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The high stakes of Alaska is faced with democratic skepticism in Ukraine

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The Democrats of Congress remained skeptical about the fact that any progress towards the end of the war in Ukraine would be made before the meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The meeting with high issues in anchorage, in Alaska, comes when legislators are looking forward to seeing the end of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and with a lot of ready to slap a refined sanctions package in Moscow and its allies unless Putin is sold.

But Democrats are not sure that Trump will give results in his closed -door meeting with Putin, the first between American leaders and Russian leaders since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Trump to hold a historic summit with Putin in Alaska at the end of the Russian-Ukraine war

President Donald Trump

President Donald Trump in the White House oval office in Washington, DC, Wednesday, August 6, 2025. (Bonnie Cash / Upi / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“I fear that this meeting will end once again with America which has given ground to an autocrat who spent his career to undermine democratic values,” said the senator. Mark WarnerD-VA., And the best democrat of the Intel Senate committee.

He warned that there could be no concessions without the involvement of Ukraine, the withdrawal of Russia from the Ukrainian territory and the “enforceable guarantees” for the security of Ukraine.

“Nothing less would be an invitation to a new assault by Moscow and each autocrat who watches to see if the United States still has the backbone to defend the principles that ensured the Americans in security since the Second World War,” he said.

The minority head of the Hakeem Jeffries room, DN.Y., accused Trump of “playing Foodsie” with Putin, but noted that he seemed that the president’s disposition towards his Russian counterpart had changed.

He added this last year, Democrats of the Chamber And the Republicans worked together to spend another set of military aid for Ukraine and compared it to a “Churchill or Chamberlain moment”.

What we know about Trump’s meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska

Jeffries press conference in Capitol

The head of the minority of the Hakeem Jeffries room, DN.Y., is expressed during a press conference in Capitol, in Washington, Thursday, March 6, 2025. (APO photo / J. Scott Applewhite)

“We will either appease the dictator, or we will aggressively oppose the dictator,” said Jeffries. “And as we saw with Chamberlain, appease the dictator never works.”

Trump himself sought to set expectations for the summit, saying to Fox News Radio earlier this week that there would be 25% chance that the meeting ends with a failure.

And aboard the Air Force One, Trump told journalists that he wanted to “see a cease-fire quickly”.

“I don’t know if it will be today, but I’m not going to be happy if it is not today,” he said. “Everyone said it couldn’t be today, but I just say that I want murder to stop.”

The Trump administration threatened to slap the secondary prices on India, a major Russian oil buyer, if the meeting did not go well. This occurs after Trump gave Putin a 50-day deadline to reach a cease-fire agreement, which the president recently shortened in “10 or 12” days.

Putin Ally warns that Titanic’s efforts “are underway to pour the Trump’s summit on the Ukrainian war

Senator Jeanne Shaheen

Senator Jeanne Shaheen, DN.H., speaks during a press conference after the weekly meeting of the Senate democratic policy at the American Capitol building on September 19, 2023 in Washington, DC (Getty Images)

Senator Jeanne ShaheenThe best democrat of the senatorial foreign intelligence committee, told journalists that “people were willing to give the White House and the President the benefit of the doubt”.

“But if he produced nothing at this summit, after drawing Red Line after Red Line … There will be an increasing concern and increasing pressure to try to do something,” said the Democrat of New Hampshire.

An area where many legislators in the upper room agree is the need for a set of sanctions against Russia. Currently, meaning. Lindsey Graham, Rs.C., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., Have an invoice in preparation which would mass up up to 500% of prices on countries buying energy products in Moscow.

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Blumenthal told MSNBC earlier this week if Trump was firm and insisted on a ceasefire, Putin came to the table with European leaders and secure security guarantees “he has the integration of a potential agreement that could win the Nobel Peace Prize”.

“But my fear is that it is Mercurial Donald Trump which allowed the deadline for sanctions to go last Friday without any taxation of new levies to Russia, and that it will not be able to join the principles adopted yesterday by European countries at their meeting,” he said.

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