Key events
4h ago
Closing summary
6h ago
Rubio says Zelenskyy should apologise – report
7h ago
World leaders react to Trump-Zelenskyy clash
8h ago
At least five hurt in Russian strike on Kharkiv – officials
9h ago
Summary of the day so far
10h ago
Trump says Zelenskyy ‘overplayed his hand’ and says meeting ‘didn’t work out exactly great’
10h ago
Russia reacts with glee to Trump-Zelenskyy clash
10h ago
Starmer expresses ‘unwavering support’ for Ukraine after calls with Trump and Zelenskyy
10h ago
US considering ending all military aid to Ukraine – report
11h ago
Zelenskyy thanks European leaders for outpouring of support after Trump clash
12h ago
US senator Lindsey Graham calls for Zelenskyy to resign
12h ago
Zelenskyy ‘has bravery and strength to stand up for what is right’, says Ukrainian foreign minister
12h ago
Further European leaders back Zelenskyy in remarkable show of unity
13h ago
Ukraine ‘fighting for dignity, independence, security of Europe’, Macron says
13h ago
Zelenskyy’s Hudson Institute speech cancelled
13h ago
European leaders rally behind Zelenskyy after Trump spat
13h ago
Trump’s personal decision to call talks with Zelenskyy off – media reports
13h ago
‘Ukraine needs just and lasting peace, we are working for that,’ Zelenskyy says, as he thanks America and Trump
13h ago
‘Ukraine, Spain stands with you,’ Spanish prime minister says
13h ago
Macron pointedly backs Ukraine over ‘aggressor’ Russia responding to Trump-Zelenskyy clash
14h ago
No mineral deal signed, White House confirms
14h ago
Poland’s Tusk publicly backs Zelenskyy after clash with Trump
14h ago
Trump-Zelenskyy talks cut short after heated exchanges in Oval Office – summary
14h ago
Zelenskyy leaves White House after visit gets cut short
14h ago
Heated exchanges between Trump, Zelenskyy and Vance – video
14h ago
Trump-Zelenskyy press conference cancelled with Zelenskyy set to leave early
14h ago
Zelenskyy ‘disrespected the US’ and ‘not ready for peace’, Trump says
14h ago
We are committed to Nato, Trump says, but they need to step up
14h ago
Putin hates Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says
14h ago
Mineral deal not enough, we need security guarantees, Zelenskyy says
14h ago
Disagreement between Zelenskyy, Trump and Vance – in pictures
14h ago
Trump and Zelenskyy disagree on degree of Europe’s help
15h ago
Zelenskyy says ‘no compromises’ with Putin on territories
15h ago
‘You’re either going to make a deal or we are out,’ Trump tells Zelenskyy
15h ago
Trump, Zelenskyy and Vance clash over diplomacy with Putin
15h ago
‘Have you said thank you once?’, JD Vance attacks Zelenskyy
15h ago
‘You are gambling with world war three,’ Trump tells Zelenskyy
15h ago
I am for both Ukraine and Russia, Trump says
16h ago
Trump confirms deal to be signed later, compromises needed but ‘not as big as some people think’
16h ago
‘You’re all dressed up!’, Trump tells Zelenskyy on arrival
16h ago
We take pride in partnership and friendship with US, Zelenskyy told senators
16h ago
Zelenskyy’s arrival at the White House – video
16h ago
Trump welcomes Zelenskyy to White House
16h ago
Zelenskyy about to arrive at White House to meet Trump
17h ago
Five unknowns about any possible deal to end Ukraine-Russia war – analysis
17h ago
Athens protests turn violent after clashes with police – video
17h ago
German coalition talks formally underway
17h ago
Danish intelligence monitoring potential Russian interference in Greenlandic vote
18h ago
Zelenskyy expected at London summit on Sunday – diplomatic sources
18h ago
Russia names new US ambassador
18h ago
European focus for London, EU talks is on supporting Ukraine’s defence, security guarantees – Macron
18h ago
Macron says reinstating ‘strategic ambiguity’ on European troops helps Ukraine peace talks
19h ago
Macron left with ‘very little hope’ on US tariffs after meeting Trump
19h ago
Ireland starts crackdown on asylum system abuses with deportation flights to Georgia
19h ago
Romanian government survives no-confidence vote
20h ago
Pope Francis no longer in critical condition
