The US-Ukrainian Investment Recovery Fund will hold its 1st meeting in September, with plans to expand into defense sector investments alongside three planned mining ventures
President Trump is pressuring Ukraine to accept a peace plan that would grant Russia the territory it has captured and prevent Ukraine from joining NATO
President Donald Trump has announced that a long-awaited minerals agreement with Ukraine will be signed next Thursday, potentially ending months of negotiations.
After Russian missile strike killed 35 civilians in Sumy on 13 April, Ukraine retaliated with drones by targeting Russia’s 448th brigade involved in the deadly attack. Meanwhile, Denmark announced plans to send unarmed soldiers to Ukraine for combat learning, particularly drone operations.
US President Donald Trump also declared on 30 March that Ukraine will "never be a member of NATO" while also warning of consequences if President Zelenskyy withdraws from a minerals agreement.
A rare earth minerals agreement with Ukraine that failed to materialize during President Zelensky's tense White House visit reportedly will soon be signed.
Ukraine is prepared to sign the mineral resources agreement with the United States "at any time" following the conclusion of negotiations, Vice Prime Minister Olha Stefanishyna said.
While Trump chases Ukraine’s minerals, Putin eyes its industrial might — the one that built the USSR into a superpower and can push Russia ahead of the West again
Trump's White House clash with Zelenskyy signals the rise of a new world order — the one with Russia resurging as a superpower, China seizing sensitive tech, and NATO suffering trillion-dollar losses.