Rubio after Moscow's complaints about non-compliance with the "spirit of Anchorage": there was no agreement in Alaska
Kyiv • UNN
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that during the meeting between Trump and Putin in Anchorage, there was no agreement, only a proposal. He emphasized the U.S. readiness to facilitate the end of the war in Ukraine.

During a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska last year, which took place in Anchorage, "there was no agreement," U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters on Thursday during a visit to Bahrain, reports UNN.
There was no agreement in Alaska, there was a proposal in Alaska, but there was no agreement in Alaska; if there had been an agreement, we would have had an end of the war,
He noted that "as I said, the president is prepared, as the United States remains prepared, to play whatever constructive role we can to bring about you know an enduring end to this war in Ukraine". "Which has been bloody, 25, 20,000 soldiers killed every month, 5,000 a week, most of them Russian. So it's been debilitating for Europe, but especially for Ukraine and for Russia increasingly," the U.S. Secretary of State continued.
"So we are prepared to step forward and play a constructive role, if there's one for us to play, and bringing the parties together and bringing that war to an end. That's what the president's tried to do now for a year and a half," Rubio continued.
And he repeated once again: "But there was no agreement in Alaska, there was a proposal made in Alaska, but it was never an agreement."
Recall
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stated that Russia continues to consider the agreements with the U.S. at the summit in Anchorage as a starting point in negotiations on a peaceful settlement of the war with Ukraine, but "the spirit of Anchorage is evaporating."
After this, the Kremlin stated that it does not expect the implementation of the agreements reached during the negotiations in Anchorage and continues to focus on achieving its own goals in the war.