Trump Urges Zelensky to “Stop the Killing and Make a Deal” in White House Summit

The high-stakes White House summit between the U.S. and Ukrainian presidents concluded Friday night with a stark and unexpected divergence in messaging. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed he had asked for game-changing Tomahawk cruise missiles, but U.S. President Donald Trump revealed his primary message to Kyiv was to “stop the killing and make a deal” to end the war immediately.
In a series of statements following the meeting, President Zelensky described the talks as “constructive” and affirmed his trust in the United States, stating he believes “President Trump wants to end the war in Ukraine.” He confirmed that he had used the face-to-face meeting to press his case for more advanced weaponry to break the stalemate in the war. “I raised the issue of supplying us with Tomahawk missiles with President Trump,” Zelensky said.
He also confirmed he discussed Ukraine’s urgent need for “air defense systems” and noted that his forces are “facing a shortage of some types of weapons.” Beyond materiel, Zelensky said he pressed the U.S. for long-term “security guarantees” from Washington.
However, President Trump, who described the meeting as “friendly and interesting,” presented a radically different takeaway. He made it clear that his goal is an immediate cessation of hostilities, not an escalation.
“I told Zelensky that the time has come to stop the killing and make a deal,” Trump said, adding that it was “the same thing that I told President Putin.”
In a stunning statement that suggests a new U.S. policy aimed at freezing the conflict, Trump said, “On Putin and Zelensky: they must stop the fighting… Russia and Ukraine must stop at this point and let both declare victory, and let history judge.”
This push for both sides to simply “stop” and “declare victory” clashes with Ukraine’s fundamental war aim: the liberation of its sovereign territory currently occupied by Russia.
President Zelensky acknowledged this fundamental disagreement. “I believe President Trump understands that the most difficult issue in any talks will be the issue of territory,” Zelensky told reporters, signaling that a deal that freezes Russia’s territorial gains is a non-starter for Kyiv.
The summit, which Kyiv had hoped would unlock a new tier of offensive weaponry, has instead turned into a high-pressure push by its most important ally to end the conflict through negotiation. Zelensky noted he did not discuss striking Russian energy facilities, suggesting some de-escalatory topics were on the table.
He confirmed he is already briefing European leaders on the results of the meeting, a conversation that will now be dominated by this new and forceful American pivot from a strategy of total victory to one of a brokered, immediate peace.

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