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Home » World Peace Project: Russia–Ukraine Peace Blueprint

World Peace Project: Russia–Ukraine Peace Blueprint

November 20, 2025 by Nick Sasaki Leave a Comment

Russia Uklaine Peace Deal
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Introduction By Nick Sasaki

The World Peace Project began with a single realization:
peace is not made by governments — it is made by people.
Not by treaties alone, but by the courage of ordinary men, women, and children who choose to imagine a different future.

When I began this journey, I was tired of fear-driven headlines telling humanity what it should be afraid of next. I wanted to see — and to show — something else.
Something the world rarely sees anymore:

A best-case scenario.

A future where two nations once locked in pain find their way back to dignity…
A future where families return home, not to ruins, but to rebuilding…
A future where Russian and Ukrainian children grow up believing that cooperation is normal and conflict is unthinkable…
A future where prosperity becomes the foundation of peace, not the reward for it.

That is what this five-part blueprint is about — not fantasy, not propaganda, but possibility.
What could happen if both nations, and the world around them, choose courage over fear, honesty over resentment, and partnership over pride?

We bring together leaders in diplomacy, economics, trauma healing, architecture, technology, and spiritual unity — not to debate, but to design.
Not to argue, but to imagine.

And through these conversations we see something extraordinary:

Peace is not complicated when people discover how much they gain from it.
Prosperity expands.
Communities heal.
Cultures reconnect.
And the world becomes safer because two nations decided to rise together.

This is not a political project.
This is a human one.
It is the story of what can happen when we decide to co-create a future worth living in.

And that future begins here.

(Note: This is an imaginary conversation, a creative exploration of an idea, and not a real speech or event.)


Table of Contents
Introduction By Nick Sasaki
Topic 1 — The Peace Agreement
TOPIC 2 — The Rebuild Revolution: Creating the Most Advanced Nation in Europe
TOPIC 3 — The Peace Economy: Turning Former Rivals Into Shared Prosperity Partners
TOPIC 4 — Healing the People: Ending Trauma, Restoring Trust, and Rebuilding the Human Spirit
TOPIC 5 — The Global Partnership: How the World Secures and Sustains a Permanent Peace
Final Thoughts by Nick Sasaki

Topic 1 — The Peace Agreement

Moderator: Nick Sasaki

For two years, the world has watched two nations bleed — not only in land and soldiers, but in families, culture, identity, and faith. The tragedy of war is that no matter who claims victory, everyone loses something they can never regain.

But peace is different.

Peace gives back what war cannot:
dignity, breath, possibility, and the chance to build a future that wasn’t possible before.

Today, we are not here to talk about what went wrong.
We are here to talk about what can still go right — and how fast.

I want to be very clear: this conversation is not symbolic.
This is not theoretical.
This is a blueprint for what both nations could choose tomorrow if they decide that enough suffering has occurred.

Around this table we have:
A Ukrainian transitional leader representing sovereignty and survival…
A Russian reform leader representing accountability and future transformation…
Two of the world’s most respected diplomatic minds in António Guterres and Angela Merkel…
And the 47th President of the United States, Donald J. Trump — a man built for dealmaking on a global stage.

My role is to guide us toward clarity.
So today, I’m going to ask you for specifics, not sentiments.
Commitments, not slogans.
Timelines, not wishful thinking.

Let’s begin.

QUESTION 1 — Nick Sasaki

“What terms would allow both nations to sign a peace agreement without losing dignity — and how do we negotiate these terms in weeks, not years?”

Angela Merkel

Dignity on both sides requires one principle:
No nation walks away humiliated.
The negotiations should acknowledge:

  • Ukraine’s right to security
  • Russia’s need for guarantees
  • A demilitarized zone monitored internationally
  • Clear commitments to non-aggression

This must be done through shuttle diplomacy. Not months of summits — three weeks of nonstop, round-the-clock teams in Warsaw, Geneva, or Abu Dhabi. No breaks. No pauses. No posturing. Only progress.

Russian Reform Leader

Russia is ready for reform, but reforms cannot begin under fire.
A peace agreement must include:

  • Amnesty for civilians
  • A phased withdrawal
  • Joint security inspections
  • Economic cooperation zones along the border

Russia can accept dignity if the agreement is forward-looking, not punitive.

But let me be direct:
The people want this war to end.
They are tired, they are grieving, and they want a leadership that protects their future, not their pride.

