US national security adviser Mike Waltz has said that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will sign a critical minerals deal with the US in “the very short term” and that the war in Ukraine will end “soon”, although Kyiv says several key points must still be agreed.
“Under Trump, this war will end and it will end soon,” Waltz told an audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland on Friday. “He is the president of peace.”
Donald Trump called Vladimir Putin and Zelenskyy last week in an opening bid to end the war. He then dispatched senior US officials to meet Russian officials in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday but Zelenskyy was not invited.
Washington has moved to strip language from an annual G7 declaration of support for Kyiv that paints the Kremlin as the aggressor.
Ukraine has asked for security guarantees from the US, as well as Europe, to ensure that any peace deal is lasting and just, and will deter Russia from using an armistice to rest and re-arm, allowing it to resume its invasion.
Waltz said Zelenskyy wanted to develop critical minerals with US investment and claimed the Ukrainian leader would agree to a deal with Washington, although he did not provide details of the terms.
Zelenskyy last week rejected a proposal presented by US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent during a visit to Kyiv, saying it was not in Ukraine’s best interest as written.
The deal proposed that the US would take ownership of about 50 per cent of the rights to Ukraine’s rare earth and critical minerals in exchange for past military assistance, and did not contain any offers of future assistance.
Senior Ukrainian officials who viewed the proposal told the FT that Bessent demanded that Zelenskyy sign the deal in his presence.
The officials said they have spent the past week drawing up a counterproposal, which they discussed with the US special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, in Kyiv on Thursday and Friday.
Zelenskyy said in an address on Thursday evening after his first meeting with Kellogg that he had “proposed the fastest and most constructive way to achieve results”.
“Ukraine is ready for a strong and truly effective agreement with the US president on investments and security,” he added.
“We’ve never said that we don’t want to sign [the deal],” a senior Ukrainian official said. “They don’t understand that the draft text can’t violate our constitution and, actually, we are helping Trump to make a real deal.”
The official added that Kyiv was trying to negotiate a “strong deal which doesn’t violate our laws and constitution and which guarantees the investments and security”.
Officials with knowledge of the ongoing negotiations said that the US had presented an improved proposal but that the two sides were still working on several points.
Zelenskyy’s rejection of the original US deal and the subsequent war of words between him and Trump over the past week has raised concerns about the strategic partnership between the two nations and future American assistance, upon which Ukraine greatly relies to fend off Russia’s attacks.
“We want to be productive with the Americans, it’s not our choice to argue,” the Ukrainian official said.
Trump this week falsely claimed that Zelenskyy had started the war, and raised the stakes further on Friday by saying that the Ukrainian president did not need to be involved in negotiations to bring it to an end. Trump also labelled Zelenskyy a “dictator” in a social media post.
“I don’t think he’s very important to be at meetings, to be honest with you,” Trump said. “When Zelenskyy said, oh, he wasn’t invited to a meeting, I mean, it wasn’t a priority because he did such a bad job in negotiating so far.”
Waltz on Friday told his audience of conservatives outside Washington that the US had “an obligation” to the American taxpayer “to recoup the hundreds of billions of dollars that have been invested in this war”, drawing applause from the crowd.
He added that Europe was “often” paid back for its contributions to Ukraine, so the US should be too.
“Here’s the bottom line, President Zelenskyy is going to sign that deal, and you will see that in the very short term,” said Waltz. “And that is good for Ukraine. What better could you have for Ukraine than to be in an economic partnership with the United States? . . . What better could you have for Ukraine to stop the killing?”
Waltz also portrayed Trump as a peacemaker. “He’s going to end the war in Europe. He is going to end the wars in the Middle East. He is going to reinvest the United States and our leadership in our own hemisphere, from the Arctic to the border to Panama,” he said.
“By the end of this all, we’re going to have the Nobel Peace Prize sitting next to the name of Donald J Trump,” he added.