The planned summit in Budapest between Donald Trump and Vlad Putin has been 0 decision came after a tense call between 1 of State Marco Rubio and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, where Moscow refused to back down from demands tied to 2 Financial Times first reported the cancellation, saying the 3 no sign that Russia was willing to 4 White House is yet to publicly acknowledge the 5 original goal of the Budapest meeting was to discuss a possible framework to end the 6 Moscow insisted that any ceasefire required Ukraine to give up more territory, sharply reduce its military, and guarantee it would never join 7 had supported a ceasefire along current frontlines 8 after the two leaders had agreed to meet, Russia sent Washington a memo repeating the same demands, saying they address what Putin calls the “root causes” of the 9 rejects compromise; summit cancelled According to the Financial Times , Rubio told Trump after the call that Russia was not moving an inch from its 10 administration then cancelled the summit 11 President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine is open to talks, but it will not withdraw from additional territory 12 in his term, Trump spoke strongly about backing Ukraine and pushing toward an end to Russia’s 13 over the past two weeks, his tone has 14 Zelenskiy visited Washington, many expected Trump to approve long‑range Tomahawk missiles for 15 did 16 change continued during Trump’s meeting with Xi 17 though Trump had previously urged India to cut its purchases of Russian oil, he made no such demand of China , telling reporters that:- “We really didn’t discuss the oil.” When asked about ending the war, Trump described the situation as 18 his own words:- “We’re both going to work together to see if we can get something 19 agree that the sides are locked in, fighting, and sometimes you have to let them fight, I 20 he’s going to help us and we’re going to work together on Ukraine.” Sanctions hit Rosneft and Lukoil, but oil shipments continue Even with the softer talk, Trump did announce sanctions last week on Russian oil companies Lukoil and 21 of Ukraine see this as meaningful, saying it could tighten Moscow’s war 22 companies have already said they will sell international assets because of the sanctions.
A European official allegedly told Fox News, “The sanctions are a step of actual 23 troop withdrawals are expected, but the changes seem 24 rest is your typical Trump pendulum.” However, new sanctions have not yet disrupted physical crude exports from Russia’s western 25 from LSEG shows that shipments from Primorsk, Ust‑Luga, and Novorossiisk in October are expected to total around 2.33 million barrels per day, which matches Russia’s revised 26 traders say pressure is rising because India and Turkey, key buyers of Urals crude, are expected to follow Western 27 28 set November 21 as the deadline to wind down all dealings with Rosneft and Lukoil, but since it takes about four weeks for shipments from Baltic ports to reach Indian refineries, barrels loaded now may arrive after the cutoff, creating payment and financing issues.
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