Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US Secretary Marco Rubio arrived in Saudi Arabia, where negotiations on peace prospects in the Ukrainian will begin on Tuesday, March 11. Kiev is expected to offer a partial fire with Russia, which concerns Haul’s long attacks with drones, missiles and combat operations in the Black Sea, and consent to sign the deal with the United States for the exploitation of rare land in the Ukrainian territory. All in the hope of convincing Washington to return to his footsteps and resume intelligence information sharing and weapons supplies to Ukraine.
“What we want to know is whether they are interested in facing a kind of peace conversation,” Rubio said before landing on Gedda, “we are ready to hear how far they are willing to go and then compare it with what the Russians want and see how far we are distant.” For his part, US President Donald Trump said he was ready to revoke the suspension of sharing intelligence information with Ukraine: “We almost did that,” he said. The first -British minister Keir Strmer also changed, calling Trump on the eve of the beginning of the interviews to underline his hope of an approximation between Kiev and Washington. Starmer always summoned a virtual meeting for Saturday among the ‘coalition of The Wisling’, who cannot discuss the prospects for Ukraine, while military officials from more than 30 countries are expected on Tuesday discussing an international security force for Ukraine.
In Saudi Arabia, according to some rumors, a new round of interviews between the US and the Russian government should also have been conducted. Rumors denied by Cremlin’s gate, Dmitry Peskov, who underlined the way to restore bilateral relations between Russia and the United States is “quite long and difficult,” although Putin and Trump “expressed political will in that direction.” Meanwhile, Moscow announced that she had identified two spies that worked in disguise to the British embassy in Moscow and ordered her expulsion within 2 weeks. According to the Russian Intelligence Service, diplomats provided false information at the time of entry into Russia and once in the country they would have performed “espionage and sabotage activities considered a threat to national security.” The United Kingdom Ministry of Foreign Affairs responded by defining the accusations addressed by Moscow as “evil and unfounded.”
Source: IL Tempo

John Cameron is a journalist at The Nation View specializing in world news and current events, particularly in international politics and diplomacy. With expertise in international relations, he covers a range of topics including conflicts, politics and economic trends.