Author's Intro: "The world’s superpowers met in 1945 in
the Black Sea port of Yalta to divide up Europe after the defeat of Nazi
Germany. They drew lines on the map that tore apart countries,
effectively delivered Eastern Europe to Soviet occupation and
dismembered Poland. And none of those countries were represented or had a
say.
( Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson)
As President Trump prepares to
meet President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Friday in Alaska, there is
more talk — and anxiety — among Ukrainians and Europeans about a second
Yalta. They are not scheduled to be present, and Mr. Trump has said he
plans to negotiate “land swaps” with Mr. Putin over Ukrainian territory." Trump and Putin Could Decide Others’ Fates, Echoing Yalta Summit
In
1945, the map of Europe was redrawn in Yalta without input from the
affected countries. Ukraine and Europe fear a repeat in Alaska.
From left, Winston Churchill,
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin at the Yalta summit in 1945. The
meeting, during which the three leaders redrew the map of Europe, has
become a symbol for how superpowers can decide the fates of other
nations.
Credit...Universal Images Group
By Steven Erlanger
Reporting from Berlin
Aug. 13, 2025, 5:03 a.m. ET
“Yalta has gone down in history as many things, but it became a dirty
word in Eastern Europe and especially in Poland,” since a main topic of
the conference was its new borders, said Serhii Plokhii, a professor of
Ukrainian history at Harvard and the author of numerous books about the
Cold War, including “Yalta: The Price of Peace.”
HERE'S THE KICKER:
- For Timothy D. Snyder, a historian of
Ukraine and the Cold War, the Alaska summit is “morally less defensible”
than the one in Yalta because Mr. Putin is not an ally, as Stalin was.
- “Although he was ruling a terrible system and oppressing as he
liberated, the Soviets had just borne the brunt of the war in Europe, so
it was inevitable to discuss with them a settlement at the end of the
war,” he said.
But for Mr. Snyder, a
professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the
University of Toronto, there is a crucial difference with Yalta.
- It is
Russia now, not Nazi Germany, that is “carrying out an unprovoked war
and all its atrocities.
- ” Russia is “not an ambiguous partner who helped
end the war, but started the war.”
>>
Today,
Mr. Plokhii said, Mr. Putin wants Ukraine to hand over territories not
occupied by Russia.
- So that also raises another controversial moment in
history, at Munich in 1938, when Neville Chamberlain agreed with Adolf
Hitler to dismantle Czechoslovakia, which was not represented at those
talks, in a vain, doomed effort to keep the peace.
- “We know Churchill and Roosevelt got some criticism over Yalta, but it was Chamberlain who became infamous,” Mr. Plokhii said.
Mr.
Putin’s demand for unconquered Ukrainian territory is also similar to
Hitler’s demand for the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia in 1938, Mr.
Snyder said.
- “If Ukraine is forced to concede the rest of the Donbas, it
would concede defensive lines and fortifications crucial to its
defense, which is what the Czechs had to do,” he said.
- “Hitler’s aim was to destroy Czechoslovakia,” Mr. Snyder said,
- “and Putin’s ultimate goal is to destroy Ukraine.”
Steven Erlanger
is the chief diplomatic correspondent in Europe and is based in Berlin.
He has reported from over 120 countries, including Thailand, France,
Israel, Germany and the former Soviet Union.

What we know about Trump’s meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska
Historic Alaska summit set for Friday as Karoline Leavitt calls meeting a 'listening exercise'
Uploaded: Aug 13, 2025
EXPECTATIONS
Trump has raised geopolitical eyebrows over the last week when he suggested there would be a land "swap" that Russia and Ukraine would need to agree to. - While
it remains unclear which borders he thinks will likely be moved around,
particularly which Russian borders he foresees Putin handing over to
Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his allies in NATO
have made clear any deal forged without Ukraine will not be acceptable.
Zelenskyy
over the weekend reiterated that he cannot unilaterally agree to cede
territory illegally occupied by Russia without a national referendum
under Ukraine’s Constitution.
- "Any decisions that are without
Ukraine are at the same time decisions against peace," he added.
- "They
will not bring anything. These are dead decisions. They will never
work."
Following a meeting with top EU officials on Monday, chief
diplomat for the EU Kaja Kallas told Fox News Digital,
- "Ukraine’s right
to exist as a sovereign nation is under attack, as well as the security
of our European continent."
- "As far as Russia has not agreed to
full and unconditional ceasefire, we should not even discuss any
concessions," she said.
- "It has never worked in the past with Russia,
and will not work with Putin today."
. . .Though this shared past was championed by some in Russia and the U.S.,
like the Kremlin’s special economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev, who called it
the 'perfect stage for Putin-trump talks'

LIVE | Karoline Leavitt says Trump's meeting with Putin is a 'listening exercise' | Alaska SummitUploaded: Aug 13, 2025
, others took to social
media to suggest it showed the precarious nature of sovereign borders.
WHY ALASKA
Though geographically speaking, Anchorage is a near equal distance from Moscow and Washington, D.C., the president prompted surprise when he said Putin had agreed to meet him in Alaska rather than a third-party state, like Switzerland or Hungary, both of which were floated as potential meeting locations.
However,
both locations held dubious optics, as
- Switzerland, a member of the
International Criminal Court, could be obligated to act on the 2023 ICC arrest warrant issued against Putin, and
- Hungary, though frequently seen as sympathetic to Russia, is a NATO member state.
"They
probably avoided Europe, because if they included Europe, then Europe
would have demanded that they're actually at the table," Dan Hoffman,
former CIA Moscow Station Chief, told Fox News Digital.
- "Probably your
two choices were go to Russia — which Trump would never do — or invite
him here.
- "It also exposes the challenge that you can't solve this without Ukraine and without Europe," he added.
- But Alaska
also has a shared history with the U.S., which Washington purchased
from Saint Petersburg — then the capital of Russia — in 1867.
