Ukraine
said on Wednesday it was set to approve a framework minerals deal with the
United States but that its success would depend on talks with President Donald
Trump.
The deal,
under which Kyiv would hand some revenue from its mineral resources to a fund
jointly controlled by the U.S., is central to Ukrainian attempts to win strong
support from Trump as he seeks a quick end to Russia's war, with U.S.-Russian
talks that have so far excluded Kyiv set to continue on Thursday.
Trump
confirmed Zelenskiy would visit Washington on Friday although there was no sign
that Kyiv had won the security guarantees it has been seeking as part of the
deal, cast by Trump as a payment for U.S. aid to Kyiv during the war.
"This
agreement could be part of future security guarantees... an agreement is an
agreement, but we need to understand the broader vision," Zelenskiy said
in Kyiv.
He said the
most important thing was the current draft did not cast Ukraine as a debtor
that would have to pay back hundreds of billions of dollars for past military
assistance.
"This
deal could be a great success or it could pass quietly. And the big success
depends on our conversation with President Trump."
He said it
would be a success if the U.S. becomes a provider of security guarantees for
Ukraine, which wants protection from future Russian attacks if a peace deal is
reached.
Trump said
on Tuesday that Zelenskiy wanted to come to Washington on Friday to sign a
"very big deal".
Zelenskiy
said both sides were still working on organising the visit and a White House
official on Wednesday raised doubts about whether the visit would go ahead, but
Trump later said again that Zelenskiy would visit on Friday.
Trump has
been fiercely critical of Zelenskiy as he upended U.S. policy on the war,
calling him a "dictator" and ending a campaign to isolate Russia,
which invaded Ukraine in 2022.
Trump spoke
to Russian President Vladimir Putin on February 12 and a Russian-U.S. meeting
took place in Saudi Arabia on February 18.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Russian and U.S. diplomats would meet in
Istanbul on Thursday to discuss resolving bilateral disputes that are part of a
wider dialogue the sides see as crucial to ending the Ukraine war.