All Episodes

August 14, 2025 • 20 mins

The countdown to the Putin-Trump summit is on.

The two leaders are due to meet in Alaska to discuss what peace could look like in Ukraine, more than three and a half years after Russia’s invasion.

While Trump has spoken to Ukraine’s Volodymir Zelenskyy ahead of the meeting, European capitals remain apprehensive that a resolution will come from it, and are rallying behind Kyiv.

So, is this latest development in fact, a development at all? Or just posturing by two men desperate to be seen to be doing something.

Today on The Front Page, Kiwi journalist Thomas Mutch joins us from Ukraine to take us through the latest on the frontlines, and behind the scenes.

Follow The Front Page on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

You can read more about this and other stories in the New Zealand Herald, online at nzherald.co.nz, or tune in to news bulletins across the NZME network.

Host: Chelsea Daniels
Editor/Producer: Richard Martin
Producer: Jane Yee

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Kielder.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
I'm Chelsea Daniels and this is the Front Page, a
daily podcast presented by the New Zealand Herald. The countdown
to the Putin Trump summit is on. The two leaders
are due to meet in Alaska to discuss what peace
could look like in Ukraine more than three and a

(00:28):
half years after Russia's invasion. While Trump has spoken to
Ukraine's Voladimir Zelenski ahead of the meeting, European capitals remain
apprehensive that a resolution will come from it and a
rallying behind Kiev. So is this latest development in fact
a development at all or just posturing by two men

(00:50):
desperate to be seen to be doing something Today. On
the Front Page, KIWI journalist Thomas Martch joins us from
Ukraine to take us through who is the latest on
the front lines and behind the scenes. So, Tom, we
know that Trump and Putin are set to meet in

(01:11):
Alaska on Friday local time. But first off, what's the
significance of Alaska?

Speaker 1 (01:18):
It does seem a bit of an odd choice at first.
The reasons are primarily geographic. It's quite hard for Putin
to go anywhere at the moment because he's wanted by
the International Criminal Court, So any countries that have signed
up the International Criminal Court have an obligation to basically
arrest him and hand him over. Now the US has

(01:40):
actually is not and has never been his signatory to
that court, so it is technically safe for him to
meet in Alaska. It's also something that when you choose
these kind of locations, you often want to choose something
that's kind of like equidistant for both leaders. For Putin
it's just a straight flight from Moscow. For Trump it's
a straight flight from DC. They kind of meet about

(02:00):
in the middle. But it's also got some interesting historical
significance as well because it was sold by one of
the Russian czars I think was Alexander back in around
eight I think it's eighteen sixty seven from Russia to
the United States. So when we're talking about powerful people
carving up spheres of influence and you know, handing over

(02:22):
territories with a swath of a pen and stuff like that,
there is some interesting historical legacy to it.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
Now, it has Vladimir Putin given any details on what
the Kremlin is asking for.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
So what they say it. So they first announced their
conditions basically last year, and they were Ukraine has to
withdraw from all of the four major oblasts where the
Kremlin controls that significant amount of the territory, that's Hassan, Zaprasia, Donetsky,

(02:57):
Nahask and Ukraine has to agree to never join NATO,
has to completely basically get rid of its armed forces.
And there are other things as well, about like Russian language,
you know, trying the right of the Russian language in
government institutions, not particularly important stuff for them. The really
important stuff is over territory. And it does seem that,

(03:19):
at least according to reports, there was one of the
Wall Street Journal that said that these demands have slightly lessened,
which is that they're now dropping the idea for Ukraine
to withdraw from the remainder of her Son and Zaparisia.
And you know, those are very very major cities that
the Kremlin has been pushed back from, so it would

(03:41):
be very very strange for them to be handed over.
And that what they're asking for now is the rest
of Dnetsk Oblast, which if you look at it on
a map doesn't look huge and you might wonder why
that territory is so important or so we're fighting for
the problem is that Danetsko Blast is the most heavily
urbanized and heavily fortified part of the country. So if

(04:02):
Ukraine would have hand that over, they would be handing
over what they call like a fortress belt. It's these cities,
about four of them in a row, that are just
like trenched and mined and barbed wired and just like
these kind of ultimate defensible outposts. And so the problem
with those demands is that were the Ukrainians to give
that over, not only would they be losing a large

(04:24):
chunk of their territory and the civilians that go with it.
If the Kremlin ever decided to come back in five
or teen years down the line, like it did in
twenty twenty two after the twenty fourteen war, Ukraine would
be fighting from a much weaker position because it would
have given up its most defensible territory. If you look
at it on a map, after denis Goblast to Ukraine's
major cities, it's pretty much just straight shooting.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
I think I believe he wants to get it over with. Now,
I've said that a few times. Then I've been disappointed
because they have like a great call with him, and
then missiles would be lobbed in Tikiev. For some other place,
you'd have sixty people laying on a road dying. They said,
that's cold, that's cold. But it's a violent war. Five

(05:09):
to seven thousand people a week, a day, and you
know there's nobody from here. They're all Russian and Ukrainian
people and some people from the city's much more on number.
But still those missiles do damage and they kill a
lot of people.

