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Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are set to hold a call about the Russia-Ukraine war on Tuesday, the US president said, as Washington seeks to broker a ceasefire deal.

“I’ll be speaking to President Putin Tuesday. A lot of work’s been done over the weekend,” Trump told reporters on board Air Force One late on Sunday night. “We’re doing pretty well, I think, with Russia. We’ll see if we have something to announce by Tuesday.”

When asked what concessions he would be seeking from Putin, Trump said “I think we’ll be talking about land” and “power plants”.

“I think we have a lot of it already discussed very much by both sides,” Trump said. “We’re already talking about that [ with Ukraine and Russia] dividing up certain assets.”

Trump envoy Steve Witkoff on Sunday told CNN he had a “positive” meeting with Putin and that the Russian and Ukrainian parties “are today a lot closer” in negotiations.

The comments come after the US and its G7 partners on Friday warned Moscow that they could expand sanctions and use frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine, as Trump seeks to win over Putin to his ceasefire proposal.

The joint statement followed a week in which Kyiv signed up to the 30-day truce but Moscow signalled reluctance to do so immediately. Witkoff told CNN he had witnessed improvements in ceasefire negotiations after the two sides were previously “miles apart”.

Following talks in Saudi Arabia led by US national security adviser Mike Waltz and US secretary of state Marco Rubio as well as Witkoff’s “equally positive” meeting with Putin, “we’ve narrowed the differences between them and now we’re sitting at the table”, he added.

The White House and Russia’s embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The envoy told CBS that negotiations were complex, involving multiple angles and a large swath of territory, including a “main area of confrontation” in the Kursk region, a nuclear reactor supplying electricity to Ukraine and access to ports. 

“There’s so many elements to the implementation of a ceasefire here,” Witkoff said, adding that it “involves how to get people to not be fighting with each other over a 2,000-kilometre border”.

He also seemed to dismiss a statement made by French President Emmanuel Macron, who argued that Russia “does not seem to be sincerely seeking peace”.

Witkoff declined to comment on Macron’s remarks, but added: “I think it’s unfortunate when people make those sort of assessments, and they don’t have, necessarily, first-hand knowledge . . . I saw a constructive effort over a long period of time to discuss the specifics of what’s going on in the field”.

Asked when he thinks there will be a deal, Witkoff cited Trump, who has said it would take weeks. “I don’t disagree with him,” the envoy told CNN. 

Additional reporting by Steff Chávez in Washington

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