United States (US) and officials from Ukraine have indicated they will meet in Saudi Arabia next week to discuss a peace framework for ending the Russia-Ukraine war.
This follows Washington suspending military aid and intelligence sharing with Kyiv this week, days after US President Donald Trump and his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy clashed at the White House.
Trumpâs special envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed he will meet Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia next week to carve out a framework for a peace agreement.
âWe are now in discussions to coordinate a meeting with the Ukrainians in Riyadh or even potentially Jeddah. So the city is moving around a little bit, but it will be Saudi Arabia,â Witkoff told reporters outside the White House on Thursday.
âI think the idea is to get down a framework for a peace agreement and an initial ceasefire as well.â
Zelenskyy also said he will travel to Saudi Arabia on Monday with a cadre of officials and plans to hold talks with US officials.
âI am scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia to meet with the Crown Prince. After that, my team will stay in Saudi Arabia to work with American partners,â Zelenskyy said in an evening address on Thursday. âUkraine is most interested in peace.â
Saudi Arabiaâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs welcomed the chance to host the US-Ukraine meeting, saying the talks would take place in the Red Sea city of Jeddah.
âThe foreign ministry confirms the kingdomâs continued efforts to achieve lasting peace to end the Ukrainian crisis,â it said in a statement on Friday.
This will be the first high-level meeting of US and Ukrainian officials since the February 28 meeting between Zelenskyy and Trump devolved into a shouting match and ended with the Ukrainian leader being asked to leave the White House.
Following the public spat, Trump severed intelligence-sharing and aid to Ukraine.
However, on Tuesday, he said he had received a letter from Zelenskyy in which the Ukrainian leader said he was âready to come to the negotiating table as soon as possibleâ.
âUkraine wants to make a dealâ
Trump, in an exchange with reporters on Thursday, said he believed his administration had made âa lot of progressâ in recent days with both Ukraine and Russia, but did not specify how.
âI think whatâs going to happen is Ukraine wants to make a deal, because I donât think they have a choice,â Trump said.
âI also think that Russia wants to make a deal because in a certain different way â a different way that only I know, only I know â they have no choice either.â
Trumpâs envoy Witkoff on Thursday noted that Zelenskyy has been apologetic in recent days about the White House blow-up and expressed gratitude.
He was wary about whether the much-touted minerals deal by Washington would be signed during the meeting in Saudi Arabia. âWeâll see if he follows through,â Witkoff added.
The proposed deal is seen by many analysts as an attempt by Kyiv to win the support of the new US administration amid tensions over Washingtonâs outreach to Moscow to end the Ukraine war.
Trump administration officials have said the economic pact would bind the US and Ukraine closer together and would give Russian President Vladimir Putin pause before considering malign action against Ukraine in the future.
The agreement would give the US access to Ukraineâs rare earth deposits and could be of value to US aerospace, electric vehicle and medical manufacturing.
Also See: Ukraine Still Ready To Sign Minerals Deal Despite Trump Spat, Zelenskiy says
Russia must âstopâ attacks
Meanwhile, on the ground, Russian forces damaged Ukrainian energy and gas infrastructure overnight, Kyiv said.
Russia fired a salvo of 67 missiles and 194 drones, Ukraineâs air force said, adding it had shot down 34 of the missiles and 100 of the drones.
Regional officials from the northeastern city of Kharkiv to the western city of Ternopil reported damage to energy and other infrastructure.
Eight people were injured in Kharkiv and two more, including a child, were hurt in Poltava, officials said.
âThe first steps to establishing real peace should be forcing the sole source of this war, Russia, to stop such attacks,â Zelenskyy said on the Telegram messaging app on Friday, responding to the missile attack.
Russia targets Ukrainian cities and towns far from the front lines every night with drones, but Fridayâs attack was the first large-scale assault since the suspension of US military aid and intelligence this week.
This news is sourced from Al Jazeera and is intended for informational purposes only.




