Zelenskiy seeks higher-level talks on Ukraine security

Yuliia Dysa and Dan Peleschuk |

Kyiv’s European allies are looking to set up a force that could backstop any peace agreement.
Kyiv’s European allies are looking to set up a force that could backstop any peace agreement.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has urged allies to swiftly elevate talks on security guarantees for Ukraine to the level of leaders, as EU defence ministers pledge to train Kyiv’s troops on Ukrainian soil in the event of a truce.

Kyiv is engaged in a diplomatic push to try to bring to an end Russia’s war, now in its fourth year, and to secure critical commitments from its partners to fend off any future invasion.

The Ukrainian president said he expected to continue talks with European leaders next week on “NATO-like” commitments to protect Ukraine, adding that US President Donald Trump should also be involved.

“We need the architecture to be clear to everyone,” he said, adding that he wanted to tell Trump “how we see it”.

Damage in Kyiv
The strike on Kyiv shows Russia’s unwillingness to end the war, Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s top aide says. (AP PHOTO)

Zelenskiy spoke shortly before his chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, met US special envoy Steve Witkoff in New York to discuss the need to increase pressure on Moscow.

A senior US official said the Ukrainians invited Witkoff to visit Ukraine. The official said the meeting gave Witkoff the opportunity to stress that Ukraine and Russia should meet to reach an end to the war.

In comments posted online later, Yermak said he described to Witkoff the aftermath of the mass Russian attack on Kyiv on Thursday that killed at least 23 people. The strike, he said, showed Russia “is not even showing any willingness to end the war”.

“This means we must continue to apply pressure and discuss what the next steps are,” Yermak said.

“We also talked about working with American and European partners on security guarantees. This is very important. Without them, it is impossible to look forward.”

Ukrainian officials say Russia, which has continued attacking cities with missiles and drones and is pressing a battlefield offensive, has no interest in seeking peace.

Ukrainian troops training
EU ministers backed expanding military training for Ukrainian soldiers at a meeting in Denmark. (AP PHOTO)

Diplomatic efforts to end Russia’s full-scale invasion have so far yielded little, even after Trump met separately with the Russian and Ukrainian leaders earlier in August.

Zelenskiy also raised Trump’s self-imposed deadline for deciding on new measures against Russia if President Vladimir Putin fails to commit to a one-on-one meeting with the Ukrainian leader.

“Two weeks will be on Monday. And we will remind everybody,” he said.

Russia has said there is no agenda for a potential summit between Putin and Zelenskiy.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko, also visiting New York, was expected to meet US business representatives to discuss investments in Ukraine, Zelenskiy added.

Officials in Kyiv see US funding, particularly as part of a critical minerals deal struck earlier in 2025, as central to securing a durable peace settlement.

European Union defence ministers meeting in Copenhagen on Friday expressed “broad support” for expanding the bloc’s military training mission to operate inside Ukraine, the EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, said.

Trump, who has in recent weeks appeared more willing to support Kyiv’s defence against Russia, has said Europe must provide the lion’s share of any effort to bolster Ukraine’s security.

“The EU has already trained over 80,000 Ukrainian soldiers,” Kallas wrote on social media platform X. “We must be ready to do more.”

Russia has consistently opposed the presence of any NATO troops in Ukraine.

Zelenskiy said he wanted allies to ratify any security guarantees through their parliaments, invoking a 1994 deal in which Kyiv gave up its nuclear arsenal in exchange for security assurances that proved insufficient to deter Russia.

“We want legally binding security guarantees. We don’t want (another) Budapest Memorandum.”

Germany and France on Friday outlined plans to co-operate more deeply on security, including a missile early-warning system, following a meeting between Chancellor Friedrich Merz and President Emmanuel Macron. 

Reuters