{"id":1722,"date":"2025-05-02T00:36:15","date_gmt":"2025-05-02T00:36:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.fresnoforeclosure.com\/?p=1722"},"modified":"2025-05-02T16:43:58","modified_gmt":"2025-05-02T16:43:58","slug":"putin-moving-closer-to-ukraine-peace-deal-but-can-he-be-trusted","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.fresnoforeclosure.com\/index.php\/2025\/05\/02\/putin-moving-closer-to-ukraine-peace-deal-but-can-he-be-trusted\/","title":{"rendered":"Putin 'moving closer to Ukraine peace deal', but can he be trusted"},"content":{"rendered":"
New intelligence reviewed by US and Western officials suggests Russian President Vladimir Putin may have shifted his immediate focus in the Ukraine war toward the shorter-term objectives of solidifying his hold on territory his forces have seized and boosting his country's struggling economy, multiple people familiar with the matter told CNN.<\/p>\n
This represents an evolution from recent US and Western intelligence assessments suggesting that Putin felt the state of the war was to his advantage, that he had the momentum as well as the manpower to sustain a longer fight against a faltering Ukraine and seize the entire country.<\/p>\n
The perception Putin may have shifted his thinking has played into US President Donald Trump and his negotiators' belief that the Russian president may be more willing to consider a potential peace deal than in the past, two US sources familiar with the matter told CNN.<\/p>\n
READ MORE:<\/strong> US and Ukraine sign rare-minerals deal sought by Trump\ufeff<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n However, senior US officials remain skeptical of Putin and his repeated assertions in ongoing talks that he wants a peace deal, even though what is being proposed by the US is incredibly generous to Russia, handing them most of the territory they've taken. There is also a widespread belief that even if Russia agrees to a version of the agreement on the table it may look to resume the war and try to seize more of Ukraine in the long-term.<\/p>\n "I think that he may be thinking – I don't want to say thinking smaller – but thinking about what a reasonable nearer-term objective is," said a senior western intelligence official.<\/p>\n The pressure exerted by an increasingly angry Trump administration, threatening more sanctions and a struggling Russian economy, have Putin in a potentially difficult position. There has also been strong emphasis in talks on the potential for investments between the US and Russia if the war ends, opportunities the US has called "historic."<\/p>\n "All of this really depends on what is the US willing to put on the table so that he could not just claim victory domestically," the official continued, "but really feel that he has achieved something that is worth a significant pause and then maybe retake up the fight at some point later."<\/p>\n The official pointed to Putin's repeated references to where the Russian people have historically come from and said he maintains "a long-term objective," to seize more of Ukraine, "at least those portions that are the cradle of Russian civilisation" in Putin's eyes.<\/p>\n LIVE UPDATES:<\/strong> Albanese, Dutton try to convince voters in final day of campaigning<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n Moscow is willing to "play along" with the US and restrict its immediate objectives to improve its relationship with Washington, a senior European official agreed, but "clearly hasn't given up on their maximalist war ends."<\/p>\n The Kremlin hopes that a better relationship "draws the attention away after a tactical pause and that they can then use the mix of military, economic, informational and political tools to achieve Putin's full objectives in Ukraine and beyond," the official said.<\/p>\n Earlier this year, US intelligence officials cautioned now-senior Trump advisers that controlling Ukraine remained Putin's top priority next to regime survival and warned he was eager to exploit any perceived rush to negotiations by the new administration, according to a source familiar with those conversations.<\/p>\n "Putin's thinking has evolved because he thinks he has a sympathetic US president who doesn't know what he's doing and is more interested in short-term wins," said Democratic Congressman Jason Crow, who sits on the House intelligence committee. Putin, he added, "thinks there can be a settlement, and it simply won't be enforced."<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
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