WASHINGTON DC – Three days of high-stakes talks in Florida ended without the breakthrough Ukrainian and US negotiators had hoped for – but President Volodymyr Zelensky is projecting determination and a cautiously upbeat tone as he pivots to Europe in search of momentum.
The Ukrainian leader, who dialed into the Miami discussions for what he called a “very substantive and constructive” call with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, insisted the process is moving forward even if no major concessions emerged.
“Ukraine is committed to continuing to work honestly with the US side to bring about real peace,” Zelensky said, stressing that the two sides agreed on “next steps and formats” for continued talks.
A senior Western diplomat on Saturday afternoon described the Miami round as “steady rather than spectacular.”
While there was “no headline breakthrough,” the diplomat told Kyiv Post, “there was also no backsliding – and given the current geopolitical weather, that counts as progress.”
Another Central European diplomat was slightly more upbeat, noting that the Ukrainians “believe they left Florida with a clearer picture of what Washington is willing to push for, and what the Russians are still stonewalling.”
The diplomat added that Zelensky’s choice to personally join the call “signaled urgency but also confidence that the process isn’t stalling.”
London next – and a friendlier crowd
Zelensky now turns to what is likely to be a more receptive audience. He arrives in London on Monday for meetings with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz – a gathering that several officials described as a “reset moment” for the European pillar of the peace effort.
Macron previewed the meeting by saying the leaders would “take stock” of negotiations and continue planning for a potential European peacekeeping force should a ceasefire take hold.
He also accused Moscow of remaining on an “escalatory path,” reiterating Paris’ insistence that Europe and the US must jointly provide Ukraine with robust security guarantees.
And while Zelensky is in London, Kyiv Post has learned from diplomatic sources that UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will travel to Washington this weekend. She is expected to meet senior Trump administration officials on Monday for discussions covering Ukraine, transatlantic security, and broader geopolitical issues.
One diplomat called the move “a deliberate two-track strategy” to ensure “no daylight opens between London, Brussels and Washington” as negotiations intensify.
A senior EU official put it more bluntly: “Europe knows that if the Americans are testing new formats, we cannot afford hesitation. London is about aligning our political will – and showing Kyiv we are not passengers in this process.”
Diplomatic landscape still in flux
The Miami talks, led on the Ukrainian side by Rustem Umerov and Andrii Hnatov, focused heavily on Ukraine’s security architecture and Russia’s track record of violating past commitments.
The Ukrainians reiterated fears of a “third Russian invasion” if the final deal lacks enforcement mechanisms – a concern widely shared across EU capitals.
Russia, meanwhile, signaled mixed reactions to the US proposals, with aide Yury Ushakov calling parts of the framework “constructive” while rejecting others – particularly issues touching on territory and Ukraine’s future defense capabilities.
Yet despite ongoing airstrikes and political friction, Western officials insist diplomacy remains alive. “The fact that both Kyiv and Moscow keep showing up – even to disagree – is not nothing,” a Western diplomat said.
“If London produces a unified European message, that alone will strengthen Zelensky’s hand in the next round with the Americans,” the source added.
For now, Kyiv is leaning into optimism. “Our approach is that everything must be workable – every crucial measure for peace, security, and reconstruction,” Zelensky said after the Florida talks, signaling he intends to arrive in London with proposals ready.
And as Zelensky heads into another week of shuttle diplomacy, all sides insist the real test is still ahead – when warm words finally collide with hard decisions.