Speaker 2 (05:26):
So Trump is giving the impression that there will be
some swapping of territories to the betterment of both. It's
hard to believe that this kind of betterment would be achievable, though, right.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
It's a very odd turn of phrase. And the reason
for that is that one the Kremlin has shown absolutely
no willingness to withdraw from anything except for tiny parts
of land potentially Ensumi or harkyvobe Blast. It doesn't really
that were basically attempted incursions that never really win. Timmywhare

(06:00):
and they own like tenklov as a farm land here
and there, or like half a ruined village or something
like that. Now, the worry is that one Steve Whitcoff,
Trump's envoy, went to Moscow and basically apparently there was
a mistranslation and he came back saying that Vladimir Putin
was actually willing to offer up much more than he

(06:22):
actually was. And so it seems like if there are
land swaps, they would almost always they would be more
likely to be in the Kremlin's favor. You know, Ukraine
giving up that large part of Denise Goblast that I
was talking about. So that could be like a real
stickler in the negotiations because people in Ukraine are saying, well,
like Donald Trump, who are you to say what territories

(06:46):
we're going to hand over or swap or not.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
Yeah, that leads me on too. I wonder what Zelenski's
thinking about all this. Has he mentioned what he thinks
of the Trump Putin meeting.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
So there was a lot of of discussion over will
Zelenski come, will he be an anchorage that day? Will
he have anything to do with it? And it's looking
more and more likely that no, he won't have anything
to do with this particular meeting. And he has basically
said the reason we can't withdraw from Donetsk is that
Danette is going to be a springboard for a future

(07:19):
Russian attack. I should say this is not just hypothetical, right,
you know, this literally happened. The Russians took Crimea in
twenty fourteen, and Crimea became a springboard in twenty twenty
two for the most successful Russian attack of the entire war,
which took really large parts of southern Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
Yeah, he's also said that it's a personal victory for Putin,
and I saw that it came out that the meeting
is Putin's idea. It all looks like good press for
Vladimir Putin at this stage.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
So yeah, so this is the thing. Right, we're back
in twenty twenty two. It's completely you're completely right there.
Back in twenty twenty two, the kreminin effectively became kind
of stracized by the world, right, you know, ban from
sporting events, cultural events, banking systems, cut off, huge sanctions
imposed on the works, and effectively what being in America

(08:14):
and shaking hands of the US president and like as
like a partnership of equals looks like is it looks
like it's now you're welcoming them back into the fold.
You're like, okay, you're a respected partner with whom we
can do business again. And that is in and of
itself a major concessions concession and the negotiations already. It

(08:35):
also looks bad because, as I said, Donald Trump and
his advisors don't seem to have a particularly good grasp
of the battlefield dynamics or the even the geography or
the culture of the various regions they're talking about. So
it really does look like we're back in nineteen forty five,
and it's Churchill and Stull and kind of drawing lines
over countries and giving, you know, noting down the percentages

(08:58):
of dividing up the world into spheres of influence.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Again, what is the reality of a meeting between Putin
and Zelenski at this point?

Speaker 1 (09:09):
So it's it's difficult because the two leaders absolutely despise
each other. And one of the other problems is that
neither side is in a catastrophic enough military possession where
they're willing to sort of give it up, right, Like,
the Ukrainian defense is pretty strong, the Russians have taken

(09:30):
enormous casualties, but the Russian economy and the Russian military
industrial complex seems to have enough kind of slack in
it to support this kind of year, this level of war.
Effort this level of operations for like another year or two,
and you know, there's there's been a lot in Ukraine
now about a Russian penetration of Ukrainian lines around Pakrovs

(09:51):
and we don't quite yet know how serious that is,
whether it's just, you know, a bunch of Russian guys
got much further in the lines than they expected, or
whether the Russians have actually made a significant breakthrough. What
it does do is it does give Vladimir Putin the
idea that he's got battlefield momentum, however slow it is,
and that he can achieve his goals by military means.