20h ago
Zelenskyy’s visit to White House – timings
21h ago
Protesters ‘waging battle’ with police in Athens as protests turn violent
21h ago
Athens protests turn ugly with clashes with police
21h ago
Greeks protest through ‘angry silence’ on second anniversary of Tempe train crash
22h ago
Protests in Greece on two-year anniversary of Tempe train crash
23h ago
Trump briefly wanted to cancel Zelenskyy’s visit – French media
23h ago
What European papers say
24h ago
Putin would ‘keep his word’ on Ukraine peace deal, Trump insists & other key developments
1d ago
Key takeaways from Trump-Starmer meeting
1d ago
Morning opening: The Art of the Deal
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Closing summary
We’re going to wrap up this live coverage now, it’s just after 11.30pm in Washington DC and 6.3oam in Kyiv. You can read the top lines on the extraordinary scenes at the White House in our full report here, and below is an overview of all the latest. Thanks for reading.
US military support for Ukraine hangs in the balance and talks over a minerals deal have collapsed after a meeting between Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy descended into acrimony at the White House on Friday. The US president berated his Ukrainian counterpart and then abruptly called off the minerals deal that Trump had said would be the first step towards a ceasefire with Russia.
Trump warned Zelenskyy he was “gambling with world war three” and told him to come back “when he is ready for peace”. A full transcript of the Oval Office clash can be read here. The meeting between Trump, vice-president JD Vance and Zelenskyy had been due to continue behind closed doors but was cut short after the open clash, with Zelenskyy leaving the White House early and a press conference to announce the minerals deal being cancelled.

‘Make a deal or we are out’: the worst of Trump and Zelenskyy’s clash – video
US secretary of state Marco Rubio called on Zelenskyy to apologise after the Trump meeting, while questioning whether the Ukrainian leader really wanted a peace deal, according to a CNN report. Zelenskyy should “apologise for turning this thing into the fiasco for him that it became”, Rubio told the news outlet. “There was no need for him to go in there and become antagonistic.”
Zelenskyy expressed regret that the Trump meeting became acrimonious but is insisting their relationship can be salvaged. The Ukrainian leader defended himself in an interview on Fox News while also agreeing the dispute was “not good for both sides”. Asked if he felt like he owed the US president an apology, as many of Trump’s Republican allies have also demanded, Zelenskyy did not directly answer, saying instead: “I think that we have to be very open and very honest. And I’m not sure that we did something bad.”
The Trump administration is considering ending all ongoing shipments of military aid to Ukraine after the Oval Office meeting, according to a report. The decision, if taken, would apply to billions of dollars of radars, vehicles, ammunition and missiles awaiting shipment to Ukraine through the presidential drawdown authority, the Washington Post reports, citing a senior US official.
European leaders scrambled to stand by Ukraine in the wake of the Trump-Zelenskyy meeting. Zelenskyy thanked leaders from Europe who are still shaken by Vance’s chastising speech to the Munich Security Conference in February. Among those who assured Zelenskyy of Europe’s support were the heads of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, and European Council head Antonio Costa. “Today, it became clear that the free world needs a new leader,” said the EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas. German chancellor Olaf Scholz said: “Ukraine can rely on Germany – and on Europe.” French president Emmanuel Macron said: “Russia is the aggressor and Ukraine is the aggressed people.” A spokesperson for UK prime minister Keir Starmer said: “He retains his unwavering support for Ukraine.”
Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, stood out in Europe for thanking Trump for having “stood bravely for peace”. Moscow reacted with glee to the Trump-Zelenskyy clash. Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy head of Russia’s security council, said on Telegram: “A brutal dressing down in the Oval Office.”
US Democratic lawmakers came to Zelenskyy’s defence in statements condemning Trump and Vance’s “shameful” and “disgraceful” treatment of the Ukrainian leader. But Trump’s Republican colleagues described the Oval Office exchange as evidence that the president was “putting America first”. US senator Lindsey Graham from South Carolina, who used to be one of the most outspoken advocates for supporting the Ukraine war effort, called on Zelenskyy to resign.
A Russian drone strike on a medical facility and other targets in Kharkiv late on Friday injured at least five people, according to local officials. Regional governor Oleh Syniehubov said eight drones hit civilian areas in three central districts of Ukraine’s second largest city. More than 50 people were evacuated from the medical facility and emergency crews were bringing a fire triggered by the strike under control, he said. Dozens of buildings were damaged.
Updated at 23.49 EST
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the public row with Donald Trump is “not good for both sides”, as we’ve reported, but also that Trump needs to understand that Ukraine can’t change its attitudes towards Russia on a dime.
The Ukrainian leader told Fox News that Ukraine wouldn’t enter peace talks with Russia until it had security guarantees against another Russian offensive.
“It’s so sensitive for our people,” Zelenskyy said.
And they just want to hear that America [is] on our side, that America will stay with us. Not with Russia, with us. That’s it.
You can read more on this and all the key points around the Russia-Ukraine conflict in today’s Ukraine war briefing here:
Updated at 23.18 EST
Donald Trump continued his pressure on Volodymyr Zelenskyy in comments to reporters before he left the White House for his home in Florida on Friday.
The US president said he wanted an “immediate” ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine and warned Zelenskyy to make peace or lose US support, the Associated Press reports.
“I want it to end immediately,” Trump said. “I want a ceasefire now.”
He repeated his earlier comments that Ukraine had a weak hand, saying: “You can’t embolden somebody that doesn’t have the cards.” Without US support, Ukraine would lose, Trump said.
You saw what I saw today. This is a man that wants to get us signed up and keep fighting. We’re not doing that.
Ukrainians have rallied around Volodymyr Zelenskyy as a defender of his country’s interests following his tumultuous meeting at the White House.
Many Ukrainians seemed unfazed by the blowout, expressing a sense that the Ukrainian leader had stood up for their country’s dignity and interests, the Associated Press reports.
Nataliia Serhiienko, 67, a retiree in Kyiv, said she thought Ukrainians approved of their president’s performance in Washington “because Zelenskyy fought like a lion”.
Oleh Syniehubov, head of the Kharkiv region that borders Russia, praised Zelenskyy after the tense exchanges, saying:
Our leader, despite the pressure, stands firm in defending the interests of Ukraine and Ukrainians.
Updated at 22.25 EST
The unprecedented scenes in the Oval Office dominated British front pages on Saturday, with newspapers united in their horror. Adjectives including disastrous and vile were used to describe the meeting in which Donald Trump and his vice-president openly berated Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Here’s the full report:
ShareRubio says Zelenskyy should apologise – report
US secretary of state Marco Rubio has said Volodymyr Zelenskyy should apologise after his meeting with Donald Trump devolved into what Rubio described as a “fiasco”, according to a CNN report, while questioning whether the Ukrainian leader really wants a peace deal.
In an interview with the news outlet, Rubio called on Zelenskyy to “apologise for turning this thing into the fiasco for him that it became”, after his US meeting with Trump and JD Vance became a shouting match. “There was no need for him to go in there and become antagonistic,” Rubio said on Friday.
When you start talking about that aggressively – and the president is a deal maker, he made deals his entire life – you’re not going to get people to the table.
