November 27, 2025 by Lloyd Albert Williams-Pendergraft

Trump/Putin Possible Conspiracy on Peace Agreement for Ukraine.

Putin signals Trump’s Ukraine peace plan could be ‘basis’ for future deal

by Ryan Mancini – 11/27/25 1:03 PM ET

Could it be that Trump asked Putin to tell him what he wanted to see in a Peace Agreement from Putin/Russia for Ukraine, so Putin sent his wishes to Trump. So Trump had them translated to English and sent the document back to Putin as if were Trump’s own ideas and issues. In other words Trump had no participation in negotiating the Peace Agreement, but rewrote as his own “Peace Agreement” for Putin to consider, so that Trump could claim he is/was a successful middle-man and advisor to Putin — all with Putin’s knowledge and approval, planning to force Zelenskyy to agree to the “new” agreement . . . In other words Trump brokered nothing . . .~llaw

Following are the links to news articles, etc. and a copy of Putin’s delight with “Trump’s ideas and thoughts”.

https://instaread.co/player?article=putin-signals-trumps-ukraine-peace-plan-could-be-basis-for-future-deal&publication=thehill&article_url=https%3A%2F%2Fthehill.com%2Fpolicy%2Finternational%2F5624953-putin-trump-ukraine-peace-deal&version=1764289800000

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that the Trump administration’s proposed peace plan to bring an end to the war in Ukraine could be the “basis” for a future deal — signaling openness to negotiate.

Putin added that while there are things that need to be discussed when the U.S. delegation meets in Moscow early next week, it did take his position into account, according to NBC News.

“In general, we agree that this could be the basis for future agreements,” The Russian president told reporters during a visit to Kyrgyzstan, Reuters reported.

The initial plan, which called for Ukraine to give parts of the Donbas region to Russia and slash its military capacity, was previously panned as being too favorable to Russia. Following talks with U.S. delegates in Geneva on Sunday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he agreed to “core terms” of the plan.

A new proposal was delivered to Putin after those talks were held, the Kremlin leader said Thursday. He added that Russia is “absolutely ready for a serious discussion.”

“They decided among themselves that all 28 points should be divided into four separate components,” Putin said. “In general, we agree that this can be the basis for future agreements.”

Still, the Russian leader argued that his troops will continue operations in Ukraine until the two nations agree on the terms of a ceasefire deal.

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“Ukrainian forces will have to leave the territories they currently occupy, and then the fighting will stop,” The Moscow Times reported Putin saying. “If they don’t, we will achieve this by military means.”

U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff, who is expected to travel to Russia next week, came under fire earlier this week after an earlier phone call with a Russian aide was leaked. Witkoff reportedly called Yuri Ushakov on Oct. 14 to urge him to encourage Putin to congratulate President Trump for brokering a peace deal between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, according to Bloomberg, which reviewed a recording of the correspondence.

Trump defended the call on Tuesday as “a standard thing.”

“He’s got to sell this to Ukraine, he’s got to sell Ukraine to Russia,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. “That’s what a dealmaker does.”

“I haven’t heard it, but I heard it was standard negotiation,” he continued. “And I would imagine he’s saying the same thing to Ukraine, because each party has to give and take.” 

Lawmakers in Washington also criticized Witkoff’s call, with Rep. Don Bacon (R-Ned.) accusing Witkoff of giving full “favors to the Russians.”

“He cannot be trusted to lead these negotiations,” Bacon wrote on the social platform X. “Would a Russian paid agent do less than he? He should be fired.”

The deal would also require the Kremlin to provide $100 billion in assistance to Ukraine for redevelopment after the war while halting Kyiv’s plans to join NATO.

Trump called the proposal a “fine-tuned” measure agreeable to both parties and suggested he could meet with Zelensky and Putin once a deal is finalized.

Add as preferred source on GoogleTags Don Bacon Donald Trump Kremlin Russia-Ukraine ceasefire talks Russia-Ukraine war Steve Witkoff Trump Ukraine peace plan Vladimir Putin Volodymyr Zelensky


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