๐ The Alaska Summit: was there a winner?
Plus: Do NOT bring this to a Starbucks in Korea

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Todayโs briefing: |
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Good morning Intriguer. Iโve always loved what an allied diplomat in Washington once described to me as โthe most DC thingโ he ever saw. It was like 2am and this envoy was returning from a Saturday night on the town when he noticed, on his quiet Georgetown street, a single top-floor light above, illuminating the dark street down below.
As my pal got closer he glanced up and saw it, the most DC thing ever: a 30-something guy on a treadmill at 2am, absolutely ripping out a new personal best with an intensity youโd rarely see in the gym let alone at home at 2am, presumably after spending his entire Saturday putting the finishing touches on a senatorโs briefing pack or whatever.
Anyway you can bet this weekend has had quite a few top-floor-2am-lights as staffers across the city prepare for todayโs last-minute meetings between President Trump and leaders from Ukraine and across Europe, all still digesting what just happened in Alaska.

Number of the day
3.2%ย
Thatโs the tiny vote-share won by Boliviaโs ruling socialists, with locals using Sundayโs first-round election to oust the Evo Morales-founded movement after two decades in power. A dark horse centrist (Paz) will now face a right-leaning former president (Quiroga) in Octoberโs run-off, Boliviaโs first since its 1982 return to democracy.
Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine

So Alaska ended much as we foreshadowed: no deal. But 'no deal' doesn't mean 'empty-handed'. Here's a quick tally of the 'wins' each side is now claiming (agree or not).
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๐ท๐บย What did Putin win?
Putinโs arguable wins fall into three categories: perception, isolation, and negotiation:
On the perception front, Kremlin propagandists argue that in a single afternoon, Putin shrugged off years of Western pressure to instead take a ride in a US presidential limo and stride along a US red carpet (laid by US servicemembers on their knees).
On the isolation front, critics say this unwound years of isolation since Putinโs invasion, undermining ICC arrest warrants while paving the way for others to re-engage too.
And as for the actual negotiations? Folks argue Putinโs wins include:
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First, no new sanctions, months after President Trumpโs peace-or-sanctions threat: Secretary of State Rubio is now arguing any new sanctions would be proof talks have failed, rather than (say) a tool to shape Putinโs approach to those talks.
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Second, no ceasefire, months after President Trump's ceasefire demands: heโs now suggesting talks should focus on a full peace (not ceasefire) deal. His envoy (Witkoff) frames this as a Trump win, citing positive progress. But others frame this pivot as a Putin win, because it means a) Ukraine must still negotiate with Putinโs gun to its head, and b) it hints at Putin's continued โpervoprichinyโ (root causes) demands, including for Ukraineโs "de-Nazification" (oust Kyivโs elected government), โde-militarizationโ (gut its military), and โneutralisationโ (stop Kyiv from seeking outside help).
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Third, no territorial concessions: details are still emerging, and Witkoff says Putin made concessions, though these still seem to relate to Ukraineโs own land, while demanding Ukraine hand over its own heavily fortified cities in the east โ locals fear Putin would just use them as a launchpad for future attacks on a Ukraine presumably wracked with political strife over such massive concessions.
Meanwhileโฆ
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๐บ๐ธย What did President Trump win?
Trumpโs arguable wins fit the same categories: perception, isolation, and negotiation:
On perception, supporters say the US president flexed US strength by startling Putin with a sudden B2 flyover as he walked past F-22 Raptors. That, combined with the eventโs "Pursuing Peace" signage (plus a personal appeal from the First Lady), all reflected the president's peace through strength mantra.
On the isolation front, the idea is if years of icing Putin haven't stopped the war, re-engagement is worth a shot. And that brings scrutiny, like when a US reporter shouted out if Putin would stop killing civilians (Putin didnโt answer).
Then there's the negotiation: the president's initial tweets didn't reveal much, but his top envoys (Witkoff and Rubio) are now suggesting Putin might've shown openness toโฆ
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First, a US security guarantee for Ukraine? Witkoff suggests itโd be like NATO's article 5 (an attack on one is an attack on all), which Europe has long wanted as a way to prevent more Putin attacks. But Putin has always rejected a NATO guarantee, so this lesser (US and maybe European) version is doing the rounds as a possible compromise.
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Second, a European-led 'reassurance' force for Ukraine? This idea is also resurfacing, with European troops potentially adding to any US-backed guarantees, though details remain scant beyond possible Trump backing.
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Third, a Russian commitment not to invade again? Witkoff is flagging the possibility Russia could pass a law pledging no further attacks. Aside from what such a pledge would be worth (Putin has already broken several by invading Ukraine), and the obvious loopholes (Putin has passed laws to, say, redefine Ukrainian land as his own, and abolish term limits), this idea seems aimed at Ukraine, which has always rejected land concessions in part because theyโre banned in its constitution: so Putin is arguing โif we can amend our laws, you can amend yoursโ.
Anyway, President Trump is hinting at big progress as he prepares for todayโs last-minute summit with Ukraine plus the UK, Italy, Germany, France, Finland, the EU, and NATO.
Intrigueโs Take
Thereโs been real shock in Europe over the weekend, as it digests what it sees as a US pivot back to aligning more with Putinโs perspectives. The cigar-chomping capitalists at the UKโs Financial Times, for example, described Fridayโs summit as an "embarrassing failure".
The UKโs defence ministry also came out with a remarkable intelligence update, directly pushing back on Putinโs vast territorial claims by noting that, at his current rate, Putin would need another four years (and a million more casualties) just to seize the four Ukrainian provinces heโs already claiming as his own.
And that reminds us of the old George Shultz quote: โnegotiations are a euphemism for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining table.โ Why? First, because the US isnโt yet casting its own full shadow (eg, itโs still withholding further sanctions and arms). But second, because Putinโs own shadow isnโt as big as heโd like us to believe.
Sound even smarter:
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President Trump has pushed back on any suggestion Putin could claim wins in Alaska, though has now reiterated calls for Ukraine (not Putin) to end this war.
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Talk of any new US security guarantees is reviving debate in Ukraine about the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, via which Ukraine agreed to hand over the worldโs third-largest nuclear arsenal (inherited from the USSR) in return for US-UK (and Russian) security promises.
Todayโs newsletter is sponsored by Minderoo
Global Plastics Treaty Talks Stuck in Neutral
INC-5.2 (the latest treaty talks) have ended in a stalemate after marathon negotiations.
Governments agreed to strengthen health protections, but still left toxic chemical controls to patchwork national measuresโmissing the chance for global standards.
With no date for INC-5.3, and no agreed draft to form the basis for future talks, the path forward is uncertain. Some countries are even pushing to weaken the treatyโs scope.
Stay up to date on our work toward a strong and effective plastics treaty here.
Meanwhile, elsewhereโฆ

