The Kremlin has said what the newly signed minerals deal between Ukraine and Washington does is effectively force Kiev to pay for all future military aid.
This from thelibertydaily.com.
Dmitry Medvedev, a former Russian president and current deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council, stated on Telegram:
Trump has broken the Kyiv regime to the point where they will have to pay for U.S. aid with mineral resources.
Of the Ukrainians, he said:
Now they will have to pay for military supplies with the national wealth of a disappearing country.
As of yet, the full contents of the newly inked deal, finalized and signed late in the day Wednesday, have not been revealed, but the deal gives the United States preferential access to new Ukrainian minerals deals and its natural resources like oil and gas, and will fund investment in Ukraine’s reconstruction.
But the Zelensky government was able to get something crucial dropped at the last minute. As CNN detailed:
Compared to earlier drafts, the final agreement is reportedly less lopsided in favor of the US and is not as far-reaching.
It stipulates that future American military assistance to Ukraine will count as part of the US investment into the fund, rather than calling for reimbursement for past assistance.
President Trump’s initial reaction after the signing was seen in the following:
Speaking Wednesday in a call with NewsNation, Trump said he made the deal to ‘protect’ Washington’s contribution to the Ukrainian war effort. ‘We made a deal today where we get, you know, much more in theory, than the $350 billion but I wanted to be protected,’ Trump said.
He continued, voicing the administration’s longtime complaints that Zelensky only asks for “more and more” —and yet is still losing the war.
I didn’t want to be out there and look foolish.
Meanwhile, the ceasefire process is still basically stalled, as neither side has backed off of their demands and conditions. President Zelensky has recently reiterated that he cannot even legally give up Crimea.
However, Trump presidential special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, Keith Kellogg, has told Fox News that Ukraine is ready to make territorial concessions, but would not see any ceded territory as a permanent situation.
If you've been demanding the disengagement of the US from Ukraine, it would be strange to cheer today's signing of the "minerals deal," which establishes a long-term "partnership" between the US and Ukraine
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) May 1, 2025
The envoy said:
Not de jure forever, but de facto, because the Russians actually occupy that and they’ve agreed to that. They know that if they have a ceasefire in place, which means you sit on the ground that you currently hold, that’s what they’re willing to go to.
He emphasized:
You have your line set, and they’re willing to go there.
But it is clear the Kremlin sees this as an issue of sovereignty and permanence, given President Putin has described the four annexed territories and Crimea as “ours forever.”
And still no peace between Ukraine and Russia.