After greater than three years of battle, the prospects of peace for Ukraine stay slim. There is no such thing as a apparent credible pathway even to a ceasefire, given Russia’s refusal to increase a short and shaky truce over Easter. This, regardless of the US, UK and Ukraine all signalling their assist for this concept.
And even when the appreciable hurdles impeding a ceasefire deal may very well be overcome, a extra elementary downside would stay. Not one of the key gamers within the battle seem to have a plan for an settlement that’s more likely to be acceptable to Kyiv and Moscow.
Earlier plans, comparable to a joint proposal by China and Brazil in Could final yr which was supported by a Chinese language-led “Pals of Peace” group have been primarily centered on a ceasefire as a stepping stone to negotiations about an precise peace settlement.
This and different plans have been all mild on element of what a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine would entail however have been nonetheless roundly rejected by Ukraine and its western allies as favouring Russia. Given {that a} ceasefire would merely freeze the entrance strains and really doubtless make them everlasting with or with out a subsequent peace settlement, this was not an unreasonable place.
What Ukraine proposed as an alternative, nevertheless – and what its western allies backed, at the least rhetorically – was hardly extra viable. The peace plan proposed by Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in December 2022 was already on life assist on the time of the primary “Summit on Peace in Ukraine” in Switzerland in June 2024.
Solely 84 of the 100 delegations attending the summit (out of 160 invited) supported a watered-down model of Zelensky’s plan of their closing communique – and there was no settlement on a follow-up assembly. Ukraine’s peace plan was clearly lifeless within the water.
Ukraine then proposed an “inner resilience plan”. With its its concentrate on guaranteeing that the nation can survive a protracted battle of attrition with Russia, that is something however a peace plan.
However it serves Kyiv’s must keep away from an unconditional give up to Moscow. That is additionally excessive on the agenda for Ukraine’s European allies who stay dedicated to supporting Kyiv.
For the rising European coalition of the prepared, it is very important preserve Ukraine within the struggle whereas they construct up their very own defences. They face the opportunity of a brand new worldwide order by which the world would possibly effectively be carved up into US, Russian and Chinese language spheres of affect.
The place the White Home stands
Such a carve-up is on the coronary heart of efforts by the US president, Donald Trump. Trump is attempting to safe a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine in addition to a deal that might give the US privileged entry to Ukrainian sources.
Having initially fallen aside throughout an awfully acrimonious press convention within the White Home on February 28, this deal now seems to be comparatively near conclusion.

EPA-EFE/Jim lo Scalzo/pool
The ceasefire deal Trump seems to envisage would divide Ukraine itself into spheres of affect in line with a plan not too long ago steered by Trump’s particular envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg. But even such a pro-Moscow association that might provide Putin management of 20% of Ukraine continues to elude negotiators.
At current, the Russian president has few incentives to accept lower than his most calls for and cease a battle that he thinks he’s nonetheless capable of win on the battlefield – notably given Trump’s unwillingness to exert any significant stress on Russia.
At instances, it now seems extra doubtless that Trump will merely abandon his efforts to finish the preventing in Ukraine. From a Russian perspective, this might be preferable to a ceasefire that freezes the battle however doesn’t result in a peace deal reflecting Moscow’s calls for.
The doubtless calculation within the Kremlin is that even when the 2026 mid-term elections within the US water down Trump’s energy, that also leaves two extra years to overcome extra Ukrainian territory. Ought to Washington then make one other push for a ceasefire, Moscow might declare any extra conquests as a value for Ukraine to pay for a settlement.
Even when Trump doesn’t stroll away from the negotiations now, and even when his particular envoy Steve Witkoff finally manages to cobble collectively a deal, it will extra doubtless seem like a ceasefire than like a peace settlement.
Gulf stays between Russia and Ukraine
The easy motive for that is that Russia’s and Ukraine’s positions on an appropriate end result haven’t shifted. Putin stays dedicated to the total annexation of 4 full Ukrainian areas in addition to retaining Crimea. Zelensky has repeatedly dominated out territorial concessions and is broadly supported by Ukrainians on this stance.
For the west, the fact {that a} peace settlement is near unimaginable on phrases satisfying all sides has turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy. To the extent that there are any joint efforts by Ukraine, the US and the European coalition of the prepared, they’re fully centred on a workable ceasefire.
At a gathering of international ministers and high-level officers in Paris on April 17, discussions have been centered on making such a ceasefire sustainable.
Whereas particulars of how this may be achieved stay unclear, the truth that there now seems to be a extra inclusive negotiations observe indicators progress, at the least on the method of negotiations. Whether or not it will result in an precise breakthrough in the direction of a sustainable ceasefire, nevertheless, will rely on their substance and whether or not Ukraine and Russia can finally agree on phrases about disengagement of forces, monitoring, and ensures and enforcement mechanisms.
That is an already extremely excessive bar, and the bar for a subsequent peace settlement is increased but. Within the present stage of Russia’s battle of aggression in opposition to Ukraine, a ceasefire is clearly a precondition for a peace settlement. However the sole concentrate on the previous is not going to make the latter any extra doubtless.
What’s extra, given Russia’s observe report of reneging on the Minsk ceasefire agreements of September 2014 and February 2015, investing all the things in a ceasefire deal would possibly prove not only a self-fulfilling however a self-defeating prophecy for Ukraine and its supporters.

