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What time is Donald Trump meeting Vladimir Putin and why is it in Alaska?

August 15, 2025
in US & Canada
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Madeline Halpert, Christal Hayes and Jake Lapham

BBC News

Getty Images A high angle shot of buildings surrounded by a lake and treesGetty Images

Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson outside Anchorage will host the closely-watched meeting on Friday

US President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin are set to meet in Anchorage on Friday to discuss how to end the war in Ukraine.

The venue for the high-profile meeting is Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson – a US military installation on the northern edge of Alaska’s most-populated city.

White House officials have said the base satisfied security requirements for hosting two world leaders. And, during the height of summer tourism, there were few other options for the hastily arranged meeting.

Three rounds of talks between Russia and Ukraine this summer, held at Trump’s behest, have yet to bring the two sides any closer to peace.

Here is what we know about the base, and what we can expect from the meeting – as well as the key timings.

What time is Donald Trump meeting Vladimir Putin?

The White House has issued a schedule, although nothing has been released by the Kremlin.

At 06:45 EDT (11:45 BST) the US president is expected to depart the White House for Anchorage.

Trump and Putin are due to start discussions around 11:00 local time (20:00 BST). They will meet face-to-face joined only by their translators.

The US president is then scheduled to leave Anchorage and head back to the White House around 17:45 Alaska time (02:45 BST on Saturday).

What is Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson?

With roots tracing back to the Cold War, Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson is Alaska’s largest military base. The 64,000 acre installation is a key US site for Arctic military readiness.

Snow-capped mountains, icy lakes and picturesque glaciers frame the base, which regularly shivers through temperatures as low as -12C (15F) in winter. However the leaders can expect comparatively pleasant temperatures of around 16C (61F) on Friday.

When Trump visited the base during his first term, in 2019, he said the troops there “serve in our country’s last frontier as America’s first line of defence”.

More than 30,000 people live on the site, accounting for approximately 10% of the population of Anchorage.

Built in 1940, the base was a critical air defence site and central command point to ward off threats from the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

At its peak in 1957, it hosted 200 fighter jets, and multiple air traffic control and early warning radar systems, earning it the nickname of “Top Cover for North America”.

The base continues to grow today due to its strategic location and training facilities.

Map showing Alaska, Canada, and Russia with the Bering Sea in between. Anchorage is marked in southern Alaska. The map highlights how Alaska and Russia are geographically close, separated by only a narrow stretch of water. An inset globe in the top left shows the region’s location in the northern Pacific. It also shows where Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson is.

Why are they meeting in Alaska?

The US purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, lending a historical resonance to the meeting. It became a US state in 1959.

Russian presidential assistant Yuri Ushakov pointed out that the two countries are neighbours, with only the Bering Strait separating them.

“It seems quite logical for our delegation simply to fly over the Bering Strait and for such an important and anticipated summit of the leaders of the two countries to be held in Alaska,” Ushakov said.

The last time Alaska took centre-stage in an American diplomatic event was in March 2021, when Joe Biden’s newly minted diplomatic and national security team met their Chinese counterparts in Anchorage.

The sit-down turned acrimonious, with the Chinese accusing the Americans of “condescension and hypocrisy”.

In Anchorage there are few signs of the impending high-stakes meeting, except for the international media that have descended on the area.

Journalists are rubbing elbows with holidaymakers from the “lower 48” states on visits to the Alaskan wilderness during the height of the tourist season.

Why are Putin and Trump meeting?

Trump has been pushing hard – without much success – to end the war in Ukraine.

As a presidential candidate, he pledged that he could end the war within 24 hours of taking office. He has also repeatedly argued that the war “never would have happened” if he had been president at the time of Russia’s invasion in 2022.

Last month, Trump told the BBC that he was “disappointed” by Putin.

Frustrations grew and Trump set an 8 August deadline for Putin to agree to an immediate ceasefire or face more severe US sanctions.

As the deadline hit, Trump instead announced he and Putin would meet in person on 15 August.

The meeting comes after US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff held “highly productive” talks with Putin in Moscow on Wednesday, according to Trump.

Ahead of the meeting, the White House sought to play down speculation that the bilateral could yield a ceasefire. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt described it as a “listening exercise”.

Speaking to Fox News Radio on Thursday, Trump said there is a “25% chance that this meeting will not be a successful meeting”.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Trump would enter the meeting with the goal of reaching a ceasefire deal, but a wider peace agreement would take more time.

“To achieve a peace, I think we all recognise that there’ll have to be some conversation about security guarantees,” he told reporters at the state department on Thursday. “There’ll have to be some conversation about… territorial disputes and claims, and what they’re fighting over.”

Is Ukraine attending?

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is not expected to attend. Trump said on Monday: “I would say he could go, but he’s been to a lot of meetings.”

Trump did, however, say that Zelensky would be the first person he would call afterwards.

Trump and Zelensky met virtually on Wednesday and were joined by several European leaders.

Putin had requested that Zelensky be excluded, although the White House has previously said that Trump was willing to hold a trilateral in which all three leaders were present.

On Thursday, Trump reiterated that his meeting with Putin could lead to a second meeting which could include Zelensky.

Zelensky has said any agreements without input from Ukraine would amount to “dead decisions”.

What do both sides hope to get out of it?

While both Russia and Ukraine have long said that they want the war to end, both countries want things that the other harshly opposes.

Trump said on Monday he was “going to try to get some of that [Russian-occupied] territory back for Ukraine”. But he also warned that there might have to be “some swapping, changes in land”.

Ukraine, however, has been adamant that it will not accept Russian control of regions that Moscow has seized, including Crimea.

Zelensky pushed back this week against any idea of “swapping” territories.

“We will not reward Russia for what it has perpetrated,” the Ukrainian president said.

Watch: ‘We’re going to change the battle lines’ Trump on the war in Ukraine

Meanwhile, Putin has not budged from his territorial demands, Ukraine’s neutrality and the future size of its army.

Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, in part, over Putin’s belief the Western defensive alliance, Nato, was using the neighbouring country to gain a foothold to bring its troops closer to Russia’s borders.

Ultimately, Putin’s “central objective lies in obtaining… the geopolitical ‘neutralisation’ of Ukraine,” according to analyst Tatyana Stanovaya.

“It is extremely difficult to convey what is truly at stake… as people often simply cannot accept that Putin might want so much – and be serious about it. Unfortunately, he can.”

Map showing which areas of Ukraine are under Russian military control or limited Russian control. A large section of the map, including Crimea and Donetsk are coloured in red to show that the areas are fully under Russian military control.

The Trump administration has been attempting to sway European leaders on a ceasefire deal that would hand over swathes of Ukrainian territory to Russia, the BBC’s US partner CBS News has reported.

The agreement would allow Russia to keep control of the Crimean peninsula, and take the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, which is made up of Donetsk and Luhansk, according to sources familiar with the talks.

Russia illegally occupied Crimea in 2014 and its forces control the majority of the Donbas region.

Under the deal, Russia would have to give up the Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, where it currently has some military control.



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