EU supports military training in Ukraine
Published August 29, 2025last updated August 29, 2025What you need to know
- EU defense and foreign affairs ministers meet in Copenhagen to talk about Ukraine
- EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas vows to increase pressure on Russia
- Kallas also spoke of expanding EU military training of Ukrainian troops into Ukraine itself
- Ukraine says Russian strikes kill 2 in central Dnipropetrovsk region
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You can follow Saturday's developments on the war in Ukraine here.
Below you can review a roundup of news and analysis on Russia's war in Ukraine from Friday, August 29.
White House: Trump still working on Ukraine-Russia peace summit
The White House on Friday said President Donald Trump has not given up hope of getting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin to sit down for ceasefire and peace negotiations.
The statement comes as a two-week deadline that Trump gave Putin to do so is set to expire on Monday.
It also comes just hours after French President Emmanuel Macron said Trump ran the risk of getting "played" by Putin "again" in the matter.
"President Trump and his national security team continue to engage with Russian and Ukrainian officials towards a bilateral meeting to stop the killing and end the war," the AFP news agency quoted an anonymous White House official as saying Friday.
AFP said Trump Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller was indignant when asked about Macron's comments, snapping, "No president in history has done more to advance the cause of peace."
"He's working steadfastly to end the killing, and that's something that everybody in the world should celebrate," Miller added.
Trump had said he would end the war in Ukraine on his first day in office in January and has since said that reaching a peace deal is proving harder than he anticipated.
Macron says "coalition of willing' will hold Ukraine military talks next week
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday said Ukraine's backers, the leaders of the so-called "coalition of the willing," will convene in person and via video link next week to discuss how to provide credible security guarantees to Kyiv in the event that a ceasefire can be negotiated with Russia.
"Our Chiefs of Staff have done very important work since the [August 18] meeting in Washington ... and in the last few hours have again allowed us to finalize the contributions of each of the countries," Macron told reporters in Toulon, France, alongside German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Macron said the coalition meeting would allow leaders to "take stock next week after the end of the deadline which had been set for Monday." Trump announced that Russia's Putin had "two weeks" to move toward negotiations or face serious "consequences."
The roughly 30-member coalition is made up largely of EU countries, but also includes Turkey, Canada and Australia.
Macron did not say when and where the meeting would take place, only that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy — who has been clamoring for more high-level meetings — will attend.
Germany's Merz seconded the proposed meeting, saying, "I am very much in favor of all of us — that is the Europeans and the Americans — carefully planning the next steps together."
Lithuanian Defense Minister says time for Europe to 'walk next to US' not freeload
Lithuanian Defense Minister Dovile Sakaliene, speaking to DW on the sidelines of a meeting of EU defense and foreign ministers on Friday, said of the situation in Ukraine: "It's crucial that the Ukrainian army is kept strong, because that is the first security guarantee. That is the first line of defense."
"Secondly, of course," said Sakaliene, "financial pain to Russia. So that means that the next sanctions package has to be more ambitious."
"Lithuania has always been pressuring for more secondary sanctions by the United States. That would be a nuclear option that would actually hurt the Russian war machine, that would hurt cash flow to the Russian war machine significantly," she said.
"And of course, finding a way to make use of those over €200 billion ($234 billion) that are on the table of Russian assets, which still are not used for the benefit of Ukraine," she added.
Talking about Europe's strategic dependence on the US, Sakaliene said the US had been metaphorically "carrying" EU and NATO partners "for quite some time," adding that now "we need to walk next to them" and carry more of the load when it comes to defending Ukraine and Europe.
Sakaliene voiced uneasiness over the idea of Donald Trump negotiating with Russian President Vladimir Putin while also acknowledging that every avenue potentially leading to peace must be considered: "We are never going to trust Russia. It doesn't really matter if it's Putin or somebody else. At the same time, nobody has a better alternative and the game is not over."
Asked if Trump could be trusted, Sakaliene said, "I would not talk about trust. I would say that we are watching, we are participating and we try to do our part. That's all that we can do at this time."
Macron says Trump may be getting 'played' by Putin
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday suggested that Donald Trump may be getting played by his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.
