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Sources say that the US and Ukraine are now planning to sign a mineral deal.

Four people with knowledge of the situation on Tuesday said that the U.S. administration under Donald Trump and Ukraine planned to sign a mineral deal, but it fell through following a disastrous Oval Office Meeting Friday during which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy was ejected from the building.

Three sources confirmed that President Donald Trump had told his advisers he wanted to announce the agreement during his speech to Congress on Tuesday night. However, they cautioned that the agreement has not yet been signed and that it could change.

The White House didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

The Ukrainian Embassy in Washington and the Ukrainian Presidential Administration in Kyiv did not respond immediately to requests for comments.

The deal was put off on Friday following a contentious Oval Office Meeting between Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, which resulted in Zelenskiy's quick departure from the White House. Zelenskiy traveled to Washington for the signing of the deal.

In this meeting, Trump, and vice president JD Vance, reprimanded Zelenskiy for asking for more aid in front the U.S. press.

Trump stated, "You are gambling with World War III."

According to a person familiar with the situation, U.S. officials spoke to officials in Kyiv in recent days about signing the mineral deal despite the Friday blow-up. They also urged Zelenskiy’s advisers convince the Ukrainian President to openly apologize to Trump.

Zelenskiy said on X Tuesday that Ukraine is ready to sign the agreement and called the Oval Office Meeting "regrettable."

Zelenskiy wrote in his blog that "our meeting at the White House in Washington on Friday did not go as it was intended." "Ukraine will come to the table to negotiate as soon as it is possible in order to bring a lasting peace closer."

Uncertainty remained about whether the agreement had changed. The agreement that was supposed to be signed by last week did not include any explicit guarantees of security for Ukraine, but it gave the U.S. a way to access revenues from Ukraine's mineral resources. The deal also included the Ukrainian government contributing half of future monetization from any state-owned resources to a U.S.Ukraine-managed reconstruction investment fund.

Trump said in a press conference that Ukraine should be "more appreciative" of the agreement.

Trump said, "This country has stood by them through thick-and-thin." "We have given them more than Europe and Europe should give more than us."

France, Britain, and perhaps other European countries offered to send peacekeeping forces to Ukraine in case of a ceasefire. However they would need support from the U.S. Moscow has rejected the proposal for peacekeeping forces.

Daniel Fried, former senior White House official, and ambassador to Poland said that the process of getting a minerals deal completed was messy. But it would bring two solid victories for Trump: Zelenskiy’s regretful statement and the agreement by Britain and France to provide boots on the ground and security.

"Trump should and can win. Fried, a fellow with the Atlantic Council, said that Fried would be able "to say he... got the Europeans standing up for an issue of European Security, which they have never done before." (Reporting Erin Banco and Gram Slattery; Additional reporting Yuliia Dyesa in Kyiv, Editing Don Durfee & David Gregorio).

(source: Reuters)