WASHINGTON, United States
United States President, Donald Trump has said he has a "lot of respect" for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, on the eve of their talks at the White House.
Asked by the BBC if he would
apologise for recently calling him a "dictator", he said he could not
believe he had said this. He also called Zelensky "very brave".
Trump was speaking after talks
with UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer about ending the war between Ukraine
and Russia.
He predicted a "very good
meeting" with Zelensky on Friday, saying efforts to achieve peace were
"moving along pretty rapidly".
This week's meetings come
after the Trump administration shocked its Western partners by holding the
first high-level US talks with Moscow since Russia invaded Ukraine just over
three years ago.
America's new president had
appeared to blame Zelensky for the war and chided him for not starting peace
talks earlier.
"You've been there for
three years," he had said last Tuesday. "You should have ended it...
You should have never started it. You could have made a deal."
But this Thursday, speaking
after meeting Sir Keir, Trump told reporters asking about his forthcoming talks
with Zelensky: "I think we're going to have a very good meeting tomorrow
morning. We're going to get along really well."
Asked by the BBC's Chris Mason
if he still thought Zelensky was a "dictator", he replied: "Did
I say that? I can't believe I said that."
Zelensky will be hoping to win
some kind of security guarantees for his country that would underpin any peace
deal that may be negotiated.
Asked about these on Thursday,
Trump only said he was "open to many things" but he wanted to get
Russia and Ukraine to agree a deal before deciding what measures might be put
in place to enforce it.
On his visit on Friday,
Zelensky is expected to sign a deal that will give the US access to Ukraine's
rare earth mineral resources.
Trump suggested that the
presence of US mining concerns in Ukraine would act as a deterrent against
future Russian attacks on Ukraine.
"It's a backstop, you
could say," he said on Thursday. "I don't think anybody's going to
play around if we're there with a lot of workers and having to do with rare
earths and other things which we need for our country."
The British prime minister had
said earlier that the UK was prepared to send troops to Ukraine after the war
as part of a peacekeeping force but only if the US, Nato's leading member,
provided a "backstop".
Asked if the US would aid
British peacekeepers if they were attacked by Russia, Trump said: "The
British have incredible soldiers, incredible military and they can take care of
themselves. But if they need help, I'll always be with the British, okay?"
Nato's Article 5 holds that
Nato members will come to the defence of an ally which comes under attack.
Praising Trump's
"personal commitment to bring peace" in Ukraine, Sir Keir said the UK
was "ready to put boots on the ground and planes in the air to support a
deal".
"We're focused now on
bringing an enduring end to the barbaric war in Ukraine," he said.
But, he added, it must not be
a peace deal "that rewards the aggressor or that gives encouragement to
regimes like Iran".
Asked whether Vladimir Putin
was trustworthy, the UK prime minister said his views on the Russian president
were well-known.
Asked in turn why he seemed to
trust Putin and Sir Keir did not, Trump said: "I know a lot of people that
you would say no chance that they would ever deceive you, and they are the
worst people in the world.
"I know others that you
would guarantee they would deceive you, and you know what, they're 100%
honourable, so you never know what you're getting."
EU foreign policy chief Kaja
Kallas, who had been due to meet US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in
Washington before he cancelled the talks "due to scheduling issues",
told BBC News that Putin and Russia did "not want to have peace".
"For any peace agreement
to function, it needs the Europeans as well as Ukrainians on board," she
added.
Stopping off in the Irish
Republic on Thursday en route to the US, Zelensky met the Taoiseach (Irish
prime minister) Micheál Martin at Shannon Airport.
"We discussed the steps
to end the war with guaranteed peace for Ukraine and the whole of Europe,"
he said later.
Following the overthrow of
Ukraine's pro-Russian president in 2014, Moscow annexed the Black Sea peninsula
of Crimea and backed pro-Russian separatists in bloody fighting in eastern
Ukraine.
The conflict burst into
all-out war when Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022.
It is estimated that hundreds
of thousands of people, most of them soldiers, have been killed or injured, and
millions of Ukrainian civilians have fled as refugees.
As well as Crimea, Russia now
occupies parts of four other regions - Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and
Kherson.
The Kremlin warned on Thursday
that Russia would make no territorial concessions to Ukraine as part of a peace
deal.
"All territories that
have become subjects of the Russian Federation... are an integral part of our
country, Russia," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
"This is an absolutely indisputable fact and a non-negotiable fact."
Separately, Russian and US
officials met in the Turkish city of Istanbul for talks on rebuilding diplomatic ties.
The two nuclear superpowers
expelled one another's embassy staff when Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, was
in the White House.
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