Trump — who was recently caught on an open mic telling Macron, "I think he [Putin] wants to make a deal for me…. as crazy as that sounds" — promised on August 18 that he would bring about ceasefire talks in two weeks' time or else Russia would face serious consequences.
This coming Monday marks the two-week deadline and there is no sign that Putin has any intention of stopping the bombing and meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to negotiate an end to his war of aggression on neighboring Ukraine.
"If that doesn't happen by Monday, the deadline set by President Trump, it means that once again President Putin played President Trump," said Macron in remarks delivered at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Toulon, France.
"I hope it [the meeting between Putin and Zelensky] takes place but if not... we will push for primary and secondary sanctions, which will pressure Russia and force it to come to the negotiating table," said Macron.
Ukrainian President Zelenskyy, too, spoke of the two-week deadline set by Trump in a social media statement, writing, "Two weeks will be on Monday. And we will remind everybody."
With Russian missiles and drones continuing to devastate Ukraine while the Kremlin claims it is interested in peace, Macron also warned that Putin had a habit of saying one thing at international talks and then doing quite another when executing his wars.
"The gap between President Putin's positions at international summits and the reality on the ground shows how insincere he is," said the French president.
WATCH — Merz: Ukraine war 'may go on for many more months'
French President Emmanuel Macron has been hosting German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in the southern port city of Toulon, where the two leaders talked about shared security challenges — above all, the war in Ukraine.
After the meeting, Merz said Russia was ignoring all diplomatic efforts to end the conflict.
Germany, France 'Russia shows no intention to end its war of aggression'
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and French President Emmanuel Macron, speaking in southern France, vowed further security assistance for Kyiv and more economic sanctions against Moscow in the face of increasingly intense Russian airstrikes on Ukraine.
Speaking in Toulon, Merz said he was "not surprised" at the Kremlin's stalling, saying, "It is part of this Russian president's strategy."
"Earlier this week," Merz continued, "it became clear to me that President Putin is unwilling to meet with President Zelensky and has set preconditions that are downright unacceptable."
In a joint statement released after the two met, Germany and France said, "despite intensive international diplomatic efforts, Russia shows no intention to end its war of aggression against Ukraine."
"In light of the massive Russian airstrikes on Ukraine and its population, and the consequences for our own security, France and Germany will therefore provide additional air defense to Ukraine," the statement continued.
Both Berlin and Paris agreed "on the need to provide Ukraine with credible security guarantees" in the event that the war can be ended.
Neither nation, however, has committed to the idea of deploying troops to Ukraine.
The second prong of the joint approach, the statement said, was to "consider the effective implementation and further strengthening of sanctions essential to exert maximum pressure on Russia to end its illegal war of aggression against Ukraine, and ultimately bring peace to Ukraine and Europe."
Accordingly, Berlin and Paris will push for both EU and G7 sanctions targeting third-country businesses supporting Russia's invasion of Ukraine as part of their effort.
Kallas: Broad EU support for military training mission
EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas on Friday said member states broadly support the idea of providing military training inside Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire with Russia. The EU has already trained more than 80,000 Ukrainian soldiers but none inside its borders.
Kallas suggested the effort could be integrated into the West's security package for ally Ukraine if a ceasefire comes to fruition.
"I welcome that there is broad support today to expand our EU military mission mandate to provide training and advice inside Ukraine after any truce," said Kallas after meeting with EU defense ministers. "We must be ready to do more. This could include placing EU trainers in Ukrainian military academies and institutions," she said.
A formal change to the bloc's defense mandate would require unanimity among all 27 member states.
Beyond dragging his feet and refusing to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Russian President Vladimir Putin has also greatly increased the scale of Russia's nightly attacks on Ukraine as US and European efforts to end the war in Ukraine appear very much stalled.
"The past weeks we have seen diplomatic efforts to end Russia's war and it's clear that Europe wants peace, America wants peace, Ukraine wants peace." The only actor "who doesn't want peace," Kallas said, "is Russia."
Ukraine's commander speaks with allies about future peace
Ukraine's top commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi, said he discussed steps that could help secure a just and lasting peace in the war with Russia with his counterparts from the so-called "Coalition of the Willing" member countires.
