A demonstrator holds a sign that reads “Remember Budapest Memorandum 1994” during a protest outside the embassy of the United States of America in Warsaw, Poland earlier this month.
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A demonstrator holds a sign that reads “Remember Budapest Memorandum 1994” during a protest outside the embassy of the United States of America in Warsaw, Poland earlier this month.
NurPhoto/Getty
Representatives from Russia and Ukraine will be in meetings to try to hammer out details of a ceasefire on Monday. But peace is still a long way off.
For starters it’s only a partial ceasefire—no strikes on energy infrastructure. It’s only for 30 days. And the Ukrainians and Russians aren’t even meeting with each other. The U.S. will be a go-between.
One of the biggest things working against a new agreement, is what happened after Ukraine’s last agreement with Russia. And the ones before that.
Ukraine says it won’t trust a promise from Russia. It needs security guarantees. To understand why, you’ve got to go back to the birth of independent Ukraine.
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This episode was produced by Connor Donevan.
It was edited by Courtney Dorning.
Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.