
Murray Hunter
Trump’s Kiev envoy clarifies proposal to ‘divide Ukraine like postwar Berlin’
Keith Kellogg has accused The Times of misrepresenting his words about the demilitarized zone and areas of “responsibility”
Apr 12, 2025

Trump envoy General Keith Kellogg
US President Donald Trump’s special envoy to Ukraine, General Keith Kellogg, has rejected the notion that he proposed partitioning Ukraine like post-WWII Germany, accusing The Times of misrepresenting his remarks about a Cold War-style post-ceasefire security arrangement.
Kellogg told The Times in an interview published on Friday that British and French – but not American – troops could lead a Western military force positioned west of the Dnepr River, while Ukrainian forces would hold territory further east. He also suggested establishing a demilitarized zone (DMZ) roughly 18 miles (30 kilometers) wide along the current lines of control to prevent direct clashes with Russian forces.
“You could almost make it look like what happened with Berlin after World War Two, when you had a Russian zone, a French zone, and a British zone, a US zone,” said Kellogg, a retired US Army lieutenant general, appointed by Trump to deal directly with Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky.
Kellogg acknowledged that Moscow “might not accept” the proposed zones of control, and claimed that a DMZ would create conditions for a “sustainable” ceasefire and would “not be provocative at all” to Moscow.
The British newspaper ran its story with the headline “Trump envoy: We can divide Ukraine like postwar Berlin,” prompting Kellogg to accuse the publication of taking his words out of context.
“The Times article misrepresents what I said,” Kellogg wrote on X on Friday evening. “I was speaking of a post-ceasefire resiliency force in support of Ukraine’s sovereignty. In discussions of partitioning, I was referencing areas or zones of responsibility for an allied force (without US troops). I was NOT referring to a partitioning of Ukraine.”
he Times report, however, noted that Kellogg’s idea implies that any final settlement would involve Kiev relinquishing claims to territories already controlled by Russia – a point that echoes proposals recently floated by Trump’s Russia envoy, Steve Witkoff.
Witkoff, who met Russian President Vladimir Putin in St. Petersburg on Friday, had previously argued that recognizing Russian ownership of Lugansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, and Kherson was the swiftest path to halting the conflict. The suggestion, reportedly voiced during a White House meeting last week, has triggered internal debate within the Trump administration, with Kellogg allegedly pushing back against full territorial concessions.
Kiev’s backers remain split on a proposed “reassurance force” that could potentially be deployed to Ukraine after hostilities between Kiev and Moscow end. Following the latest meeting of the “coalition of the willing” – composed of some 30 predominantly EU and NATO member states – in Brussels on Thursday, only six Western nations expressed readiness to send troops, according to AFP.
Moscow has repeatedly warned the West against deploying troops to Ukraine under any pretext, specifically objecting to forces from any NATO countries ending up in the country. Last month, former Russian president and deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, Dmitry Medvedev, said that the potential emergence of any NATO “peacekeepers” in Ukraine would mean a war between the bloc and Russia.
12th March 2025
Wars have Consequences - Ukraine is bitterly learning, especially when you have lost. And when you lose, you must give up your territory to foreigners. Just ask Germany. Their boundaries shrunk and their colonies taken over. Prussia disappeared. Yapan lost all their Pacific colonies. Italy lost all theirs in Africa. South Vietnam disappeared from the map. Ottoman Empire carved up.
ReplyDeleteBut the privileged people refuse to surrender and give up their territory, putting their own civilian lives at risk. Their Refugees, the one with a special UN refugee agency created just to serve them (UNWRA), all other refugees must go through UNHCR. UNHCR has resettled tens of millions of refugees worldwide over the decades. When they are in charge the number of refugees fall. Usually all are resettled within 3-5 years after fighting stops. But under UNWRA the number of the privileged refugees grows and grows, because they multiply (where got genocide) and pass on their refugee status to their cucucici, even after they have been resettled and granted citizenship like in Jordan they still have “Right of Return” to Haifa. UNHCR works hard and ends refugee suffering. UNWRA works hard to perpetuate it. Fritz in Hamburg wants to Return and re-claim his grandfather’s house in Kaliningrad but Bloodymir Pootin will never allow. Nguyen Mai a French citizen from Paris wants to reclaim the family home in Hanoi but no chance, the building now houses the Cuban Embassy. None of this is fair but these people have learned to Move On. And Ukrainians will eventually Move On. However The Priviledged Refugees under UNWRA refuse. Thats why their war will never end.
Mfer, better do a c&p with the source intact, than just regurgitating zionist fart!
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