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Trump’s Ukraine envoy has postponed planned trip to Kyiv, says top diplomat

Ukraine, up against a larger enemy, Russia, relies on Western and especially US military backing to keep fighting.

By contributor By Vasilisa Stepanenko, Associated Press
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Donald Trump
President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago (Evan Vucci/AP)

An upcoming trip to Kyiv by US President-elect Donald Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia has been cancelled but will be rescheduled, Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha has said.

The planned meetings between Keith Kellogg, a highly decorated retired three-star general who has long been Mr Trump’s top adviser on defence issues, and Ukrainian officials are “extremely important”, Mr Sybiha told reporters in the Ukrainian capital.

“I am confident that this meeting will take place in its own time,” he said during a news conference with his visiting Icelandic counterpart.

Russia Ukraine War Iceland
Iceland’s foreign minister Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir, left, and Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andriiy Sybiha in Kyiv, Ukraine (Efrem Lukatsky/AP)

“We are in contact to clearly define the timeline for its organisation and to ensure that the meeting is as meaningful as possible.”

Mr Trump’s arrival in the White House on January 20 injects another measure of uncertainty into how the almost three-year-old war might unfold and whether it can end in the foreseeable future.

Ukraine, up against a larger enemy, Russia, relies on Western — and especially US — military backing to keep fighting.

But Mr Trump has criticised the billions of dollars the Biden administration has spent on Ukraine.

He has also said he could end the war in 24 hours, though he has not elaborated on how he might do that.

Ukrainian officials are eager to sway Mr Trump on sticking with Ukraine.

Russia Ukraine War
Servicemen have a short rest in a shelter on the front line near Chasiv Yar town in Ukraine’s Donetsk region (Ukraine 24th Mechanised Brigade via AP)

President Volodymyr Zelensky has praised Mr Trump’s “strength” and said the American president’s “unpredictability” could work in Ukraine’s favour.

Ukrainians have expressed hope tinged with pragmatism about Mr Trump’s election victory last November.

The war is draining the resources of both sides, though military analysts say the conflict is less sustainable for smaller Ukraine, and the war’s recent trajectory has not been in its favour.

Its undermanned army is under strain on the front line, especially in eastern areas, though Ukrainian officials say its five-month-long incursion into Russia’s Kursk border region shows that Russia is vulnerable.

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