Putin Tells World Leaders About First Trip to the West in Years…Again and Again

In calls with global leaders, Putin repeatedly highlights his planned Alaska meeting with Trump – his first major visit to the West since the full-scale Ukraine invasion began.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been repeatedly telling world leaders about his planned meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska.

In a phone call on Monday, Aug. 11 with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, initiated by the Armenian side, Putin spoke extensively about his recent conversation with US Special Envoy Stephen Witkoff and the preparations underway for the Alaska summit with Trump. The Kremlin’s Telegram channel highlighted that this meeting is a key focus of Putin’s diplomatic agenda.

Over the weekend, Putin continued to raise the topic during separate calls with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Tajikistan’s President Emomali Rahmon, and Kyrgyzstan’s President Sadyr Japarov. Each conversation included references to the planned Alaska trip and the discussions with Witkoff, underscoring how central this meeting is to his current foreign outreach.

The Kremlin described these exchanges as opportunities to discuss trade, investment cooperation, and Eurasian Economic Union interaction, but Putin consistently circled back to the Alaska summit, signaling its significance as his first major visit to the West since the war’s onset.

Since the war began, Putin’s foreign travel has been heavily restricted due to widespread airspace bans, limiting him mostly to neighboring and allied countries in Asia and Eastern Europe.

According to open-source data, since the start of the war, Putin has visited Belarus five times, Kazakhstan four times, China and Turkmenistan twice each, and made the same number of trips to Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. He has also made single visits to Tajikistan, Iran, Armenia, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, North Korea, Vietnam, Azerbaijan, and Mongolia, as per Ukrainska Pravda.

In 2025, Putin has made just one foreign trip to Belarus.

The planned Alaska meeting, set for Aug. 15, 2025, represents a notable break in this pattern. Last week, Trump announced the summit on social media, calling it a “highly anticipated meeting” to advance peace talks on Ukraine.

Putin’s repeated mentions to multiple world leaders about this trip appear designed to project momentum and diplomatic significance, emphasizing that despite isolation, he remains engaged on the global stage.