Kremlin lauds Trump’s renewed emphasis on Ukraine peace deal

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Kremlin welcomes Trump's focus for peace deal in Ukraine
The comment comes after a Russian drone attack was launched against Ukraine's second largest city, Kharkiv

Night in Kharkiv: sirens, glass, and the uneasy promise of talks

They woke to the sound of glass. Not the slow, sleepy rattle of a city shifting gears at dawn, but the violent shatter of windows and the metallic groan of hospital doors being forced open under blinking emergency lights. Outside, whole blocks were black—streetlamps dead, apartment windows dark—while the wind carried the thin, unmistakable smell of burned electronics and scorched insulation.

“We pulled blankets over the patients and moved them down the corridor by flashlight,” a nurse at Kharkiv’s main hospital told me, her voice raw with exhaustion. “Fifty people had to be evacuated in the middle of the night. You don’t prepare for that—no sheet exercise covers a night like this.”

That hospital was one of several targets in a wave of overnight strikes that sent drones and glide bombs into the city, officials said, wounding seven people and shattering windows across wards treating endocrine and other chronic conditions. More than a hundred patients were moved to safety after the attack, according to regional authorities—an emergency ballet in the dark, staged by exhausted staff with nothing but urgency and resourcefulness to guide them.

Between ceasefires and new threats: a fragile diplomatic opening

At the same time, in a very different theater of geopolitics, the Kremlin publicly welcomed a U.S. president’s offer to focus on brokering peace—on the condition, officials implied, that Washington use its leverage with Kyiv. The message was oddly domestic in tone: now that one war appeared to be cooling, the Kremlin suggested, perhaps the world could turn its attention to another.

“If a ceasefire in Gaza allows for real negotiations elsewhere, we are ready for talks,” a Russian government spokesperson told reporters, an olive branch wrapped in a warning. “But peace cannot be imposed; it must be negotiated with the parties who are actually fighting.”

The timing is combustible. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was preparing to fly to Washington to press for more military assistance as Russia continued to hammer at Ukraine’s power grid, infrastructure, and frontline logistics. The same day Kharkiv’s hospital windows exploded inward, Kyiv said a UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) convoy in the Kherson region was hit—one truck burned, another badly damaged, and two left intact—drawing condemnation from Ukrainian diplomats and fresh warnings about the shrinking space for aid delivery.

What’s at stake in the corridors of power

The conversations expected in Washington were to be consequential: Kyiv is seeking wider-ranging, longer-range weaponry to blunt Moscow’s aerial campaign—systems that could strike strategic targets at distances previously off-limits to Ukrainian forces. There is talk, even suggestion from the U.S. side, that long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles might be a possibility—a consideration that many strategists say would be a major escalation and a complicated diplomatic choice.

“Giving Kyiv the ability to strike deeper into Russia would change the bargaining calculus,” a European security analyst told me. “It could coerce Moscow to negotiate, but it could also harden positions—and that risk cannot be understated.”

For ordinary Ukrainians living under nightly outage warnings and winter fears, it’s not abstract policy calculus. “When they cut the power, they cut our lives,” said a shopkeeper in Kharkiv’s industrial quarter, rubbing his hands against the chill. “You can’t cook, you can’t keep medicines refrigerated, the kids can’t study. Talk of missiles feels far away until your boiler fails.”

Electric winter: a tactic that targets civilians

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, long-range strikes on energy infrastructure have become a grim seasonal reality. Power plants, substations, and gas facilities have been repeatedly struck, leaving million-plus populations to endure rolling blackouts in the dead of winter. Utility workers—heroes in reflective vests—splice cables in the middle of the night, trying to coax warmth back into apartments across cities where balconies are draped with blankets to trap heat.

“This is a war that targets the foundations of daily life,” a humanitarian coordinator who has worked in eastern Ukraine told me. “When you take away heat and water, you are weaponizing winter.”

Those strikes do more than freeze radiators. They strain hospital oxygen supplies, sabotage small businesses that cannot afford diesel generators, and send ripple effects into agriculture and food storage. In recent months, Ukrainian officials have said long-range strikes have also degraded Russian oil production in border regions—an indirect counterpunch as Kyiv’s drone and missile capabilities extend farther than before.

Between diplomacy and escalation: the Tomahawk question

Would supplying Tomahawks open a path to peace—or a road to a wider confrontation? It’s the question that hung over this week’s diplomacy. Tomahawks are precise and powerful, able to strike beyond Russia’s immediate border. For some advocates in Kyiv and abroad, they would be leverage: a way to impose costs, to make a blockade of strategy untenable.

“Weapons change options, they don’t create peace on their own,” said an arms-control specialist in Brussels. “They can buy space for negotiation, but only if there’s a political vision to use that space.”

Zelensky framed the moment bluntly on X: as one conflict ceases, another must not be allowed to ossify. “It is important not to lose the momentum for advancing peace,” he wrote. “The world must force Moscow to sit down at the table for real negotiations.”

Frontline life: aid convoys and the small rituals of survival

On the ground in Kherson oblast, where a UN convoy was struck near Bilozerka, people spoke of the logistics of survival as if reciting grocery lists. “We trust those blue trucks,” said a volunteer who helps load supplies. “They bring food for old men who cannot leave their cellars. When they’re hit, it’s not abstract—it’s the breakfast for a grandmother who depends on that bread.”

Ukrainian officials called the attack on the convoy a violation of international law—another sign, they said, of the indiscriminate nature of the offensive. International humanitarian organizations have repeatedly warned that attacks near supply lines and convoys choke off life-saving aid at precisely the moment winter approaches.

  • Over a hundred hospital patients evacuated in Kharkiv after windows shattered during overnight strikes.
  • Seven people were reported wounded in the Kharkiv attack.
  • One vehicle in a UN OCHA convoy burned and another damaged near Bilozerka in Kherson region.

What if peace is negotiable? What if it isn’t?

As diplomats trade notes and leaders weigh the unthinkable—supplying longer-range missiles, pushing for ceasefires, or pressing harder for talks—the people I spoke to live in the tension between hope and fatigue. “We are tired of both answers,” said an elderly teacher who has lived through Soviet times and three years of war. “We are tired of headlines that promise solutions and then turn into more nights like last night.”

So where does that leave us—the global audience reading from comfortable time zones, sipping coffee while the sky over another city is lit by flare and fire? Do we push our leaders for risk-taking that might shorten a war? Do we demand caution to prevent escalation? There are no pure answers, only trade-offs that real people pay for with their warmth, medicines, and sleep.

In Kharkiv, a child drew a sun on a blackout-stained windowpane the morning after the raid. It was childish, stubborn, hopeful—an ordinary act of resistance. It’s worth asking: if you were in power tomorrow, what would you do to keep that child warm tonight and bring everyone to the negotiating table tomorrow?