Vladimir Putin called Donald Trump on 29 April for a 90-minute conversation and proposed a Victory Day ceasefire around the 9 May parade. Kremlin foreign-policy aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters Trump 'actively supported' the proposal. Trump, asked outside the Oval Office, said Putin 'might announce something, a little bit of a ceasefire'. The White House issued no signed instrument during the gap window.
Putin did not contact Volodymyr Zelenskyy. He contacted Trump, framed the request as a calendar gesture rather than a negotiating step, and offered no reciprocal hold on Russian deep strikes inside Ukraine. Russia's later messaging floated a revised three-day window covering 7 to 9 May, then retracted it pending what Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called concrete decisions still to be made.
The pattern matches Putin's 32-hour Easter decree , which was issued without prior US contact and expired with 10,721 Russian violations on Ukraine's count . Both proposals share the same architecture: Russia announces a window pegged to a domestic anniversary, Western governments are asked to validate it, and Ukraine is presented with a finished offer rather than a negotiating draft. The Easter decree gave Putin 32 hours of Russian-controlled optics; the Victory Day proposal asks for the same arrangement around the security perimeter the Kremlin needs for its own parade.
The Trump channel substitutes for direct Russia-Ukraine contact that Moscow has avoided since the 2022 Istanbul talks collapsed. For the Kremlin, a Western-validated truce produced through the White House is preferable to a bilateral negotiation that would treat Kyiv as the primary counterparty.
