Zelensky calls Trump's negotiating pressure 'not fair' as Geneva talks stall after just two hours
Two days of Ukraine peace talks in Geneva collapsed Wednesday morning, with the second session lasting barely two hours before delegations packed up and left.
The abrupt end to the third round of trilateral negotiations between Ukraine, Russia, and the United States came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky publicly complained that President Trump calls on Kyiv to compromise more often than he pressures Moscow.
Zelensky called the dynamic "not fair."
Fair or not, someone has to move. And three rounds of talks have now made clear that Ukraine's leadership still hasn't decided how much it's willing to give.
What Happened in Geneva
Tuesday's opening session brought all three delegations into the same room for what was described by both sides as "very tense" discussions. By Wednesday morning, the talks broke early. Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov called the conversations "intense and substantive" while acknowledging that progress was limited, Breitbart News reported. His Russian counterpart, Vladimir Medinsky, offered a cooler assessment, calling the talks "difficult, but businesslike."
Zelensky himself struck a more measured tone on the substance of the negotiations, even as he aired grievances about the broader pressure campaign:
"We can see that some groundwork has been done, but for now the positions differ, because the negotiations were not easy."
This was the third round of trilateral talks. Reports suggest that broader multilateral discussions may have also taken place this week, possibly involving delegations from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland, though it remains unclear whether Russia participated in those sessions.
The Referendum Problem
The most revealing detail to emerge from this round of talks has nothing to do with what happened inside the negotiating room. It's what Zelensky said outside of it.
Ukraine and the United States have reportedly agreed that any workable peace deal would require concessions significant enough to demand a referendum of the Ukrainian people. Zelensky, according to reports, acknowledged that he would need to sell the Ukrainian public a story of coming out of the conflict as a victor, or at least not a loser, to win that vote.
He was blunt about the limits of that sales pitch. Conceding the remaining fraction of the Donbas, he said, would be an "unsuccessful story." Then he went further, speaking to the emotional reality on the ground:
"Emotionally, people will never forgive this. Never. They will not forgive… me, they will not forgive [the U.S.]"
That's a revealing admission. Zelensky isn't just negotiating with Russia. He's negotiating with his own people, and he's telling Washington in advance that they'll share the blame for whatever deal emerges.
The Leverage Question
Zelensky's complaint about fairness deserves scrutiny, not sympathy. The reason Trump leans harder on Ukraine than on Russia in public is straightforward: Ukraine is the party that depends on American support. You apply pressure where you have leverage. That's not unfair. That's negotiation.
Russia has its own pressures, economic, military, and diplomatic, but those don't run through Washington in the same direct way. Zelensky knows this. His objection isn't really about fairness. It's about framing. He wants to walk into any referendum with the narrative that America stood fully behind Ukraine and that whatever territorial concessions were made came under duress from Moscow, not encouragement from Washington.
That framing serves Zelensky's domestic political survival. It does not necessarily serve the goal of ending a war that has been going on for years.
Behind closed doors, Zelensky reportedly conceded there was "respect" with U.S. negotiators. The public complaints and private acknowledgments tell two different stories. One is for the cameras in Kyiv. The other is for the room in Geneva.
Stalling as Strategy
Zelensky also accused Russia of trying to "drag out" progress, and he's probably right about that. Moscow has little incentive to rush toward a settlement when time favors the side holding territory. But the irony is that Zelensky's own rhetorical positioning accomplishes something similar. Every public statement about unfairness, every warning that the Ukrainian people will "never forgive," raises the political cost of compromise and makes any deal harder to close.
If you tell your population in advance that concessions are unforgivable, you've pre-poisoned the referendum you've already agreed is necessary.
Zelensky suggested he could see what might be a "final stage" in talks. That's the most optimistic note from a week that produced very little else. Whether it reflects genuine progress behind the scenes or an attempt to keep Western attention and support flowing is impossible to know from the outside.
Where This Leaves Things
Three rounds of trilateral talks. Two hours on the final day. One side is complaining publicly about its chief ally. The other side is described as dragging its feet. And a proposed resolution mechanism, a Ukrainian referendum, that the man who would have to champion it is already undermining in the press.
Peace requires someone willing to close. So far, Geneva has produced groundwork, tension, and grievances. What it hasn't produced is a deal.