(10:12):
What Ukrainians, I guess I'm hoping for from this summit
is that Donald Trump can convince him that it's going
to be more painful to achieve his goals through military
means than just banking whatever small wins he has now
and kind of calling it quits. But I'm not incredibly optimistic.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
Is there any evidence suggesting that Putin is willing to
compromise or retreat even or does the Kremlin remain kind
of steadfast in its position at the moment.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
So there is the little bit of leeway that the
Kremlin has given has been saying that there are the
two provinces that it's not going to require withdrawal from those. Now,
those provinces were like Hrsan and Zupparisia, like especially those cities,
they were virulently anti Russian. They never had you know

(11:12):
that the Kremlin had never said anything about them before
the start of the war. They were generally considered the
Kremlin's most outlandish demands and they they have been retracted.
So it does seem like there is a tiny bit
of wiggle room. But at the same time it does
you know, Vladimir Putin and you know, top Russians will

(11:34):
constantly come out and say things about how like Ukraine
doesn't really exist and Russia should get to a Dessa
and you know, Russia's borders have no end and stuff
like that. So what I think people are still on
the tossing up is are these signs that he's genuinely
willing for a compromise or is he willing to come

(11:55):
to some sort of ceasefire conditions That would just mean
that he will think that he can then have another
light at the apple in five or ten years time.
That's what everyone in Ukraine is really worried about not
so much specifically where the final battle lines might be
drawn in this round of fighting, but how do you
stop this kind of invasion happening again?

Speaker 2 (12:14):
How do you stop something like this invasion happening again.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
So, look, a lot of Ukrainians have sort of lost
faith in sort of Western institutions. So for instance, you know,
at the start of the full scale war, the big
thing was NATO membership. You know, Ukraine needs NATO membership,
then the cast iron guaranty of Article five. I now
talk to Ukrainians, and I've speaking of spoken to people

(12:40):
in the Baltic States as well, who say, look, we're
no longer convinced that NATO is all it's cracked up
to me. We're no longer convinced that the US would
necessarily honor an Article five arrangement and you know, come
full throated to our defense if we were invaded or
we had a Russian incursion or something like that. So
so you know that, I mean, the idea of European

(13:02):
peacekeepers had its flaws and its difficulties, but it was
at least one way for European countries to have genuine
skin in the game in protecting Ukraine. The only other way,
as the Ukrainians have found, is unfortunately, the model where
you just have an extremely strong standing army like they
have in South Korea, like they have in Israel for

(13:24):
all its issues, like they have in a number of
countries where they expect that war could break out, that
you just have to have an extra you know, everyone
has military service. The country's just full of weapons, and
there's minefields all over the borders, and it's not a
particularly pleasant way to live, but it might be the
only way to survive in this kind of new world order.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
Zelenski himself has insisted that all conversations about Ukraine must
be with Ukraine present. Europe has backed him up on that.
A quick reminder, though, a moment like today, a virtual
conference with Trump and European leaders and President Zelenski setting
out positions, does echo what we saw back in May
when a ceasefire was demanded by Europe and Ukraine and

(14:09):
Trump was on the phone to his European allies saying
he'd impose sanctions with them if Putin didn't go along
with that suggestion.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
And Tom, you're in Ukraine now, whereabouts in the country
are you?

Speaker 1 (14:24):
I've been living in Kiev for the last three years now.
So look in Kiev, like everyone is pretty used to
like things that Things that can appear sort of very
shocking on the mirror or on TV are often not
necessarily that shocking to the eyes of Ukrainians who've lived
through countless air raids, who've seen the battlefield situation go

(14:46):
up and down for years and years and years. Now
there's everyone is no one is sort of inclined to surrender,
but everyone is more exhausted and more annoyed and more
more sort of despondent than they were before, even if
there is still no real appetite to sort of surrender

(15:08):
large parts of the country to Russia.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
And in your book Dogs or the Dogs of Mariopol,
there are some pretty incredible stories of just everyday Ukrainians
stopping their studies, putting away their things and just checking
on some some army gear. I mean is that it
just speaks to the I guess the resilience of Ukrainians

(15:33):
at this point.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Is that what you found, Yes, so that the whole
the whole point in that was about. You know, it's
the forging of Ukraine's iron generation, and this is one
of the things that I said. That's that like so
many of the people that I met in Ukraine, you know,
were had you know, they had really good careers, really
good educations. You know, they were you know, intensely well

