Breaking
President Donald Trump announced that Russia and Ukraine have agreed to a three-day ceasefire and a major prisoner exchange, marking one of the clearest diplomatic openings in the long-running war. According to the Associated Press, Trump said the leaders of both countries agreed to his request for a ceasefire covering May 9, 10, and 11. The agreement also includes a suspension of all kinetic activity and a prisoner swap involving 1,000 prisoners from each side.
Trump announced the development on Truth Social, saying he was pleased to report the ceasefire and noting the timing around Russia’s Victory Day commemoration. He also expressed hope that the pause in fighting could become the “beginning of the end” of the war. The announcement came after repeated diplomatic efforts to find even a temporary halt in the fighting, with both sides previously accusing each other of violating or manipulating ceasefire proposals.
Details & Background
The war has dragged on for more than four years, causing staggering destruction, loss of life, and international instability. Earlier ceasefire efforts often collapsed under distrust, battlefield pressure, and competing political demands. The New York Post reported that the ceasefire follows high-level negotiations involving Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov, Trump envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner in Miami.
The new agreement arrives after Russia had previously floated a shorter pause around Victory Day, while Ukraine had questioned whether Moscow was using the idea for symbolic or tactical reasons. The Guardian reported that Zelenskyy confirmed the agreement on Telegram and said both the ceasefire dates and the prisoner exchange had been accepted. The same report noted that Russia had not immediately commented publicly on the new Trump-announced agreement at the time of publication.
Reactions
Trump framed the ceasefire as a significant step toward peace and emphasized the humanitarian importance of the prisoner exchange. His announcement highlighted the suspension of military activity and the return of captives as immediate gains that could build momentum toward a broader settlement. For an administration focused on ending conflicts rather than extending them, the agreement gives Trump a concrete diplomatic result in one of the world’s most dangerous wars.
Zelenskyy also credited the United States and Trump for helping push the agreement forward. According to the Associated Press, Zelenskyy said the chance to bring Ukrainian prisoners home influenced Ukraine’s participation and expressed confidence that Washington would help ensure Russian compliance. Secretary of State Marco Rubio cautioned that broader diplomatic efforts had not yet produced a final breakthrough, but the ceasefire and prisoner exchange still represent a rare moment of progress.
Why This Matters to You
For American families, the Russia-Ukraine war has never been a distant issue. It has shaped foreign policy, defense spending, energy concerns, and global stability. Many taxpayers have demanded a serious strategy that prioritizes peace through strength rather than open-ended involvement with no clear finish line. Trump’s announcement gives Americans a glimpse of what forceful diplomacy can look like when the White House puts pressure on both sides to stop the killing.
The government should now focus on verifying compliance, supporting the prisoner exchange, and pressing for a longer-term settlement that protects American interests while reducing the risk of wider war. A three-day ceasefire is not the same as permanent peace, but it can become a foundation if enforced with strength and clarity. At a moment when the world needs leadership, Trump’s move places the United States back at the center of the peace table with urgency, leverage, and purpose.