Ukraine Turns to Europe as U.S. Steps Back as Mediator in Peace Talks

 

President Volodymyr Zelensky traveled to London to meet with the leaders of Britain, Germany and France, whom he said could be negotiators in talks with Russia. Listen · 5:21 min Share full article Volodymyr Zelensky, in a black shirt stands behind a white lectern with two microphones. A blue and yellow flag and text are on the podium. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine this month in Kyiv, the country’s capital.Credit...Tetiana Dzhafarova/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Constant Méheut By Constant Méheut June 7, 2026, 11:20 a.m. ET President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine arrived on Sunday afternoon in London for talks with the leaders of Britain, Germany and France as Europe considers taking a more active role in peace talks with Russia after more than a year of unsuccessful U.S. mediation. Ukraine and its European allies see a new opening to revive talks that have stalled as Moscow made uncompromising territorial demands and Washington shifted its focus to the war with Iran. They note that Russia’s recent battlefield setbacks and mounting economic strains could make a peace settlement more appealing to the Kremlin, a scenario that is also increasingly discussed in Russia. In a letter to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia last week, Mr. Zelensky offered to resume talks. He added that “Europe should be part of this process,” renewing his call for European capitals to help fill the vacuum left by Washington’s retreat from negotiations. European leaders have said they do not see themselves replacing Washington as mediators — a prospect Mr. Putin has also dismissed — but rather as additional participants in efforts to end a war whose outcome will shape Europe’s security for decades to come. Advertisement SKIP ADVERTISEMENT “I believe we should talk to Putin,” President Alexander Stubb of Finland told the Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung in an interview published Sunday. “We must do this together with the Americans, but at the same time ask ourselves whether American foreign policy toward Russia and Ukraine is currently in Europe’s interest. If not — and in certain aspects, it isn’t — then we must get involved.” E.U. officials in recent weeks have been weighing ways to step up their roles in future talks. Sunday’s meeting in London is expected to advance those discussions. In a social media post marking his arrival in Britain, Mr. Zelensky said the leaders would discuss their “shared view of diplomatic prospects” and stressed that “Europe must be part of the negotiations.” He added that he would meet King Charles III on Monday. Formally joining the peace talks would mark a new role for Europe, which had until now been largely sidelined from the negotiations by the United States and confined to managing tensions between President Trump and Mr. Zelensky to keep talks from derailing. For months, Europe quietly accepted Washington’s lead in the negotiations despite rounds of inconclusive talks. That was largely because Moscow, holding the upper hand on the battlefield, demanded territorial concessions that were a red line for Kyiv. Secretary of State Marco Rubio acknowledged last month that the talks “were not fruitful.” Advertisement SKIP ADVERTISEMENT The dynamic began to change this year. First, the joint Israeli-U.S. attack on Iran shifted Washington’s attention away from Ukraine, effectively freezing U.S.-mediated talks. Image People set up overhead netting across a street; one is on a ladder. A dark truck is parked, with golden domes visible in the background. Anti-drone netting being installed in Izium, Ukraine, in May.Credit...Finbarr O’Reilly for The New York Times Around the same time, Moscow’s military prospects sharply deteriorated. Its troops have barely advanced on the battlefield since the start of the year, unable to break through Ukraine’s drone-dominated defenses and suffering attacks on their supply lines. Ukraine has also stepped up its strikes on Russia’s oil assets, eroding a critical source of funding for its war effort. This is part of a wider long-range campaign that has hit Russian cities once shielded from the war’s impact, like the strike in St. Petersburg this past week. Russia has also stepped up its air attacks on Ukrainian cities, military and industrial facilities. On Sunday, Ukrainian authorities claimed that a Russian drone had struck a nuclear-fuel ​storage facility near Ukraine’s Chernobyl power ​plant. They added, however, that no nuclear fuel was stored in the building at the time of the attack, and that radiation levels at the plant remained within established limits. Advertisement SKIP ADVERTISEMENT Mr. Zelensky said Moscow’s battlefield setbacks could force it back to the negotiation table. “I told our American partners, ‘I think there is a window for negotiations because each month, Russia will be losing more and more troops,’” he told CBS’s “Face the Nation” last month. But as U.S. mediation waned, the Ukrainian leader began calling for Europe to step in, something he had rarely done before. “Who could represent Europe in the negotiations?” he said on “Face the Nation.” “There is an E3 format — the United Kingdom, France and Germany. I don’t know if this is the best format, but I think these countries could be negotiators from Europe.” António Costa, the president of the European Union’s political arm, said last month that he and Mr. Zelensky had discussed a possible European presence at the negotiation table. European capitals have been abuzz with speculation over who might represent Europe. Among the names frequently raised are Angela Merkel, a former German chancellor, and Mario Draghi, a former Italian prime minister and European Central Bank chief. Jeanna Smialek contributed reporting. Constant Méheut is a New York Times correspondent, covering the war in Ukraine. See more on: Russia-Ukraine War, European Union, Mario Draghi, Angela Merkel, Vladimir Putin, Marco Rubio Share full article Our Coverage of the War in Ukraine Putin’s Conference: At the St. Petersburg economic forum, business and political elites said Russia faced a choice of halting the conflict or sacrificing more. 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