Vance and Zelenskyy Meet at Security Summit Amid Push for Peace Talks

Trump has said that U.S. and Russian officials will also meet in Munich on Friday for discussions and that Ukraine had been invited.
Vance and Zelenskyy Meet at Security Summit Amid Push for Peace Talks
U.S. Vice President JD Vance (3rd R), U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (4th R) and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (3rd L) meet on the sidelines of the 61st Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, southern Germany, on Feb. 14, 2025. Tobias Schwarz/AFP via Getty Images
Guy Birchall
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U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met on Friday, following President Donald Trump’s call with Russian President Vladimir Putin and the announcement of talks aimed at ending the war in Ukraine.

“It’s important for us to get together and start to have the conversations that are going to be necessary to bring this thing to a close,” Vance said.

“Fundamentally the goal is as President Trump outlined it. We want the war to come to a close. We want the killing to stop. But we want to achieve a durable, lasting peace, not the kind of peace that’s going to have Eastern Europe in conflict just a couple of years down the road.”

Zelenskyy likewise described the meeting as the first of many to come and said that the conversation was productive.

Zelenskyy and Vance are both attending the 61st Munich Security Conference, a three-day annual gathering of political leaders, military officers, and diplomats in the German city.

Trump said on Wednesday that he had initiated proceedings to hold talks with Putin surprised both the Ukrainians and America’s allies in Europe, who had not been made aware of the move ahead of time.
Fearing they may be excluded from any upcoming negotiations to bring a halt to the nearly three years of war in Ukraine, representatives of European governments called for a seat at the table.

Britain, Germany, France, Poland, Italy, Spain, and the European Commission’s (EC) top foreign representatives said that only a fair agreement with security guarantees would ensure lasting peace and an acceptable resolution to the conflict.

In a joint statement, they said, “Our shared objectives should be to put Ukraine in a position of strength. Ukraine and Europe must be part of any negotiations. Ukraine should be provided with strong security guarantees. A just and lasting peace in Ukraine is a necessary condition for a strong transatlantic security.”

Trump described the call with Putin as “highly productive” and, shortly after that conversation, he briefed Zelenskyy.

The Ukrainian president cautioned world leaders against “trusting Putin’s claims of readiness to end the war.”

Vance, as a senator, was skeptical about American support for Ukraine. At last year’s Munich conference, he said Washington’s strategic priorities lay primarily in Asia and the Middle East.

However, in comments reported in the Wall Street Journal on Friday, Vance did not rule out sending U.S. troops to Ukraine.

“There are economic tools of leverage, there are of course military tools of leverage” the U.S. could use, he told the paper, adding that “we do care about Ukraine having sovereign independence.”

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio was due to take part in the meeting with Zelenskyy as well, but it was not immediately clear whether he would make it after his U.S. Air Force plane was forced to return to Washington due to a mechanical issue.

Vance began his day in the Bavarian city by meeting NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, during which he reiterated the Trump administration’s call for members to spend more on defense.

Ahead of the meeting with Rutte, he told reporters, “We’re going to talk, of course, about the Ukraine-Russia conflict and how to bring it to a negotiated settlement.”

At present, just 23 of the 32 NATO nations are hitting the alliance’s target of spending 2 percent of the nation’s GDP on defense.

“NATO is a very important military alliance, of course, that we’re the most significant part of,” Vance told Rutte. “But we want to make sure that NATO is actually built for the future, and we think a big part of that is ensuring that NATO does a little bit more burden sharing in Europe, so the United States can focus on some of our challenges in East Asia.”

Rutte agreed that Europe needs to step up, saying: “We have to grow up in that sense and spend much more.”

Trump said on Thursday that U.S. and Russian officials would also meet in Munich on Friday and that Ukraine had been invited. Kyiv said it did not expect to hold talks with Moscow’s representatives in the city.

No Russian officials were invited to the three-day conference held at the Hotel Bayerischer Hof, but this would not prevent a meeting elsewhere in Munich.

Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
Guy Birchall
Guy Birchall
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Guy Birchall is a UK-based journalist covering a wide range of national stories with a particular interest in freedom of expression and social issues.