Trump names pick for special envoy to Ukraine

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Ex-general Keith Kellogg reportedly co-authored the “frozen conflict” peace proposal

US President-elect Donald Trump has announced that retired Army general Keith Kellogg will be his special envoy for Ukraine and Russia.

Trump is scheduled to be sworn in as the 47th US president on January 20 next year. He has already announced dozens of names of future officials, some of whom need to be approved by the Senate first.

“He was with me right from the beginning,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Wednesday, announcing Kellogg’s nomination. “Together, we will secure peace through strength and make America, and the world, safe again!”

Kellogg served as chief of staff for the National Security Council during Trump’s first presidential term (2017-2021). He was a top aide to then-Vice President Mike Pence and acting national security advisor to Trump after the ouster of General Michael Flynn in February 2017.

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”I don’t think World War III has begun, but we’re right on the precipice,” Kellogg told Fox News last week, after President Joe Biden authorized long-range missile strikes into Russia. He described the conflict as “the largest land war in Europe since the end of WWII,” where a single spark “can spin things right out of control, without even trying.”

Kellogg did not criticize the White House for making the missile decision, however, saying that it would give Trump “more leverage” to negotiate come January.

Richard Grenell, the former US ambassador to Germany and Trump’s former acting director of national intelligence, had also been a candidate for the job.

According to Reuters, Kellog and another former Trump aide, Fred Fleitz, co-authored the proposal for ending the Russia-Ukraine conflict that Vice President-elect JD Vance outlined in a September interview.

The plan would freeze the conflict along the current line of confrontation without recognizing Russia’s sovereignty over territories claimed by Ukraine, while putting off consideration of Kiev’s membership in NATO for a future date. Moscow would be forced to the negotiating table by a threat of US increasing its aid to Kiev, while Ukraine would get a promise of more American weapons if it agreed to the talks. Both Russia and Ukraine have dismissed the rumored proposal as a non-starter, however.

Kellogg served in the US Army and was chief of staff of the 82nd Airborne Division during the first Gulf War (1990-1991). After the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, he was appointed chief operating officer of the occupation authority in Baghdad.

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