We can divide Ukraine, like post-war Berlin - Kellogg
Kyiv • UNN
Kit Kellogg proposed dividing Ukraine along the Dnieper, stationing Western troops on the right bank. This implies ceding the eastern territories to Russia, but the idea is unlikely to find support in Moscow.

U.S. Special Envoy General Keith Kellogg has proposed dividing Ukraine into zones of control, similar to post-war Berlin. This was reported by The Times, reports UNN.
Details
According to Kellogg, the Dnipro River could become the demarcation line.
Thus, he proposes to deploy a British-French contingent together with Ukrainian troops on the right bank of the Dnipro and in western Ukraine. Ukrainian troops will remain in the north and center, and Russia will remain in the temporarily occupied territories.
This idea implies that Ukraine will have to cede territories in the east that are currently controlled by Russia.

According to Kellogg, the deployment of the British and French military will "not be provocative at all" for Russia, and added that Ukraine is a large enough country to accommodate several armies seeking to ensure a ceasefire.
You can make it look almost like what happened to Berlin after World War II, when you had a Russian zone, a French zone, a British zone, an American zone.
According to the publication, Kellogg's proposals implicitly mean recognition that Ukraine will have to cede its eastern territories, which are currently under Russian control.
At the same time, the Kremlin rejects the possibility of NATO peacekeepers, and Kellogg's proposal is unlikely to find support in Moscow.
Let us remind you
U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff suggested that Trump support the "transfer" of Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions to Russia.