Ukraine may sign economic deal next week, US Treasury chief tells Fox News

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March 26, 2025

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday Ukraine may sign an economic deal next week and President Donald Trump will not hesitate to raise sanctions on Russia if the need arises.

Bessent made the comments in an interview on the Fox News show "The Story with Martha MacCallum," after he was asked for an update on talks about a minerals agreement.

"We have passed along a completed document for the economic partnership (that) is currently being reviewed by Ukrainians, and we hope to go to full discussions and perhaps even get signatures next week," Bessent said.

Trump said on Monday he expects a U.S.-Ukraine revenue-sharing agreement on Ukrainian critical minerals to be signed soon.

Ukraine and Russia accused one another on Wednesday of flouting a truce on energy strikes brokered by the United States.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has called on Washington to apply further sanctions on Moscow, which he said was clearly not pursuing "real peace."

On Russian sanctions, Bessent said: "It will be determined by Russian leadership's next moves, whether the sanctions go up or down, and President Trump, I think, would not hesitate to raise the sanctions if it gives him a negotiating advantage."

The United States announced separate agreements with Ukraine and Russia on Tuesday to pause their strikes in the Black Sea and against each other's energy targets.

Trump says he is pushing for an end to the war in Ukraine, which began when Russia launched a full-scale invasion of its neighbor more than three years ago. Russia had annexed Crimea in 2014.

 

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US ‘intensifies demands for minerals’ as UK military delegation to visit Kyiv
27 March 2025

Donald Trump has intensified his demands for US control over Ukraine’s rare minerals and energy assets, according to a fresh proposal seen by multiple media outlets.

The new deal would see the US receive all royalties from such assets until Ukraine has paid off at least $100bn of war debt to the US, and hand Kyiv just 50 per cent thereafter, while giving the US a veto over the sale of any such assets to other nations, according to reports.

One analyst labelled the fresh proposal an “expropriation document” incompatible with Ukraine joining the EU, telling The Telegraph: “I’ve never seen anything like it before ... I have to wonder whether the real intention might not be to force Zelensky to reject it.” One Kyiv official described the proposal as “robbery” to the Financial Times.

It came as Emmanuel Macron announced that a British-French military delegation will be sent to Ukraine to scout Kyiv’s needs and what can be done to support its army – and that troops would be deployed as a “reassurance force” to uphold any potential peace deal agreed with Russia.

An analyst has described the Trump administration’s latest proposals on a deal granting the US control over Ukraine’s critical minerals and energy assets as “an expropriation document”.

“It is an expropriation document,” said Alan Riley, an expert on energy law at the Atlantic Council. “There are no guarantees, no defence clauses, the US puts up nothing.

“The Americans can walk away, the Ukrainians can’t. I’ve never seen anything like it before.”

Under the proposals, the US would be able to veto sales of Ukraine’s resources to other countries, according to The Telegraph.

Prof Riley told the outlet: “It is not compatible with EU membership, and perhaps that is part of the purpose. I have to wonder whether the real intention might not be to force Zelensky to reject it.”

 
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