And so you start to perceive that maybe Zelenskyy doesn’t want a peace deal. He says he does, but maybe he doesn’t.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio. Photograph: Craig Hudson/Reuters
As the report continued:
Rubio’s remarks underlined the serious damage that has been done to the US-Ukrainian relationship at the end of a week that also saw the leaders of the UK and France visit Washington to make the case to Trump that the US needs to mediate an end to the war that doesn’t prioritise Russian president Vladimir Putin’s interests over Zelensky’s.
Updated at 22.01 EST
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has expressed regret that the Oval Office meeting with Donald Trump devolved into a shocking display of acrimony between the leaders of two historically allied nations but is insisting their relationship can be salvaged, Lauren Gambino is reporting.
Hours after the public confrontation in which Trump and Vice-president JD Vance berated Zelenskyy, accusing him of “gambling with world war three”, the Ukrainian leader defended himself during an in-studio interview on Fox News, while also agreeing that the dispute was “not good for both sides”.
Asked by the host, Bret Baier, if he felt like he owed the US president an apology, as many of Trump’s Republican allies have demanded, Zelenskyy did not directly answer. Baier pressed, and asked again whether he owes Trump an apology. Zelenskyy again did not answer, saying instead:
I think that we have to be very open and very honest. And I’m not sure that we did something bad.
You can read the full report here:
Continuing from the last post with world leaders’ reactions to the fiery meeting at the White House.
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on X:
Your dignity honors the bravery of the Ukrainian people. Be strong, be brave, be fearless. You are never alone, dear President.
We will continue working with you for a just and lasting peace.
Moldovan president Maia Sandu on X:
The truth is simple. Russia invaded Ukraine. Russia is the aggressor. Ukraine defends its freedom – and ours. We stand with Ukraine.
Moldova’s Maia Sandu. Photograph: Dumitru Doru/EPA
Spanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez on X:
Ukraine, Spain stands with you.
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán on X:
Strong men make peace, weak men make war. Today President @realDonaldTrump stood bravely for peace. Even if it was difficult for many to digest. Thank you, Mr. President!
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia’s security council, on Telegram:
A brutal dressing down in the Oval Office.
Czech president Petr Pavel on X:
We stand with Ukraine more than ever. Time for Europe to step up its efforts.
Norwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre in a statement to TV2:
What we saw from the White House today is serious and disheartening … That Trump accuses Zelenskiy of gambling with world war three is deeply unreasonable and a statement I distance myself from. Norway stands with Ukraine in their struggle for freedom.
Norwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr Store, right, with Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Munich in February. Photograph: Javad Parsa/EPA
Dutch prime minister Dick Schoof:
The Netherlands continues to support Ukraine. Especially now. We want lasting peace and an end to the war of aggression that Russia has started. For Ukraine, for all its inhabitants and for Europe.
Estonian foreign minister Margus Tsahkna on X:
The only obstacle to peace is [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s decision to continue his war of aggression. If Russia stops fighting, there will be no war. If Ukraine stops fighting, there will be no Ukraine. Estonia’s support to Ukraine remains unwavering. Time for Europe to step up.
Polish prime minister Donald Tusk on X:
Dear @ZelenskyyUa, dear Ukrainian friends, you are not alone.
– With Reuters
Updated at 21.22 EST
World leaders react to Trump-Zelenskyy clash
The Trump-Zelenskyy clashes in the Oval Office prompted an outpouring of reaction from around the world. Here’s a cross-section of leaders’ comments, care of Reuters.
Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau on X:
Russia illegally and unjustifiably invaded Ukraine. For three years now, Ukrainians have fought with courage and resilience. Their fight for democracy, freedom, and sovereignty is a fight that matters to us all. Canada will continue to stand with Ukraine and Ukrainians in achieving a just and lasting peace.
German chancellor Olaf Scholz:
No one wants peace more than the citizens of Ukraine! That is why we are jointly seeking the path to a lasting and just peace. Ukraine can rely on Germany – and on Europe.