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๐จ๐ณย CHINA – Pinky promise. Comment:ย Itโs possible this kind of exchange has more to do with Chinaโs military preparedness (or lack thereof) than anything else. A former CIA director (Burns) famously suggested Xi had ordered his military to be ready for an invasion by 2027 (President Trumpโs final year in office). |
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๐จ๐พ CYPRUS – Crossed the line. |
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๐ฒ๐พย MALAYSIA – Second-hand. Comment:ย Itโs a reminder that while US arms are mostly considered top-of-class, thereโve been lemons over the decades still shaping decisions today. |
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๐ต๐ชย PERU – A grim record. |
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๐ฒ๐ฑ MALI – French-backed coup? |
Extra Intrigue
๐คฃย Your weekly round-up of the worldโs lighter headlines
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Starbucks Korea has had to ban customers from setting up full desktop PCs, printers, and even office cubicle dividers in stores.ย
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Lawmakers in Bahrain have started calling for a ban on adult pacifiers.ย
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An LA thief has stolen $30k worth of Labubus (the viral collectable furry monster).
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A zoo in Denmark is inviting folks to donate their unwanted pets to feed its predators.
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And three German postal workers have started biking all the way to Finland to deliver Christmas letters to Santa.
Map of the day
Credits: Equal Earth Project.
If you ever need to torpedo a dinner party by triggering an argument, try bringing up the subject of maps. Sure, people argue about the boundaries, but the world map itself continues to stir debate, with critics arguing our worldโs classic Mercator projection style from the 16th century shapes attitudes by distorting actual country and continent sizes.
On a Mercator map, for example, Africa and Greenland appear roughly the same size, whereas in reality Africa is 14 times larger. Thatโs why the African Union has now officially joined efforts to ditch the Mercator map in favour of the Equal Earth map (shown above).
Todayโs poll
What do you think will come of today's summit with Ukraine / Europe? |
Last Thursdayโs poll: How do you see [last Friday's] Alaska summit going?
๐จโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธ ๐ท๐บ More sanctions on Russia (14%)
๐จโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธ ๐บ๐ฆ More pressure on Ukraine (17%)
๐ฉ๐ฉ๐ฉ๐ฉ๐ฉ๐ฉย ๐คท No meaningful change (67%)
โฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธ โ๏ธ Other (write us!) (2%)
Your two cents:
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๐คทย D.D: โLots of noise, but no real change on the ground or serious diplomatic progress. โ
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๐ท๐บย E.W: โPutin will make unreasonable demands. Even if some demands are met, he will continue military actions.โ
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๐บ๐ฆ M.A: โIf Trump wants to realize his personal ambitions of peacemaker, pressuring Ukraine will give far better results than pressuring Russia.โ
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๐คทย F.G: โI mean, have we had meaningful change after the multiple talks and summits this year?โ








