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Rescue workers clear the rubble of a residential building which was heavily damaged after a Russian strike in Odesa, Ukraine. Alamy Stock Photo

Trump claims Putin agreed 'not to fire on Kyiv' after personal plea over extreme cold

The US president said that Putin promised a week-long halt to attacks as Ukraine faces blackouts and plunging temperatures, though the Kremlin has yet to confirm

DONALD TRUMP HAS announced that Russia’s Vladimir Putin agreed to a personal request to halt attacks on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, after Moscow’s strikes left millions without heating during an “extreme” cold snap.

Trump’s claim comes as Russian strikes on Ukraine’s power infrastructure have disrupted light, heating and water supplies, with temperatures plummeting and leaving the war-battered country facing a fresh humanitarian crisis.

The Kremlin did not immediately confirm any truce, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Trump and said he was counting on Washington to secure the pause in attacks.

“Because of the cold, extreme cold… I personally asked President Putin not to fire on Kyiv and the cities and towns for a week during this,” Trump told a cabinet meeting at the White House.

“They’ve never experienced cold like that. And I personally asked President Putin not to fire into Kyiv and the various towns for a week. And he agreed to do that, and I have to tell you, it was very nice,” he added.

president-donald-trump-speaks-at-an-event-on-addiction-recovery-in-the-oval-office-of-the-white-house-thursday-jan-29-2026-in-washington-ap-photoallison-robbert Trump pictured in the Oval Office of the White House yesterday. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Ukraine’s state weather agency has forecast a drastic dip in temperatures to as low as -30 degrees in coming days as authorities race to restore services.

Trump, who met Putin in Alaska last year amid great fanfare but without achieving any breakthrough, said he trusted the Russian leader to honor the agreement.

“People said, ‘don’t waste the call. You’re not going to get that.’ And he did it,” Trump said, without specifying when the conversation took place, or when the purported truce would start.

‘Make this happen’

Zelenskyy, who met Trump in Davos last week despite patchy relations since their Oval Office bust-up nearly a year ago, thanked the US president for his “important statement.”

“We hope the United States can make this happen,” the Ukrainian leader said.

The pause had initially been discussed last weekend during three-way talks in Abu Dhabi between Russia, Ukraine and the United States, Zelenskyy said.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz also welcomed what he termed “efforts in favour of a truce”.

Merz at the same time stressed that “the systematic and brutal destruction of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure by Russian attacks” was “still ongoing”, which he condemned “in the strongest terms”, his spokesman, Stefan Kornelius, said.

russia-ukraine-war Emergency services work to extinguish a fire following a Russian attack in Odesa. AP AP

A second round of trilateral negotiations in Abu Dhabi is scheduled to begin on Sunday as Trump pushes his plan to end the nearly four-year-old invasion by Russia.

Putin met Emirati counterpart Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in Moscow on Thursday ahead of those talks. The UAE has emerged as a key mediator in the war.

The talks come as Ukraine faces one of its most difficult periods since Russia’s February 2022 invasion, with Moscow’s forces grinding slowly on in the east and bitter cold closing in.

Zelenskyy warned in an evening address on Wednesday of fresh Russian attacks on energy facilities.

Russian attacks killed six people in central and southern Ukraine on Thursday, regional authorities and emergency services said.

But Trump has repeatedly said in recent days that he believes a ceasefire is possible.

At the cabinet meeting yesterday, Trump said there had been “a lot of progress” in the talks.

Trump’s roaming envoy Steve Witkoff said he was also confident there would be a truce, saying that the US president had a “friendship” with his Russian counterpart.

“The president, what he said, is true,” he told an AFP reporter.

“And I think that he and Vladimir Putin have a friendship, and I think that allows them to talk and to have a relationship that hopefully will help things out here, get to a settlement and save a lot of lives.’

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