Overview
- President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed receipt of the 28‑point draft and said Ukraine will engage but only for a dignified peace that preserves independence and sovereignty.
- President Donald Trump publicly set a response deadline before Nov. 27 and said Zelensky "will have to approve," with U.S. media reporting potential curbs on support if Kyiv refuses.
- Reported provisions require recognizing Russian control of Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk, dividing parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia along current lines, capping forces at 600,000, renouncing NATO membership and barring NATO troops.
- The plan outlines security guarantees described as limited and potentially time‑bound and ties reconstruction to roughly $100 billion from frozen Russian assets, with IAEA oversight to restart the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant.
- EU officials and key European leaders protested exclusion from drafting and insisted Ukraine’s defense capacity must not be weakened, while Moscow sent mixed signals as Dmitry Peskov downplayed consultations and Vladimir Putin said the plan could serve as a basis.