"Jointly developed practical solutions, supported by real mechanisms of political and diplomatic support from reliable partners of Ukraine, are capable of ensuring a just and lasting peace for Ukraine and all of Europe," Syrskyi said in a statement.
Russia massing 100,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia is amassing a force of about 100,000 troops near Pokrovsk, a stronghold in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region.
"There is a build-up and concentration of the enemy there. Up to 100,000. That's what we have as of this morning. They are preparing offensive actions in any case," Zelenskyy told journalists.
He also said that Ukrainian forces were pushing Russian troops out of the northeastern border region of Sumy.
Russia blasts France's Macron for calling Putin 'ogre'
Moscow vehemently denounced Emmanuel Macron for what it termed "vulgar insults" after the French president characterized Russian leader Vladimir Putin as a "predator" and an "ogre."
During an interview with LCI last week, Macron cautioned European leaders against trusting Putin. "For his own survival, he needs to keep eating... That means he is a predator, an ogre at our gates," Macron said.
In response, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters in Moscow that Macron constantly makes strange statements that sometimes cross the line of decency and turn into "low-grade insults."
"This is unworthy of a head of state," she said.
Russia has long criticized France's support for Ukraine, accusing Paris of provoking the conflict.
Kremlin says Putin-Zelenskyy meeting must be well prepared
Russia has not ruled out a meeting between President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to find a peaceful solution to the conflict in Ukraine, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian news agencies.
"However, Putin believes that any meeting at the highest level must be well prepared so that the results previously achieved at the expert level can be finalized," he said.
However, thus far, work at the expert level has not progressed at all, Peskov added.
Peskov was responding to statements by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said on Thursday that it was "obvious" that Zelenskyy an Putin would not be having a face-to-face summit, despite previous assurances from the United States to that end.
Earlier this week, US President Donald Trump also cast doubt on a Zelenskyy-Putin meeting, despite previously saying "arrangements for a meeting" between the Ukrainian and Russian leaders had begun.
Ukraine says it struck fuel pumping facility in western Russia
The Ukrainian military announced that it had carried out an overnight strike on a facility in Russia's western Bryansk region that it says supplies diesel fuel for Moscow's war effort in Ukraine.
According to a statement from Ukraine's General Staff, the station in the village of Naitopovichi has a pumping capacity of around 10.5 million tons per year.
The statement also said that the strike caused a fire.
Ukraine has previously struck Russian oil facilities many times. Ukraine argues that Russia's oil industry helps fund Moscow's war efforts.
Sweden summons Russian ambassador over attacks on Ukraine
The Swedish government summoned the Russian ambassador in Stockholm to protest Russia's continued attacks on Ukrainian cities and civilians, it said in a statement.
"It is clear that Russia is not interested in peace as it continues its attacks all over Ukraine. Now is the time to maximize pressure on Russia, including through more sanctions," Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard wrote on X.
On Thursday, the EU and the UK also summoned Russian envoys to protest Moscow's massive attack on Ukraine that same day, which caused damage to the EU mission, a British government cultural building and two media outlets' offices.
Zelenskyy says 8 people still missing after Russia's Kyiv air attack
Following the Thursday's Russian air attack on Kyiv, which resulted in at least 23 deaths, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced on Friday that eight people were still missing.
"The fate of eight people still remains unknown, and 53 others were injured," he wrote on X.
According to the Ukrainian leader, four children were among the deceased. "The youngest girl was not even three years old," Zelenskyy said.
The president offered his condolences to the families and loved ones of those who were killed.
"Russia only understands strength, and demonstrations of strength are needed now," Zelenskyy said, again urging allies to impose harsher sanctions on Moscow.
Ukraine says Russian strikes kill 2 in Dnipropetrovsk region
Ukrainian authorities said that Russian strikes overnight had killed two people in the Dnipropetrovsk region.
"Unfortunately, two people died — a man and a woman. My sincere condolences to their relatives," wrote Sergiy Lysak, the head of the regional military administration, on Telegram.
Lysak said the drone strike on the Synelnyky district also wounded a 50-year-old woman. A separate attack on the city of Dnipro wounded two people, including a 46-year-old man who was in a "serious condition", he added.
The strikes occurred just days after Kyiv acknowledged the Russian army's advance into the east of the central Dnipropetrovsk region for the first time.