People take shelter at a metro station during Russian air attacks on Kyiv

Fresh attacks on Ukraine ahead of Zelensky-Trump meeting

· RTE.ie

Russia attacked Kyiv and other regions of Ukraine with missiles and drones, ahead of what ⁠President Volodymyr Zelensky said would be a key meeting with US President Donald Trump to work out a deal to end nearly four years of war.

Before the attacks, Mr Zelenskiy said his talks in Florida tomorrow would focus on the territory to be controlled by each side after a halt to the fighting that began in February 2022 with President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Russia's smaller neighbour, Europe's deadliest conflict since World War II.

Explosions sounded in ‍Kyiv as Ukraine's air defence units went into action, and the military said on the Telegram messaging app that missiles were being deployed. The air force said Russian drones were targeting the capital and regions in the northeast and south.

The attack was continuing at 8am (6am Irish time) and an air raid alert remained in effect in the capital, witnesses said. At least eight people were wounded, Kyiv authorities said.

Russia's strikes prompted the temporary closure of Rzeszow and Lublin airports in southeastern Poland, to the west of Ukraine, after the Polish armed forces scrambled fighter jets, the Polish Air Navigation Services Agency posted on X.

On Thursday night, Russia struck Ukraine's energy infrastructure and stepped up attacks on the southern region of Odesa, the site of Ukraine's main seaports.

Amid the continued fierce fighting, territory remains the main diplomatic stumbling block. A 20-point draft in the US-driven campaign to clinch a peace plan is 90% complete, Mr Zelensky told journalists in Kyiv.

He said a security guarantee agreement between Ukraine and the US was almost ready - a key element after guarantees in earlier post-Soviet years proved meaningless.

"A lot can be decided before the New Year," Mr Zelensky told Politico.

Mr Trump said the United States was the driving force behind the process.

"He doesn't have anything until I approve it," Mr Trump told Politico ‍in an interview published yesterday.

"So we'll see what he's got."

Before their meeting, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky will have a call today, joined by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen ⁠and other European leaders, a commission spokesperson said.

Mr Zelensky told Axios the US had offered a 15-year deal on security guarantees, subject to renewal, but Kyiv wanted a longer agreement with legally binding provisions to guard against further Russian aggression.

Mr Trump ⁠said he believed tomorrow's meeting would go well.

He also said he expected to speak with Mr Putin "soon, as much as I want."

In addition to territory, a critical point is control of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station, ⁠Europe's ‍largest, seized by Russia in ⁠the opening weeks of the war.

Moscow demands that Ukraine withdraw from the areas of the eastern region of Donetsk that Russian troops have failed to occupy in their drive to secure all of the Donbas, which also includes the ‍Luhansk region.

Kyiv wants the fighting halted at the current lines.

Under a US compromise, a free economic zone would be set up if Ukraine ⁠leaves parts of the Donetsk region, though details have yet to be worked out.

Axios quoted Mr Zelensky as saying that if he is not able to push the US to back Ukraine's "strong" position on the land issue, he was willing to put the 20-point plan to a referendum - as long as Russia agrees to a 60-day ceasefire to allow Ukraine to prepare for and hold the vote.

He said he wanted more pressure applied to Russia.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Kyiv's version of the 20-point plan differed ‍from what Russia had been discussing with the US, according to Interfax-Russia news agency.

But he expressed optimism that matters had reached a "turning point" in the search for a settlement.

Mr Putin's foreign policy aide, Yuri Ushakov, spoke with members of the Trump administration after Moscow received ⁠US proposals about a possible peace deal, the Kremlin said yesterday.

It did not disclose how Moscow had viewed the documents.