This piece cuts through the diplomatic fog to reveal a stark reality: the proposed security architecture for Ukraine is currently more "napkin sketch" than binding treaty. Laura Rozen exposes a dangerous gap between the urgent need for legally enforceable guarantees and a U.S. draft that offers vague "assurances" contingent on presidential discretion. For anyone tracking the future of European security, the evidence here suggests that without immediate congressional ratification, Ukraine faces a repeat of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum's fatal failure.
The Credibility Gap
Rozen anchors her analysis in the trauma of the past, noting that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is explicitly demanding a framework that avoids the "negative experience" of previous broken promises. The author highlights Zelenskyy's insistence that "security guarantees are among the most critical elements for all subsequent steps," a sentiment born from the memory of Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea and the 2022 full-scale invasion. Rozen effectively frames the current negotiations not as a fresh start, but as a desperate attempt to fix a system that has already failed once.
The core of the argument rests on the distinction between political promises and legal obligations. Rozen writes, "We believe this document should be approved by the U.S. Congress. This would mean real, solid, legally binding security guarantees for our country." This is a crucial pivot; without legislative backing, the executive branch's word remains subject to the whims of future administrations. The coverage rightly identifies that "security has to be real, especially since some parts of the Trump administration are talking about pulling back from Europe or reinterpreting Article V in a weaker way."
"You can't do that and convince the Ukrainians that Article V-like security backing is real enough for them to trust it."
Former Ambassador Dan Fried, quoted by Rozen, delivers the piece's most biting assessment of the current U.S. posture. He warns that "the Russians have no credibility," and therefore, "what's agreed has to be tough minded." This framing is essential because it shifts the burden of proof away from Ukraine's defensive capabilities and onto the reliability of its allies. Rozen's inclusion of Fried's warning to "stop playing" and "stop allowing the Russians to play us" serves as a necessary counterweight to the administration's optimism about a quick settlement.
Critics might argue that demanding a congressional vote could delay a ceasefire indefinitely, potentially costing more lives in the interim. However, Rozen's reporting suggests that a rushed deal without ironclad security is a recipe for a third invasion, which would ultimately cost far more.
The "Napkin" Agreement
The most damning section of Rozen's piece comes from her synthesis of reports on the actual text of the U.S. proposal. Citing a detailed report from Ukraine's Mirror of the Week, Rozen describes the current draft as an "improvised set of 'under-the-table understandings' hastily sketched on a napkin." This metaphor is not just colorful; it underscores the lack of legal rigor in a document that is supposed to prevent a nuclear-armed aggressor from launching another war.
Rozen details how the proposed text creates conditions where the U.S. response to a Russian violation is not automatic. The agreement reportedly states that an attack must be "significant, deliberate… and prolonged" before allies are compelled to act. As Rozen notes, this gives "allies ample room to reflect and deliberate in the event of an incident." In the context of a fast-moving battlefield, such ambiguity is not a diplomatic nuance; it is a fatal loophole.
The author further highlights the vagueness of the proposed measures, which range from "armed forces" to "logistical assistance" based solely on what the "leader of the free world deems necessary." This discretionary language is the antithesis of the "devastating" reaction NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte says is required. Rozen writes, "If Ukraine signs the 'Trump peace plan' in the form currently being thrust upon us..., then our country will be left without its territories, without security guarantees, without the ability to manage the funds for its reconstruction."
"This package of documents bears no resemblance to serious international agreements."
This section of the coverage is particularly effective because it moves beyond the high-level rhetoric of "peace" to the granular details of enforcement. By exposing the "minerals agreement" that places Ukraine's natural resources under American control, Rozen adds a layer of economic coercion to the security dilemma. It suggests that the proposed deal is less about mutual defense and more about transactional extraction.
The Stakes of Ambiguity
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte's comments, as presented by Rozen, provide the necessary counter-narrative of urgency. Rutte argues that "there have to be security guarantees in place of such a quality and level that Putin knows, if he tries again, the reaction will be devastating." Rozen juxtaposes this clear-eyed demand for deterrence against the administration's vague "assurances." The tension is palpable: the alliance's top military leader knows what is needed, but the executive branch is offering a draft that looks like a "hasty" compromise.
Rozen also notes the human cost of this ambiguity. While the text focuses on policy, the implication is clear: without a "tough minded" agreement, the "25,000 soldiers" Russia lost last month is just a prelude to further slaughter. The coverage reminds us that "no one is interested in a third Russian invasion," yet the current diplomatic trajectory risks making it inevitable if the security guarantees are not strengthened.
The author's choice to highlight the "Coalition of the Willing" meeting where Zelenskyy addressed 30 nations reinforces the global nature of this failure. It is not just a U.S.-Ukraine issue; it is a test of the entire Western security architecture. As Rozen puts it, "This is the test" for whether the West can stand ready against a dictator with "crazy ideas of some historical whatever he has."
Bottom Line
Rozen's most compelling contribution is her forensic dissection of the proposed peace plan's legal weaknesses, proving that "assurances" are not "guarantees." The piece's greatest vulnerability is its reliance on the assumption that the U.S. Congress will actually intervene to fix the executive branch's draft, a political hurdle that remains unproven. Readers should watch closely to see if the "napkin" language is replaced by binding legislative text before any signatures are put to paper.