The
decision came after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Trump’s
call for a ceasefire contradicted the understandings he reached with
Putin.
The
statement came hours after Russia’s top diplomat signaled a wide chasm
between Moscow and Washington on ending the war in Ukraine. The Trump
administration, in confirming the meeting’s postponement, made no
mention of a diplomatic row between the longtime adversaries
“Secretary
Rubio and Foreign Minister Lavrov had a productive call," said a White
House official. "Therefore, an additional in-person meeting between the
Secretary and Foreign Minister is not necessary, and there are no plans
for President Trump to meet with President Putin in the immediate
future.”
Russia
on Tuesday rejected Trump’s call to freeze the fighting in Ukraine on
the current front line, signaling that the Kremlin has not significantly
changed its demands for peace, after Trump said last week that he
believed Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted a deal.
Lavrov
said Trump’s demand for “an immediate ceasefire, which has suddenly
become a topic of discussion again,” was contrary to what was agreed at
the Trump-Putin summit in Alaska in August, when Trump abandoned his
pressure on Putin to end the fighting ahead of negotiations.
“You
see, if we just stop, it means forgetting the root causes of this
conflict, which the American administration clearly understood,” Lavrov
complained. “I am referring to ensuring Ukraine’s nonaligned, nonnuclear
status, which implies refraining from any attempts to draw it into
NATO.”
A joint statement issued Tuesday
morning signed by the leaders of Britain, France, Germany, Italy,
Poland as well as top E.U. officials, backed Trump's proposal for a
ceasefire along the existing line of contact ahead of any talks.
The
statement also expressed skepticism about Russia’s negotiating efforts
over the past nine months and its interest in ending the conflict.
“Russia’s
Stalling Tactics have shown time and time again that Ukraine is the
only party serious about peace. We can all see that Putin continues to
choose violence and destruction,” the statement said.
Lavrov said on Tuesday only that phone contact with Rubio would continue.
CNN
reported that plans for a meeting between Lavrov and Rubio this week
had been put on hold over differences in the terms to end the war and
Russia’s continuing hard-line position.
Russia has also demanded a veto over Ukrainian security guarantees, as
well getting its own security guarantees, even though it is the
aggressor in the war.
Ukraine and its European supporters have strenuously opposed these conditions.
President
Donald Trump shakes hand with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a
summit in Anchorage on Aug. 15. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
At
the Alaska summit, Trump accepted Putin’s rejection of a ceasefire,
writing on Truth Social that it had been decided that the best way to
end the war was to “go directly to a peace agreement, which would end
the war, and not a mere ceasefire agreement, which often times do not
hold up.”
But
that freed Russia to ramp up it attacks on Ukraine and it resisted
Trump’s calls for a meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky to move the peace process forward.
In Thursday’s phone call with Trump, Putin again demanded that Ukraine surrender all of Donetsk region, including territory not yet conquered, according to senior U.S. officials.
In a subsequent
tense White House meeting Friday with Zelensky, Trump urged him to
surrender all of Donbas, which includes Donetsk region, to get a deal or
see his country destroyed by Russia, according to people familiar with
the exchange.
But Trump still emerged from the meeting with Zelensky calling for a ceasefire along the front line, a stance that the Ukrainian president endorsed but appears to have incensed Lavrov.
Trump’s position on the Russia-Ukraine conflict has changed
several times over the past year. Tatiana Stanovaya, senior fellow at
the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, said that whenever Trump appeared to
be losing patience with Putin, the Russian leader reached out to offer
peace — but strictly on Russia’s terms.
“Russia’s
position has not changed at all — it is the same as six months or even a
year ago. They still want everything they have been demanding all
along. So we are entering the third round of the same game,” she wrote
on X. Putin, she said, would continue pushing Trump to force Ukraine to
give up territory in Donbas to Russia — and then he would push for even
more.
“That
is only the starting point; the remaining demands will follow later.
The real question remains the same: how far will Ukraine be forced to
go?” she wrote.
Natalia Abbakumova contributed to this report.