-
Trump says US will allow sale of Nvidia AI chips to China
-
NBA fines Magic's Bane $35,000 for hurling ball at Anunoby
-
Pulisic quick-fire double sends AC Milan top of Serie A
-
Man Utd back on track after Fernandes inspires Wolves rout
-
Syria's Sharaa vows to promote coexistence, one year after Assad's ousting
-
World stocks mostly lower as markets await Fed decision
-
Palmer misses Chelsea's Champions League clash with Atalanta
-
Trump says Europe heading in 'bad directions'
-
Benin hunts soldiers behind failed coup
-
Salah a 'disgrace' for Liverpool outburst: Carragher
-
Peace deal at risk as DR Congo, Burundi slam Rwanda and M23 advances
-
Feminists outraged at video of French first lady's outburst against activists
-
Suspect arrested in theft of Matisse artworks in Brazil: officials
-
Troubled Liverpool host Barnsley in FA Cup third round
-
Slot has 'no clue' whether rebel star Salah has played last Liverpool game
-
Liverpool boss Slot says Salah relationship not broken
-
Powerful 7.6 quake strikes off Japan, tsunami warning lifted
-
100 abducted Nigerian children handed over to state officials
-
Lula orders road map to cut fossil-fuel use in Brazil
-
EU pushes back 2035 combustion-engine ban review to Dec. 16
-
Court will give decision in Sala compensation hearing on March 30
-
Mamdani to swap humble apartment for NY mayor's mansion
-
MSF says conditions for Gaza medics 'as hard as it's ever been' despite truce
-
Sala compensation hearing opens in Cardiff's dispute with Nantes
-
Syria's Sharaa vows to promote coexistence, reconciliation one year after Assad's ousting
-
Club Brugge sack coach in build up to Arsenal clash
-
US residents get free entry to national parks on Trump's birthday
-
Spurs looking into Bissouma conduct after 'laughing gas' report
-
Machado's mother says hopes daughter will collect Nobel in person
-
Salah dropped by Liverpool for Inter Milan clash after outburst
-
Boeing closes takeover of aviation supplier Spirit
-
Salah dropped by Liverpool for Inter Milan clash
-
Brazil police ID suspect in Matisse theft
-
Deal agreed to save Frankfurt's euro sculpture
-
Inter's Thuram braced for fightback from crisis-hit Liverpool
-
Trump says to sign order blocking AI regulation by states
-
Fracturing Real Madrid need Mbappe magic in Haaland showdown
-
13 inmates die in violence-plagued Ecuador prison
-
Paramount counters Netflix with hostile bid for Warner Bros
-
World stocks tread water with eyes on Fed
-
European allies back Zelensky after Trump criticism
-
'One Battle After Another' leads Golden Globes noms with nine
-
Tens of thousands celebrate as Syria marks one year since Assad's ouster
-
Meta to allow European users to share less data: EU
-
Three things to watch ahead of the 2026 F1 season
-
Zelensky meets European allies after Trump criticism
-
Barcelona defence on 'another level' now, says Flick
-
AI tools help choose best embryos for IVF
-
EU nations back 'return hubs' in migration policy tightening
-
Ex-footballer Barton handed suspended sentence for offensive posts
Putin-Trump summit: What each side wants
The US and Russian presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are to meet at a US air base in Alaska on Friday for talks on the Ukraine war.
Expectations are high for the first summit between sitting US and Russian presidents in more than four years, but Moscow and Kyiv remain far apart in their visions on how to end the conflict.
It will be Putin's first trip to a Western country since launching his invasion in February 2022, as well as his first US visit in 10 years.
Here is a look at what each side hopes to achieve from the talks:
- Russia -
For Putin, who has faced years of isolation from the West since the invasion, the summit is an opportunity to press Russia's hardline demands for ending the conflict.
In a draft peace plan published in June, Russia called on Ukraine to withdraw its forces from the Kherson, Lugansk, Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions that Moscow claimed to annex in 2022. Ukraine has rejected the idea.
Russia has also called on Ukraine to halt its military mobilisation, abandon its NATO ambitions, and for Western countries to immediately stop weapon supplies -- something critics say amounts to capitulation.
In addition to territory, Russia wants Ukraine to ensure the "rights and freedoms" of the Russian-speaking population and to prohibit what it calls the "glorification of Nazism".
It also wants Western sanctions lifted.
Ukraine says Russia's allegations of Nazism are absurd and that it already guarantees rights to Russian speakers.
- Ukraine -
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is not scheduled to take part in the summit, but has said there can be no peace deal without its involvement. He has called the meeting a "personal victory" for Putin.
Ukraine has called for an unconditional ceasefire on land, sea and sky as a prerequisite to peace talks.
It wants both sides to release all prisoners of war and demanded the return of Ukrainian children it says Russia illegally kidnapped.
Ukraine says Russia has forcibly transferred thousands of Ukrainian children into areas under its control since the war began, often adopting them into Russian families and assigning them Russian citizenship.
Russia rejects the kidnapping allegations but acknowledges that thousands of children are on its territory.
Ukraine says any deal must include security guarantees to prevent Russia from attacking again, and that there should be no restrictions on the number of troops it can deploy on its territory.
It says sanctions on Russia can only be lifted gradually and that there should be a way of reimposing them if needed.
- United States -
Trump promised he would end the war within "24 hours" after taking office in January. But eight months on, and even after repeated calls with Putin and several visits to Russia by US envoy Steve Witkoff, he has failed to extract any major concessions from the Kremlin.
The summit is his first opportunity to broker a deal in person.
The US president, author of the book "Trump: The Art of the Deal" said on Wednesday that Russia would face "very severe consequences" if it did not halt its offensive.
The US leader initially said there would be some "land swapping going on" at the talks, but appeared to walk back after speaking with European leaders on Wednesday.
Trump has said he would "like to see a ceasefire very, very quickly".
But the White House has played down expectations of a breakthrough, describing it as a "listening exercise" for the former reality TV star.
"If the first one goes okay, we'll have a quick second one," Trump said, hinting Zelensky could take part in a subsequent summit.
- Europe -
Despite providing military support for Ukraine and hosting millions of Ukrainian refugees, European leaders have been sidelined from the peace talks that may affect the region's security architecture in the future.
European representatives were neither invited to the past three meetings between Russian and Ukrainian officials in Istanbul, nor to the Russia-US talks in Riyadh in February.
In a statement last week, the leaders of Britain, France, Italy, Germany, Poland, Finland and the EU Commission warned there could be no meaningful peace without Ukraine's participation.
"Territorial questions concerning Ukraine can be, and will be, negotiated only by the Ukrainian president," French President Emmanuel Macron said after speaking with Trump on Wednesday.
Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer have signalled they are willing to deploy peacekeepers in Ukraine once the fighting ends, an idea Russia has vehemently rejected.
J.Horn--BTB