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June 5, 2026 |
By Michael Froman
President, Council on Foreign Relations
This week, the U.S. House of Representatives acted contrary to the wishes of its leadership and President Donald Trump to pass legislation providing support for Ukraine.
And yesterday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy published an open letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin calling for a meeting between the two leaders and a full ceasefire during subsequent peace negotiations.
“We see that the United States is fully focused on the issue of Iran, and it would be wrong to simply wait until the war in Europe returns to the center of its attention. Ukraine proposes ending this war through direct engagement between us—and you.”
Zelenskyy’s letter and the new aid bill come at an inflection point in the war, not because Ukraine and Russia have stopped striking one another but because for the first time, as the Royal United Services Institute’s Jack Watling writes in the pages of Foreign Affairs, a ceasefire is “now a realistic possibility.”
On the ground, the front line—which spans nearly eight hundred miles—is largely frozen. But frozen lines do not necessarily make for a frozen conflict
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