JTFMax:
Complete Plan Revealed!: The 28-Point Deal That Claims It Will “End” the Ukraine War—If Anyone Actually Signs It
Washington/Moscow – Buckle up: President Donald Trump’s (79) long-whispered, tightly guarded “secret Ukraine plan” has blown wide open—and Europe is still trying to shut its jaw. After weeks of cryptic leaks, the political news outlet Axios dropped the full package: 28 explosive points meant to bring the war to an end.
The biggest shock?
Ukraine is expected to swallow concessions the size of Crimea itself—fast. According to Russia’s state agency TASS, negotiators want President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s signature by November 27. Yes, next week. Zelenskyy admitted on Telegram that the talks happened with a “high-level” U.S. delegation, calling it a “very serious discussion,” but conveniently left out the ticking clock.
Meanwhile, Europe is staring at this proposal like it’s a mystery meat special—unsure what’s inside but already regretting the smell.
The 28-Point Bombshell – Exactly as Reported
These are the points—some trimmed but unchanged—that Axios says make up the grand plan:
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- The sovereignty of Ukraine is confirmed.
- Russia, Ukraine, and Europe sign a sweeping non-aggression pact; all tensions of the last 30 years magically vanish on paper.
- Russia promises not to attack neighbors; NATO agrees not to expand further.
- Russia and NATO, with the U.S. babysitting, talk out all security issues.
- Ukraine gets “reliable” security guarantees.
- Ukraine’s military capped at 600,000 troops (down from ~850,000).
- Ukraine constitutionally commits to never join NATO; NATO also updates its rules.
- NATO will not station troops in Ukraine.
- European fighter jets go to Poland.
- The U.S. gives a security guarantee and receives compensation; guarantee void if Ukraine attacks Russia. If Russia attacks, a “decisive” response follows.
- Ukraine is allowed to join the EU.
- A massive reconstruction program launches via a Ukraine Development Fund, gas repairs, housing rebuilds, and a World Bank package.
- Russia re-enters the global economy—sanctions gone, G8 invite included.
- Frozen funds: $100 billion to U.S.-led projects in Ukraine, with the U.S. getting 50% of profits. Europe adds another $100 billion.
- A U.S.-Russian working group monitors safety regulations.
- Russia legally commits to non-aggression toward Europe and Ukraine.
- The U.S. and Russia extend nuclear arms control deals, including START I.
- Ukraine commits to staying non-nuclear.
- Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant runs under IAEA oversight; electricity split 50:50.
- Both sides launch education programs about tolerance and rejecting Nazi ideologies.
- Territories: Crimea, Luhansk, and Donetsk recognized as de facto Russian; Kherson and Zaporizhzhia frozen along the line of contact. Russia gives up some areas; Ukraine withdraws from parts of Donetsk it still holds—demilitarized and internationally recognized as Russian.
- No one may change the territorial lines by force.
- Russia allows Ukraine commercial use of the Dnipro; grain exports via the Black Sea are arranged.
- A humanitarian committee handles prisoner swaps, body returns, and releases all civilian detainees—including children.
- Ukraine holds elections within 100 days.
- Full amnesty for everyone involved in the conflict phase; all future claims waived.
- The agreement becomes legally binding; a Trump-led peace council oversees compliance and slaps sanctions on violators.
- A ceasefire starts immediately with consent of all sides.
- The Twist: The Plan Was Written Without Ukraine
Here’s the part lighting European capitals on fire: Ukraine wasn’t in the room when the plan was drafted.
Trump’s circle—chiefly Special Envoy Steve Witkoff (68), working with Secretary of State Marco Rubio (54) and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner (44)—crafted the proposal directly with Moscow.
Witkoff reportedly worked hand-in-glove with Kirill Dmitriev (50), one of Vladimir Putin’s (73) key envoys.
Only once the plan was fully assembled—with the geopolitical glue still drying—was it shown to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (47).
Europe is now staring at this diplomatic grenade, wondering: Is this a peace plan, or a pressure cooker with a shiny lid?
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