Trump Arranges Three-Day Ceasefire and Large Prisoner Exchange

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Talks around Ukraine/Russian war took a sharp turn when Washington stepped in. Friday brought word

from President Donald Trump about a pause in fighting lasting three days. This came right after US involvement nobody saw coming. A major swap of prisoners will happen at the same time. The move ties back to Moscow and Kyiv both saying yes behind closed doors. Details emerged late through GNS, dated May 8. WASHINGTON became the backdrop for the sudden update.


Trump dropped news on Truth Social about a deal kicking off Saturday, May 9. This one stops every form of fighting straight through to Monday, May 11. Happens right alongside Russia’s big holiday honoring the end of World War II. Victory Day it’s called – when Nazi Germany fell.


Key Terms of the Agreement
A full stop to fighting takes effect when May 9 turns into the 10th. This pause lasts three days straight. Midnight marks the start. Fighting must halt by then.
A full thousand POWs will move between countries, matched equally by both sides. This handover marks a rare moment where lives shift hands without gunfire. One prisoner traded for another, step by step. The scale stands out – few such moves have happened at this size during the fighting. Each person returning home was counted twice: once lost, now found again.


That day, Ukraine’s leader made it clear – Red Square stays off limits. By signing an order, Volodymyr Zelenskyy ruled out targeting Moscow’s famous plaza during the May 9 event. The move draws a line, quietly setting boundaries amid tension. Weapons won’t be aimed there, not on that date. A signal more than a strategy, perhaps. Still, the decision stands firm. No strikes where crowds gather for the parade. Distance is measured in policy now, not just miles. Clarity comes through restraint. One place remains untouched by design.


Diplomatic Breakthrough
After speaking by phone, the agreement took shape. Talk of wartime partnership came up when Trump and Putin exchanged words. Their conversation touched on how both countries once stood together long ago. Details emerged about references to shared efforts in the conflict decades past. What followed was completion of the arrangement.
Maybe this marks the start of something closing, after years soaked in violence and struggle, Trump said, pointing out that both Putin and Zelenskyy agreed to stop – because he asked them directly.
Moscow and Kyiv respond

Out of the blue, Yuri Ushakov gave a quiet nod – Moscow sees the deal as workable. Tension had been building over fears Ukraine might target the Red Square event. Now, those worries ease, at least for now. The move arrives just before things could have gone sharply wrong. Not much fanfare, just a shift under the surface. Moscow’s stance rests on avoiding escalation, nothing more. Details stay thin, but the direction feels clear.


In Ukraine, Zelenskyy made clear the move wasn’t about holidays but about people. Red Square matters far less than bringing back detained Ukrainians, he posted online. Still, he added, Washington must watch Moscow closely to make sure promises are kept. For now, trust needs proof.
A short pause in heated words follows the deal, after days when Russia warned of heavy attacks on Kyiv should festivities in Moscow face interference.

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