with Kirill Dmitriev and other military representatives.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the two days of talks as “constructive,” said they focused on “possible parameters for ending the war,” and identified the status of the Russian‑occupied Donbas as the key unresolved issue; he said military representatives flagged topics for a potential follow‑on meeting as soon as next week and stressed the need for U.S. monitoring/backstop of any security arrangement.
- Russian officials (Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov and adviser Yuri Ushakov) and multiple reports said Moscow insists a long‑term settlement requires Ukraine ceding control of parts of the Donbas; some outlets reported Putin is demanding Kyiv surrender the roughly 20% of Donetsk it still holds; the Russian side described prior overnight talks with Witkoff and Kushner as “substantive,” “constructive” and “frank.”
- U.S. private envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner (accompanied by Josh Gruenbaum) met with Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin for about four hours the night before the Abu Dhabi talks; Witkoff said negotiations were “down to one issue” and told CNBC there had been “lots of progress” in recent weeks.
- There were conflicting accounts about Davos: President Trump said he met or would meet Zelenskyy there and that “they both want to make a deal,” while a Ukrainian official said Zelenskyy remained in Kyiv and did not travel to Davos; some reports said Zelensky reiterated to Trump a proposal for a Ukraine‑controlled free‑trade zone in the east.
- The trilateral talks occurred amid major Russian strikes: Zelensky reported roughly 370 attack drones and 21 missiles were launched against Kyiv and other cities during the talks; reporting said at least one person was killed and multiple people were wounded in Kyiv and dozens wounded in Kharkiv in related attacks.
- Participants said discussions addressed outstanding elements of a U.S.‑proposed peace framework and confidence‑building measures, and the UAE and delegations noted the talks could extend into Saturday with coordination back to capitals and the possibility of additional meetings soon.
📰 Source Timeline (10)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Zelenskyy publicly stated that two days of trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi ended with 'constructive' discussions on 'possible parameters for ending the war.'
- He said all parties agreed to report back to their capitals on each aspect of the negotiations and coordinate next steps, and that military representatives identified issues for a possible next meeting as soon as next week.
- Zelenskyy emphasized there is 'an understanding of the need for American monitoring and control of the process of ending the war and ensuring real security.'
- CBS specifies the Ukrainian delegation included chief negotiator Rustem Umerov and military intelligence head Kyrylo Budanov, and confirms Russian participation through military intelligence and army representatives.
- The article details fresh Russian drone and missile attacks during and after the talks: at least one person killed and four wounded in Kyiv, and 27 wounded in Kharkiv, with Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha accusing Putin of ordering a 'brutal massive missile strike' while delegations met.
- The piece reiterates that Putin, in overnight talks with Witkoff and Kushner just before Abu Dhabi, insisted any deal requires Kyiv to withdraw from Russia‑annexed eastern territories Moscow has not fully captured.
- Ukrainian officials describe the Abu Dhabi trilateral talks as 'positive' and 'constructive' and say they included direct Russia–Ukraine engagement without U.S. mediators in the room at times.
- The article lists the full U.S. delegation — Trump advisers Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Josh Gruenbaum, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and EUCOM commander Gen. Alexus Grynkewich — and the Ukrainian team, including Kyrylo Budanov, Rustem Umerov, Gen. Andrii Hnatov, Sergiy Kyslytsya and Davyd Arakhamia.
- UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed personally hosted the talks, and a UAE government spokesperson said discussions addressed 'outstanding elements of the U.S.-proposed peace framework' and confidence‑building measures.
- Zelensky, after a report from his team, said the focus was on 'possible parameters for ending the war,' thanked the U.S. for being willing to monitor and oversee any end‑of‑war process, and signaled Ukraine is ready for follow‑on meetings in Abu Dhabi as early as next week.
- The talks coincided with a massive new Russian strike in which Zelensky said 370 attack drones and 21 missiles of various types were launched against Kyiv and other cities.
- Confirms that the U.S., Russia and Ukraine are now actually meeting in Abu Dhabi in the first trilateral talks since 2022, not just preparing for them.
- Quotes Zelenskyy via WhatsApp saying "The question of Donbas is key" and that Donbas will be discussed by all three sides in Abu Dhabi today and tomorrow, with talks expected to continue Saturday.
- Reports that, according to Reuters as cited here, Putin is demanding Ukraine surrender the 20% of Donetsk region it still holds in Donbas.
- Adds Trump’s Air Force One comments that there were periods when either Putin or Zelenskyy "didn't want to make a deal" but that he now believes "they both want to make a deal," while declining to commit to a three‑way leaders’ meeting.
- Zelenskyy says the status of the eastern Donbas region will be a key focus of Friday’s three‑way talks in Abu Dhabi between Ukraine, Russia and the U.S.
