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Senior Ukrainian official: US and Ukraine sign a memorandum to begin a mineral deal

Ukraine announced on Thursday that Kyiv had signed a Memorandum with Washington as an initial step to clinching a deal on developing minerals in Ukraine. This is a deal pushed by U.S. president Donald Trump.

Trump has said that the agreement could be signed as soon as next week.

Yulia Shvyrydenko (Ukraine's first vice-premier and minister of economy) announced on social media the signing of the memorandum.

She wrote: "We are pleased to announce the signing of a Memorandum of Intent with our American Partners, which opens the door for an Economic Partnership Agreement, and the creation of the Investment Fund for the Reconstruction of Ukraine."

The Trump administration had offered a more comprehensive deal at the end last week, so a Ukrainian delegation went to Washington for negotiations. The initial framework agreement has not been signed.

Trump said to reporters in the White House: "We've got a mineral deal that I think will be signed Thursday."

Trump has called for a deal that would give the United States privileged access to Ukraine’s minerals and natural resources. He sees this as recompense for Washington’s military assistance to Ukraine during former President Joe Biden's tenure.

Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury secretary, said that "we are still working on the detail" and the signing could happen by next Friday.

He said, "It is essentially what we had agreed upon previously." "When the President was here, there was a memorandum. We moved straight to the important part, which I believe is an 80-page contract that we will be signing.

The White House has not responded to a request from a journalist for more information on the agreement's timing and content.

The Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that both countries would be able to sign the Memorandum of Understanding online later on in the day.

This is a letter of intent. Zelenskiy, a reporter in Kyiv told reporters that they had positive and constructive intentions.

He said that the U.S. offered to sign the Memorandum of Understanding before the Comprehensive Deal, which requires ratification by the Ukrainian Parliament.

Svyrydenko said earlier that Kyiv made significant progress in discussing the agreement with Washington, and the Memorandum was the stage where this progress could be recorded. Reporting by Yuliia Dysa in Kyiv and Angelo Amante in Washington. Editing by Mark Heinrich and Anna Driver.

(source: Reuters)