Summary

  • Delegations from the US, Ukraine, and its European allies are heading to Geneva for fresh talks on the Ukraine war

  • It comes as US President Donald Trump pushes for a 28-point peace plan, which includes the handover of some of Ukraine's territory, and a cut in the size of its armed forces

  • Ukraine's allies have pushed back against the plan, as President Zelensky warns his country faces "one of the most difficult moments in our history" - here's how the key players have reacted

  1. Rubio lands in Geneva for talkspublished at 09:06 GMT
    Breaking

    A plane believed to be transporting a US delegation including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, lands at Geneva airportImage source, Valentin Flauraud / AFP via Getty Images

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has landed in Geneva, ahead of talks on the war in Ukraine.

  2. Western leaders express unease with peace planpublished at 08:53 GMT

    Chris Mason
    Political editor, reporting from the G20 in Johannesburg

    Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer (L), France's President Emmanuel Macron (2nd L) and Finland's President Alexander Stubb (2nd R) talk in a huddle at the G20Image source, Henry Nicholls-WPA Pool/Getty Images

    The brash, status quo smashing diplomacy of President Trump has met with the equally in character caution of European allies and others.

    Yesterday afternoon, nine European countries - including the UK - as well as Japan, Canada and the European Union publicly expressed their unease with the US plan.

    They said it was an “initial draft” that will “require additional work.”

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer said it had "a number of important elements", but there was "more to do".

    The French President Emmanuel Macron said “we need something which is good for Ukrainians".

    The German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said “war can only be ended if Ukraine gives its unreserved consent.”

    Later, while still in Johannesburg, the prime minister made back-to-back calls – firstly to Ukraine's President Zelensky, then President Trump.

    The UK’s National Security Adviser Jonathan Powell left Johannesburg early to travel to Geneva in Switzerland – where his equivalents from across Europe will join American and Ukrainian officials for talks later today.

    Another call between Starmer and Trump is expected too.

  3. The US, Russia, and Ukraine on the latest proposalpublished at 08:28 GMT

    Media caption,

    Watch: Trump says Ukraine proposal is not his final offer

    The US

    President Trump has said the plan does not represent a "final offer" for Ukraine, having previously said President Volodymyr Zelensky "will have to" approve it.

    Ukraine

    When details of the plan first emerged, Zelensky warned that his country faced "one of the most difficult moments in our history" over US pressure to accept it.

    On Saturday, Zelensky announced that the head of his office, Andriy Yermak, would lead Ukraine's negotiating team for future talks on a peace deal - including any that may involve Russia.

    In Kyiv, the widow of a Ukrainian soldier told the BBC: "This is not a peace plan, it is a plan to continue the war."

    Ukraine's allies

    In a joint statement issued at the G20 summit in South Africa yesterday, a number of Ukraine's Western allies said the proposal "would leave Ukraine vulnerable to attack".

    Russia

    When the plan was leaked, Russian President Vladimir Putin said it could form the "basis" of an agreement.

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said: "We are seeing some new elements, but officially we haven't received anything. There has been no substantive discussion of those points."

  4. What's in the 28-point peace plan?published at 08:21 GMT

    The draft US-Russia peace plan has been widely leaked. Here's what else we know about what's included:

    • It proposes to hand over areas of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region still under Ukrainian control to the de facto control of Vladimir Putin's Russia
    • The draft proposes that "Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk will be recognised as de facto Russian, including by the United States"
    • It calls for Ukraine to cut the size of its armed forces to 600,000 people
    • Ukraine to sign in its constitution that it won't join Nato, and Nato to commit to not allowing Ukraine to join in the future
    • Bring back Russia from isolation - "to be re-integrated into the global economy" and invited back into G8
    • Frozen Russian worth assets worth $100bn (£76.46bn) should be invested "in US-led efforts to rebuild and invest in Ukraine" - with the US receiving 50% of the profits and Europe adding $100bn in investment for reconstruction

    Read more: What we know about leaked US draft plan to end Russia's Ukraine war.

  5. Geneva to host talks on Ukraine war, as Trump pushes for 28-point peace planpublished at 08:20 GMT

    Matt Spivey
    Live reporter

    Delegations from the US, Ukraine and its European allies will convene in Geneva this morning for fresh talks on the Ukraine war.

    It comes after US President Donald Trump proposed a 28-point plan to end the war, which Russian President Vladimir Putin said could form the basis of an agreement.

    As it stands, the plan would include the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from parts of eastern Ukraine and the freezing of borders on the country's southern battle lines.

    Ukrainian President Zelensky warned his country faced "one of the most difficult moments in our history", as Trump has applied pressure on him to accept the deal.

    In a joint statement issued at the G20 summit in South Africa on Saturday, Ukraine's allies publicly pushed back against the plan.

    They voiced concern it "would leave Ukraine vulnerable to attack" and would "require additional work".

    Overnight, Ukraine struck a major power station in Russia's Moscow region which triggered a fire, according to Moscow's regional governor.

    Meanwhile, the regional head of Ukraine's southern Zaporizhzhia region said 894 Russian strikes damaged buildings and infrastructure in the past 24-hours.

    We'll be closing monitoring the summit in Geneva and the situation in Ukraine throughout the day, stay with us.