French president Emmanuel Macron:
Russia is the aggressor, and Ukraine is the aggressed people. I think we were all right to help Ukraine and sanction Russia three years ago, and to continue to do so … they are fighting for their dignity, their independence, their children and the security of Europe. These are simple things, but they’re good to remember at times like these, that’s all.
‘Russia is the aggressor’: Emmanuel Macron. Photograph: Jeanne Accorsini/SIPA/REX/Shutterstock
Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni:
Every division of the west makes us all weaker and favours those who would like to see the decline of our civilisation. Not of its power or influence but of the principles that founded it, first and foremost freedom. A division would not benefit anyone. What is needed is an immediate summit between the United States, European states and allies to talk frankly about how we intend to deal with the great challenges of today, starting with Ukraine … This is the proposal that Italy intends to make to its partners in the coming hours.
Spokesperson for UK prime minister Keir Starmer:
He retains his unwavering support for Ukraine and is playing his part to find a path forward to a lasting peace, based on sovereignty and security for Ukraine.
Danish foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen on Facebook:
It’s a punch in the gut for Ukraine. … There must be room for robust conversations – even between friends. But when it happens in front of rolling cameras like that, there is only one winner. And he sits in the Kremlin.
Updated at 01.39 EST
Australia’s prime minister has reiterated his country’s support for Ukraine after the fiery meeting between Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy but has declined to comment directly on how the confrontation might affect Australia’s relationship with the US.
Donna Lu reports that Anthony Albanese was asked about Australia’s support for Ukraine at a press conference on Saturday morning and the PM said: “We will continue to stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes. Because this is the struggle of a democratic nation versus an authoritarian regime led by Vladimir Putin, who clearly has imperialistic designs not just on Ukraine but throughout that region.”
Pressed specifically about the “extraordinary” exchange between Trump and Zelenskyy, Australia’s prime minister avoided discussing Trump directly, saying: “I am responsible for Australia’s foreign policy. Australia’s foreign policy is determined by Australia.”
To read the full story, click here:
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said his relationship with the US can still be repaired after the heated exchanges with Donald Trump and JD Vance in the White House.
“Of course,” Zelensky said when asked in a Fox News interview if the relationship with Trump could be salvaged.
US-Ukrainian ties were about “more than two presidents”, he said, adding that Ukraine badly needed Washington’s help in the fight against Russia’s far bigger and better-armed military.
“It will be difficult without your support,” Zelensky said on Fox.
Agence France-Presse also reports that Zelenskyy’s olive branch came hours after Friday’s extraordinary Oval Office scene where the years-long US policy of huge support for Ukraine against Russia collapsed in a shouting match.
President Trump told journalists later Friday that Zelenskyy was “overplaying his hand” and should agree to end fighting “immediately”.
Zelensky, however, refused to apologise, telling Fox News: “I’m not sure that we did something bad.” But he also said he wished the exchange had not taken place in front of reporters.
Updated at 19.54 EST
At least five hurt in Russian strike on Kharkiv – officials
The toll of injured from a Russian drone strike on a medical facility and other targets in Kharkiv late on Friday has risen to at least five, according to local officials.
As reported earlier, regional governor Oleh Syniehubov said on Telegram that eight Russian drones had hit civilian areas in three central districts of Ukraine’s second largest city.
He has now said five people were hurt, Reuters reports.
Kharkiv’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov, put the injury toll at seven.
Syniehubov said more than 50 people were evacuated from the medical facility and emergency crews were bringing under control a fire triggered by the strike.
He said dozens of buildings were damaged, with windows shattered in an apartment building, a car dealership and a hypermarket.
Medical and rescue workers evacuate a patient from a medical facility damaged by the Russian strike in Kharkiv. Photograph: Andrii Marienko/AP
In the Black Sea port of Odesa in southern Ukraine, meanwhile, a drone attack reportedly triggered fires in a private home and a business, killing one person and injuring another.
Updated at 21.57 EST