- Zelenskyy publicly reiterates to Trump in Davos his proposal for a Ukraine‑controlled free trade zone in the east, saying he believes it would be 'positive for our business.'
- Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirms the Russian delegation to Abu Dhabi will be headed by Adm. Kostyukov and could extend talks into Saturday if necessary.
- Kremlin adviser Yuri Ushakov, after a four‑hour overnight Moscow meeting with Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, states that a long‑term settlement 'can’t be expected without solving the territorial issue' and calls the talks 'frank, constructive' and 'fruitful.'
- Josh Gruenbaum, head of the Federal Acquisition Service and a senior adviser on Trump’s 'Board of Peace', is identified as accompanying Trump’s envoys and as part of the economic‑issues channel with Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev.
- Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov publicly reiterated that Russia’s precondition for a peace agreement is that Ukrainian forces withdraw from the Donbas, calling this 'a very important condition' on the very day trilateral talks open in Abu Dhabi.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed that the only unresolved issue in the negotiations is the status of the Russian‑occupied eastern territories, saying 'it’s all about the land' in the Donbas.
- CBS specifies that this same territorial disagreement already derailed a potential peace deal late last year, underscoring it as a recurring sticking point.
- Zelenskyy says the U.K. and France are prepared to put forces on the ground to monitor a ceasefire, but insists any security framework must include a U.S. 'backstop' from President Trump, and claims 'the main, core agreement on security guarantees is ready' pending Trump’s final decision.
- The article notes that Russia continues to make small but incremental advances in Donbas and reiterates Putin’s threats to seize full control of the region if talks fail.
- Confirms that Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner and White House official Josh Gruenbaum met Putin inside the Kremlin for four hours on Thursday night.
- Specifies that Putin adviser Yuri Ushakov publicly described the talks as 'substantive, constructive and very frank' and said they briefed Putin on Trump’s earlier meeting with Zelensky.
- States that Putin’s side is insisting there is 'no prospect of long term settlement' without Ukraine ceding the entire Donbas region on terms Trump and Putin allegedly agreed at their August summit.
- Details the Abu Dhabi trilateral lineup: on the Ukrainian side Rustem Umerov, Kyrylo Budanov, Serhii Kyslytsia and Andrii Hnatov; on the Russian side Kirill Dmitriev plus a team led by GRU chief Admiral Igor Kostyukov; Army Secretary Dan Driscoll will also attend for the U.S.
- Notes that the Kremlin talks also covered Greenland and Trump’s Board of Peace, beyond Ukraine.
- CBS report shows Steve Witkoff on camera saying Russia–Ukraine negotiations are 'down to one issue,' though he declined to specify what that sticking point is.
- The piece confirms that President Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Davos on Thursday, just before Trump’s departure, to discuss efforts to end the war.
- It situates Witkoff’s remark explicitly as coming immediately after Trump wrapped up his World Economic Forum trip, reinforcing that this is the current state of play in the U.S.-brokered talks.
- Trump, speaking at Davos on Jan. 21, said Zelenskyy and Putin would be 'stupid' if they do not soon reach a Ukraine peace agreement, while insisting he believes they are 'not stupid.'
- A Ukrainian official says Zelenskyy will remain in Kyiv and will not travel to Davos for a meeting with Trump, despite Trump claiming he would meet Zelenskyy 'later today' and then 'Thursday.'
- Ukrainian officials had expected a Davos meeting to sign two documents: one on security guarantees for Ukraine within a peace deal and another detailing an $800 billion postwar 'prosperity plan' for reconstruction.
- The planned announcement of the $800 billion reconstruction package in Davos has reportedly been derailed by European opposition to Trump’s threats to acquire Greenland and to his proposed Gaza 'Board of Peace.'
- Trump told reporters 'we’re reasonably close to a deal' to end the war and complained that at times Zelenskyy has refused U.S.–Russia frameworks and at other times Putin has balked, calling it 'a very difficult balance.'
- Confirms on‑the‑record that Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are scheduled to meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Thursday to discuss a Russia–Ukraine peace deal.
- Witkoff tells CNBC there has been 'lots of progress' in the last six to eight weeks and says he has a 'sense that everybody wants a peace there, that it’s time.'
- Trump, speaking at Davos, says 'I think Russia wants to make a deal, I think Ukraine wants to make a deal. I think I can say we are relatively close.'
- Article reiterates that 'land deals' remain on the table, signaling territorial concessions are being discussed despite Zelenskyy’s past public opposition.
- Confirms reports (via Axios) that Zelenskyy is expected to meet Trump in Davos on Thursday, tying the Moscow and Davos tracks together.