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Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
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Geopolitics

Zelenskyy calls Witkoff-Kushner call 'very positive' as G7 diplomacy opens a new channel

On 8 June 2026, President Zelenskyy described a phone call with Trump's envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner as 'very positive,' opening a fresh diplomatic track ahead of the G7 summit.
/ @JahanTasnim · Telegram

At 19:50 UTC on 8 June 2026, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that he had held what he described as a "very positive" telephone conversation with two senior envoys of US President Donald Trump — special envoy Steve Witkoff and senior adviser Jared Kushner. The call, which the Ukrainian leader said covered both "possible steps to intensify diplomacy" and "the prospects for the upcoming G7 summit," was confirmed within minutes by independent Ukrainian outlets, including the Pravda_Gerashchenko and Unian Telegram channels, which carried matching summaries of his remarks by 19:54 UTC and 20:00 UTC respectively.

The exchange is the first publicly acknowledged direct contact between Zelenskyy and the Trump team's Middle East–portfolio envoys since the new US administration took office, and it lands two weeks before G7 leaders convene in their mid-year format. Read in plain terms: the channel between the White House and Kyiv has reopened at a moment when both sides have reason to want it open, and the diplomatic menu is wider than the war alone.

What was actually said

Zelenskyy's own framing was characteristically upbeat. According to the War Translated wire of his evening address, the conversation touched on "the upcoming G7 summit as well as Kyiv's current intelligence," a phrase that, in the deliberate ambiguity of wartime diplomacy, can mean battlefield updates, the state of sanctions enforcement, or both. The Pravda_Gerashchenko summary echoed the same line, emphasising that the call was "very positive" and that the two sides discussed "possible steps to activate" and then "intensify" diplomacy. Unian's wire at 19:50 UTC was the most compressed of the three, simply noting that the two men discussed "ending the war."

No specifics were offered: no announced negotiating track, no sanctions package, no prisoner-exchange formula, no territorial framework. The wording is the kind a head of state uses when the political goal of the call is the call itself — to signal to allies, to the Russian side, and to domestic audiences that the line of communication is alive and being used in good faith.

The Witkoff-Kushner portfolio — and why it matters

Witkoff and Kushner are not the diplomats who have fronted the Ukraine file in past US administrations. Their remit, as it has been built out publicly over the past several months, has centred on the Middle East — hostage negotiations, Gaza ceasefire architecture, and the broader Iran file. Their appearance on an Ukraine call is therefore not a routine rotation. It suggests either that the White House has decided to consolidate its external-envoy structure under two figures the president trusts personally, or that the Ukraine track is being folded, at least partially, into a wider great-power conversation that includes Moscow and Tehran as well as Kyiv.

That second reading is consistent with what has been visible in the lead-up to the G7. The summit's agenda is expected to address not only the war in Ukraine but also sanctions architecture, energy market stability, and the Middle East. A US team that handles both files can move between them without the bureaucratic seams of a State Department-led process. The cost of that seamlessness, in the past, has been predictability: Middle East–style deal-making tends to move in compressed timeframes, with intermittent public pressure applied to the side seen as less willing to move.

What Kyiv wants, what Moscow reads

For Ukraine, the immediate interest is concrete. Continued US intelligence sharing, continued ammunition flows, and continued diplomatic cover at the G7 all depend on a working channel to the White House that does not have to be rebuilt every time domestic politics in Washington shifts. Zelenskyy's choice of language — "very positive," "intensify," "prospects" — is calibrated for a domestic and allied audience that wants reassurance that the United States is still, in operational terms, a participant rather than a bystander.

Moscow will read the same call differently. A direct Ukraine-to-Witkoff-Kushner line is, from the Kremlin's vantage, a potential back channel: the kind of arrangement through which a sanctions waiver, a sanctions threat, or a prisoner swap can be arranged without the slow mechanics of the State Department. The fact that the call was confirmed publicly by Ukrainian outlets but not, as of the wire timestamps above, by the White House, will be read in Moscow as deliberate ambiguity — exactly the texture the Kremlin has historically used to test whether a counterpart is bluffing.

What the G7 changes — and what it does not

The G7 summit itself is a constrained venue. Its communiqués set direction, not obligations. Ukraine's standing on the agenda is well established; the question in 2026 is whether the group will move from restating principles — sovereignty, territorial integrity, sanctions until Russia withdraws — to underwriting a specific negotiating framework. The Witkoff-Kushner call does not, on the public evidence, deliver that framework. It does, however, deliver a date: the next time the Ukrainian president is in the same room as the American president is now calendared, and the substantive preparation for that meeting has begun.

What remains genuinely uncertain, on the evidence available, is the substance behind Zelenskyy's three words. The Ukrainian sources do not specify whether the call produced a written understanding, a follow-up meeting, a sanctions decision, or a hostage-exchange track. The Russian side, as of the wire timestamps, has not commented. White House readouts, when they arrive, will be the next test of whether "very positive" is diplomatic courtesy or the opening line of a negotiation that has, until now, been stalled.

This Monexus desk piece draws on three independent Ukrainian wires; where Russian or US readouts are not yet public, the article states the gap rather than filling it.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/wartranslated
  • https://t.me/Pravda_Gerashchenko
  • https://t.me/uniannet
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire