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Ukrainian and U.S. officials held a new round of talks in Geneva, Switzerland. The meeting followed a phone call between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Donald Trump, who has been pushing for a deal to end the war with Russia within a month.
Zelensky said the talks would focus on territorial issues, and he has stated Ukraine will not give up land to Russia. The Geneva talks ended after about two hours, with Ukraine reporting some progress but Russia describing them as 'tough.' Another round of trilateral talks involving Russia is planned for early March, likely in Abu Dhabi.
Trump has suggested he would seek to lift sanctions on Russia as part of a peace agreement. The Kremlin has ruled out direct talks between Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin outside of Moscow and has questioned the structure of Trump's proposed 'Board of Peace.'
Extract how different sources frame this story. The analysis clusters headlines by editorial stance and identifies opposing perspectives.
Sign in to extract & analyseCoverage is extensive (136 titles, 45 publishers, 9 languages) with high label coverage (99%), but heavy focus on diplomatic actions (Diplomatic Pressure: 77) and Russian executive actors (Ru Executive: 52) creates an imbalanced representation of the event.
45 publishers, 9 languages
Dominant framing presents Russia as proactive diplomatic actor: 'Russia open to discussing...' (headline 1), 'Russia ready to discuss...' (headline 3), 'Russia and Ukraine reached agreement...' (headline 5). Ukrainian/Western positions appear reactive or obstructive: 'Europeans to remain outside talks... until they recognize reality' (headline 6).
Russian diplomatic narrative benefits most, as framing emphasizes Russian openness to talks while characterizing Western actors as outside reality. High Russian executive visibility (52) and Tass as top publisher (18%) amplify this perspective.