American Party Proposes Senate-Led Diplomatic Approach to Resolve Ukraine-Russia War

The American Party has unveiled a three-phase 'Plan B' strategy involving bipartisan Senate negotiations and European air defense deployment to break the diplomatic stalemate in the Ukraine conflict.

September 4, 2025
American Party Proposes Senate-Led Diplomatic Approach to Resolve Ukraine-Russia War

The American Party has announced a comprehensive strategy to address the ongoing Ukraine-Russia war, proposing a shift from current diplomatic efforts that have failed to produce a ceasefire or peace process. The plan emerges amid continued military stalemate and rising humanitarian costs, including recent Russian attacks that killed 25 civilians in Kyiv.

The proposal centers on creating a bipartisan Senate Select committee to serve as primary U.S. negotiators with Ukrainian leaders, European partners, and Russian ministerial-level officials. This approach aims to incorporate diverse political perspectives while maintaining presidential authority over final decisions. The committee would engage with the G20 and other nations to build international consensus for ending the conflict, which has disrupted global security and economic stability.

Concurrently, the plan calls for legislative action to restrict foreign property ownership, particularly targeting Russian and Chinese nationals who currently face no blanket federal restrictions on purchasing U.S. residential and commercial property. This measure represents a significant policy shift in response to Russia's compartmentalization of the war while seeking continued trade and diplomatic exchanges.

The most substantial military component involves deploying the European SkyShield Initiative in western Ukraine, with planned expansion to central and northern regions. This multinational air defense project, involving approximately 24 nations, would establish a ground-based, multi-layered network to protect against drones and missiles without engaging Russian aircraft directly. The strategy aims to provide security guarantees for most Ukrainian territory while containing the conflict to eastern regions and Crimea, with low perceived escalation risk.

The American Party, describing itself as a pragmatic problem-solving organization free from traditional ideological constraints, emphasizes that Russia should have no veto power over peace initiatives given its history of misrepresenting intentions before the 2022 invasion. The proposal acknowledges that the root conflict stems from Russia's refusal to accept Ukrainian sovereignty, dating back to the 2014 annexation of Crimea that violated international agreements including the Budapest Memorandum.

This approach represents a fundamental rethinking of diplomatic engagement amid stalled negotiations, where previous efforts including six trips to Moscow and an Alaska summit failed to produce ceasefire agreements. Russian demands for recognition of Crimea sovereignty, NATO non-expansion, and Donbas control remain unacceptable to Ukraine, creating the current impasse that the new strategy attempts to overcome through multilateral pressure and enhanced defensive capabilities.