Trump says Ukraine truce bid ‘on track’ after Zelensky call

Update President Donald Trump said he had a “very good” call with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky Wednesday. (File/AFP)
President Donald Trump said he had a “very good” call with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky Wednesday. (File/AFP)
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Updated 19 March 2025

Trump says Ukraine truce bid ‘on track’ after Zelensky call

President Donald Trump said he had a “very good” call with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky Wednesday. (File/AFP)
  • “Much of the discussion was based on the call made yesterday with President Putin in order to align both Russia and Ukraine in terms of their requests and needs”: Trump

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said he had a “very good” call with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky Wednesday, insisting that efforts to secure a ceasefire remained on track despite the lack of a deal so far with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
As Kyiv and Moscow accused each other of not respecting a halt in attacks against energy infrastructure, agreed during Trump’s talks with Putin on Tuesday, the US president said he spoke for around an hour with his Ukrainian counterpart.
“Much of the discussion was based on the call made yesterday with President Putin in order to align both Russia and Ukraine in terms of their requests and needs,” Trump said on his Truth Social network.
“We are very much on track.”
The call was believed to be the first between the pair since Trump and Zelensky had a blazing, televised row in the Oval Office two and a half weeks ago that led to a brief halt in US aid for Ukraine.
Zelensky later relented and agreed to a US plan for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire with Russia, plus a deal giving Washington preferential access to Ukraine’s minerals.
Kyiv said Zelensky was being briefed about Tuesday’s call between Trump and Putin that saw the Kremlin leader agree to a limited 30-day halt on strikes against Ukraine’s power grid.
But Putin refused to agree to a full ceasefire, insisting that Western aid to Kyiv must first stop, that Ukraine must not be allowed to rearm, and that it must halt mandatory mobilization.
Russia invaded pro-Western Ukraine just over three years ago and still occupies around 20 percent of its territory.
Despite both Ukraine and Russia saying they now backed a temporary truce on power plants, each accused the other of failing to adhere to the halt.
Ukraine’s defense ministry said an overnight barrage of Russian missile and drones struck the war-battered nation, killing one person and damaging two hospitals.
“Today Putin effectively rejected the proposal for a full ceasefire,” said Zelensky.
Ukraine’s national railway service said the barrage had hit railway energy infrastructure in the central Dnipropetrovsk region.
“So much for a pause in the attacks on the energy sector or an energy truce executed by the enemy!” a railway statement added.
Russia’s defense ministry reported a “deliberate” Ukrainian attack overnight on an oil depot in the south of the country, which they said was aimed at “derailing” Trump’s attempts to broker an end to the fighting.
“These attacks are countering our common efforts,” added Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, referring to the US-Russian talks.
Russia and Ukraine did however exchange 372 prisoners, Moscow said Wednesday, which was planned as a goodwill gesture.
In Washington, US envoy Steve Witkoff said technical talks on a possible deal to end the war would begin in on Monday. He predicted that a ceasefire agreement could be reached “within a couple of weeks.”
He told Bloomberg Television that a meeting in the kingdom between Trump and Putin was “likely” but offered no timeline.
Washington and Moscow however appeared to be at odds over exactly what Tuesday’s agreement entailed, with Moscow insisting it only covered energy plants but US officials insisting it covered other infrastructure too.
Zelensky warned before his call with Trump against making “any concessions” to Russia following Putin’s demand for a Western aid halt.
Trump insisted on Monday night that he and Putin “didn’t talk about aid at all.”
The US president has however talked about dividing up “assets” including Ukrainian land.
Trump’s overtures to Putin and indications Washington will no longer guarantee European security have spooked Kyiv and the United States’s NATO allies and prompted moves toward a steep increase in domestic defense spending.
“I don’t believe Putin at all, not a single word. He only understands force,” said Lev Sholoudko, 32.
In Moscow, locals were more optimistic the talks could bring an end to the fighting — to Russia’s advantage.
“Definitely this is in our favor,” said one Moscow resident, Larisa, 46. “There is no other way. What happened in 1945 will happen now,” she added, referring to the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany.


Siege of Sarajevo drew wealthy foreigners to shoot at civilians, say Italian prosectors 

Siege of Sarajevo drew wealthy foreigners to shoot at civilians, say Italian prosectors 
Updated 8 sec ago

Siege of Sarajevo drew wealthy foreigners to shoot at civilians, say Italian prosectors 

Siege of Sarajevo drew wealthy foreigners to shoot at civilians, say Italian prosectors 
  • Journalist says he has identified people involved with ‘tourist shooters’ who paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to kill people
  • Specialist Italian police unit investigating claims after case filed by former mayor of Sarajevo

LONDON: Allegations that wealthy foreigners paid to shoot civilians during the siege of Sarajevo are being investigated by Italian prosecutors.

The claims, made by investigative journalist Ezio Gavazzeni, add that people from the US, UK, Russia and elsewhere paid Serbian forces the equivalent of up to €100,000 ($115,900) to fire at inhabitants of the Bosnian city in the 1990s.

It was supposedly organized by troops loyal to Radovan Karadzic, who was later convicted of genocide.

Gavazzeni told La Repubblica: “(There was) a price tag for these killings; children cost more, then men, preferably in uniform and armed, women, and finally old people, who could be killed for free.”

He added: “They departed Trieste (in northeast Italy) for a manhunt. And then they came home and continued their normal lives. They were respectable in the opinion of those who knew them.”

Gavazzeni continued: “There were Germans, French, English … people from all Western countries who paid large sums of money to be taken there to shoot civilians.”

“There were no political or religious motivations. They were rich people who went there for fun and personal satisfaction. We are talking about people who love guns who perhaps go to shooting ranges or on safari in Africa.”

Italian prosecutors are working with the specialist Carabinieri anti-terror and organized crime unit, the Raggruppamento Operativo Speciale, to identify those possibly involved in Italy after a case was filed by the former mayor of Sarajevo, Benjamina Karic.

She told Italy’s ANSA news agency: “An entire team of tireless people are fighting to have this complaint heard.”

Gavazzeni said that he had spoken to a Bosnian intelligence officer who claimed to have knowledge of the macabre practice from a captured Serbian soldier, and that he had also identified a number of Italians involved.

Nicola Brigida, a lawyer working with Gavazzeni, told the Guardian: “The evidence accumulated after a long investigation is well substantiated and could lead to serious investigation to identify the culprits. There is also the report from the former Sarajevo mayor.”

It is not the first time such allegations have been made. In 2007 a former US marine, John Jordan, told the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia that he knew of “tourist shooters” who came to Sarajevo “to take pot shots at civilians for their own gratification.”

He noted that one man had turned up with a rifle “more suited to wild boar than to urban combat.”

The city, surrounded by hills to use as vantage points, became notorious for sniper shootings during the siege, which was the longest of any city in modern European history, and saw about 11,500 people killed.

Italian intelligence agency SISMI also said during the tribunal that “weekend snipers” had taken part in killings in Sarajevo during the siege. At least one case, involving Russian nationalist Eduard Limonov, is known to have taken place, after he was filmed in 1992 firing at the city alongside Karadzic.

British journalist Tim Judah, who was based in the area, told the Telegraph: “It is possible that there were people willing to pay to do this. But I don’t think the numbers would have been very large.”

A spokesperson for the Bosnian consulate in Milan said: “We are impatient to discover the truth about such a cruel matter in order to close a chapter of history. I am in possession of certain information I will be sharing with the investigators.”