Donald Trump (left), Vladimir Putin (middle) and in Right Zelenskyy

Overview of Trump administration’s 28-point peace plan that Zelenskyy called it a “difficult choice…

The Trump administration’s 28-point peace plan, drafted primarily by U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff with input from Kremlin representative Kirill Dmitriev during late October meetings in Miami, aims to end the Russia-Ukraine war. The framework, described as a “live document” open to revisions, was presented to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on November 20, 2025, with a reported Thanksgiving (November 27) deadline for key concessions. It heavily favors Russian demands, requiring Ukraine to cede territory, limit its military, and forgo NATO membership in exchange for U.S. security guarantees and reconstruction aid. Russia would receive phased sanctions relief and economic reintegration.

The plan has drawn sharp criticism: Zelenskyy called it a “difficult choice” risking Ukraine’s “dignity and freedom,” European leaders labeled it “capitulation,” and analysts warn it could invite future Russian aggression by locking in gains without Moscow’s withdrawal. Putin has expressed cautious support, calling it a potential “basis for a final settlement.”

Key Provisions: The 28 Points

The plan is structured around sovereignty, security, territorial, economic, and humanitarian elements. Below is a summarized table of all 28 points, based on the leaked draft verified by multiple outlets.

Implications and Reactions

  • For Ukraine: Cessions could total ~20% of territory (Crimea + full Donbas + frozen lines), plus military/NATO restrictions, seen as “creeping capitulation.” Zelenskyy plans counter-proposals with EU allies (e.g., Britain, France, Germany) emphasizing sovereignty.
  • For Russia: Gains territory and economic relief without full withdrawal; Putin views it positively but demands “flexibility” from Kyiv.
  • U.S./Trump: Positions Trump as global peacemaker (mirroring Gaza deal); White House insists it’s balanced, with Ukraine influencing some points.
  • Europe/NATO: Alarm over exclusion from drafting; France’s FM: “Peace cannot mean capitulation.” EU prepares alternative plan. Germany, France, UK, Italy coordinate at G20.

The plan’s fate hinges on Zelenskyy’s response by November 27; rejection could halt U.S. aid, per reports.

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