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As Zelenskiy heads to face Trump, allies hold crisis talks over forced-deal fears

A frantic and high-stakes diplomatic ballet is unfolding across the Atlantic, as Ukraine’s European allies scramble to form a united front ahead of a pivotal White House meeting.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is heading to Washington on Monday, summoned by Donald Trump just days after the US President’s secretive and inconclusive summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

The air is thick with anxiety, as the fate of Ukraine hangs in the balance.

In a clear sign of the urgency, France announced that the “Coalition of the Willing”—Ukraine’s key European backers—will hold an emergency video call on Sunday to coordinate their strategy.

The call comes as Zelenskiy and his allies continue to push for a trilateral summit with Putin, a goal that seems increasingly distant as the Russian leader shows no sign of softening his hardline stance to end the war, now grinding through its fourth year.

The shadow of the Alaska summit

The current whirlwind was set in motion by Friday’s marathon meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska. While Trump publicly called the talks “productive,” they failed to produce any clear path to peace.

Instead, the summit ended with Trump shifting the burden of resolution squarely onto Kyiv.

After speaking with the US president on Saturday, Zelenskiy remained resolute. “Ukraine reaffirms its readiness to work with maximum effort to achieve peace,” he said in a social media post on X.