(15:54):
educated and patriotic, and they were the ones who sort
of down tools, put on body armor and went to
the front lines. That is an extremely inspiring story, but
it's also a very tragic story because in large parts
a lot of Ukraine's most promising and successful, especially young people,
were the ones who ended up being killed. So there

(16:15):
is that kind of sort of dual element of this
kind of great heroism that this kind of like really
horrible sacrifice at the same time, and when the war
does eventually inevitably come to an end, it's going to
be a really difficult thing in society, you know, how
you deal with the memory and the legacy of.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
What's happened, and once the war ends, hopefully what that
will do to future generations, in the future of the
country as a whole.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
Yeah, that's well, I think one of the things that
it's already quite evident tension society now, but it's the
tension between the truths have been on the front line
for you know, three years, you know, after ten years
if they fought in the First War sometimes and the
men who maybe stayed in the home cities and like

(17:03):
you know, hit for mobilization squads and like didn't join
up in the war. There's the tensions between, you know,
because we're women were the only people who women and
children were the only ones who could leave. The women
who stayed in their home cities, and the women who
left and went to Europe or the UK or Canada
or wherever. That tension between you know, did you really

(17:25):
go through the war? I remember once driving past a
recruitment sign in Harkiv Oblast. It said, you know, daddy,
what did you do during the war, And it's like
a man like twenty years in the future, like holding
his infant son. I thought that was like a really
kind of interesting and probably quite effective psychological marketing campaign.

(17:47):
But it really does speak to because there's going to
be so many soldiers who come back from the front
line at the end and they look around at people
who whether they left and then came back or just
stayed in their cities the whole time. They're going to
be like, we fought and watched our friends died and
sometimes got maimed and utilated, and we're all psychologically traumatized
from sort of four or five However many years it

(18:09):
is a full scale war. What do you guys, you know,
where was your sacrifice and all this?

Speaker 2 (18:18):
What could New Zealand do better?

Speaker 1 (18:21):
I mean, I've got to be honest. One of the
things that I have consistently been annoyed about from the
start is that New Zealand has almost I think the
Defense Minister has been once but no New Zealand. Why
are they know, never any New Zealand officials that are
visiting Ukraine. All Australian prime ministers have done it all
the UK you know prime ministers have done it. Joe

(18:44):
Biden did it when he was US president, you know,
Earthula Vondle and you know did it as president of
the European Commissioned several times. And especially is I remember
I talked to a University of Target expert about this,
whose name unfortunately skates me, but it's he was like
New Zealand's you know, strength is in its soft power
and its diplomacy. We're never going to to be a

(19:06):
military superpower, but our we sort of project our values
in our soft power, And I'm like, why is New
Zealand in no way trying to get trying to have
some kind of voice in the negotiations for instance, It
just seems that their issue was almost sort of entirely
disappeared from New Zealand political discourse to the extent that

(19:27):
it ever was there. So I think even just some
kind of rhetoric from politicians. You know, why when Christopher
Luxon is on a European tour, why does he not
just come to Ukraine? I know the Ukrainians, for instance,
have been trying to get a New Zealand Prime minister
for ages and they've had no luck. Just Sender and
Chris Hipkins, which we were they were told note which

(19:48):
is not interested and you know why not? I just
don't understand it, Like every other world later has done it.
Why why are the key we sort of not picking
up a slack here?

Speaker 2 (20:00):
Thanks for joining us, Tom.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
No worries please.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
As always, that's it for this episode of the Front Page.
You can read more about today's stories and extensive news
coverage at enzidhrald dot co dot MZ. The Front Page
is produced by Jane Ye and Richard Martin, who is
also our editor. I'm Chelsea Daniels. Subscribe to the front

(20:25):
page on iHeartRadio or wherever you get your podcasts, and
tune in on Monday for another look behind the headlines.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

Football’s funniest family duo — Jason Kelce of the Philadelphia Eagles and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs — team up to provide next-level access to life in the league as it unfolds. The two brothers and Super Bowl champions drop weekly insights about the weekly slate of games and share their INSIDE perspectives on trending NFL news and sports headlines. They also endlessly rag on each other as brothers do, chat the latest in pop culture and welcome some very popular and well-known friends to chat with them. Check out new episodes every Wednesday. Follow New Heights on the Wondery App, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to new episodes early and ad-free, and get exclusive content on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. And join our new membership for a unique fan experience by going to the New Heights YouTube channel now!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.