

Lt Col Daniel Davis: Alaska Summit bottom line
Aug 15, 2025
Tensions escalate as Ukraine strikes within Russia, disrupting oil and drone operations but leaving front lines unchanged. The potential for an air ceasefire is explored amidst Trump's diplomatic maneuvers and unchanged Russian demands. A large Russian delegation hints at future economic and diplomatic normalization. Lavrov's eye-catching attire sparks debate, and Putin expresses a desire for peace talks and renewed arms control. The best hope? A Trump-Putin press conference signaling a first step towards easing hostilities.
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Ceasefire Is The Most Likely Early Win
- Trump and Putin face strong incentives to produce a tangible outcome from their Alaska meeting to claim historic success.
- An aerial ceasefire is the most realistic, mutual confidence-building step both sides could agree to quickly.
Pressure Falls More On Trump Than Putin
- Trump is under greater pressure than Putin to deliver a visible diplomatic result from this summit.
- Any agreement he reaches will still need buy-in from Europe and Ukraine to be implemented.
Pursue Incremental Steps, Not Immediate Tri-lateral Talks
- Do not expect a trilateral Trump–Zelensky–Putin meeting without European and Ukrainian agreement.
- Seek incremental, verifiable steps first rather than immediate full settlement.