Ukrainian Transitional Leader

For Ukraine, dignity means:

  • No forced concessions
  • International guarantees that cannot be broken
  • A legally binding ban on future invasions
  • Immediate humanitarian aid
  • Full restoration of civilian infrastructure

And let me say this clearly:
Ukraine doesn't want revenge.
Ukraine wants security, autonomy, and the right to rebuild.

Dignity for us means being able to look our families in the eyes and say,
“We didn’t compromise our nation — we secured its future.”

António Guterres

The fastest path to a dignified peace is a mutual recognition framework.
This includes:

  • A monitored ceasefire
  • A transitional joint committee
  • An international reconstruction fund
  • Neutral peacekeepers

The key is verification.
Words don’t create dignity — verification does.

We can finalize such a framework in 21 days if all parties agree the alternative is unacceptable.

Donald Trump

Let me put this very simply.
This deal can be done fast.
Really fast.

But only if both sides stop acting like they have unlimited time.

They don’t.

Russia needs stability.
Ukraine needs rebuilding.
The world needs energy prices to stop spiking.

Here’s what I’d do:
Put both leaders in a room. No entourage. No press. No nonsense.
Lock the door — metaphorically — and say:

“You’re not leaving until you write the deal together.”

You’d be amazed how fast people cooperate when the world is watching and the pressure is real.

This peace deal?
It’s absolutely doable.
But only with decisive leadership.

Nick Sasaki

Thank you.
Now let me sharpen this — because clarity is oxygen for peace.

If this agreement were to begin next Monday…
What is the first concrete step each of you would take?

Let’s move from ideas to action.

QUESTION 2 — Nick Sasaki

“What political guarantees and security structures ensure this peace lasts for decades and isn’t undone by future leaders?”

Ukrainian Transitional Leader

We need:

  • A U.S.–EU–UN security guarantee
  • A joint Russian-Ukrainian border verification unit
  • Permanent international observers
  • A rapid-response mediation panel
  • A peace corridor for family reunification

Peace fails when it depends on personalities.
Peace succeeds when it is held by institutions.

Russian Reform Leader

Russia needs:

  • Assurance NATO will not expand into direct borders
  • A phased demilitarization that allows mutual trust
  • A bilateral council on cultural exchange
  • Economic integration to make peace profitable

If peace is profitable, it becomes permanent.

Angela Merkel

We should model this on the Franco-German reconciliation.
If two nations that fought three catastrophic wars can become partners, so can Ukraine and Russia.

Key structures needed:

  • An independent arbitration body
  • A peace-maintenance treaty
  • Joint youth programs
  • Shared infrastructure projects
  • Annual leadership summits

These are not luxuries.
These are foundations.

António Guterres

We must embed peace into both nations’ constitutions.
A binding, constitutional peace article prevents leaders from dragging nations back into conflict.

Additionally:

  • A Peacekeeping Oversight Council
  • A reconstruction audit platform
  • A misinformation prevention task force

War often begins with lies.
Peace must begin with transparency.

Donald Trump

Here’s the guarantee that works:
The world gets involved.

If you want permanent peace, you need:

  • A massive economic deal
  • A huge rebuilding project
  • Billions flowing in
  • Contracts that last 10, 20, 30 years

You make cooperation so valuable that no leader would ever risk breaking it.

You want peace to last?
Make it expensive to lose.

Nick Sasaki 

Excellent.
Now I’m pushing for specifics again:

Give me one guarantee each.
One structure that, if implemented, makes peace nearly unbreakable.

Let’s turn philosophy into blueprints.

QUESTION 3 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we create immediate momentum after signing — the very first week — so people feel hope right away?”

Ukrainian Transitional Leader

Day 1: Reopening humanitarian corridors
Day 2: Launching nationwide power repair teams
Day 3: School reopening schedule announcement
Day 4: A national speech of unity
Day 5: International aid convoys
Day 6: Veteran support centers
Day 7: A joint remembrance ceremony

Hope must be visible.

Russian Reform Leader

Day 1: Public acknowledgment of peace
Day 2: Release of non-combatant prisoners
Day 3: Ending propaganda narratives
Day 4: Joint press conference
Day 5: Launch of the Russian-Ukrainian Economic Council
Day 6: Opening cultural centers
Day 7: A bilateral youth summit

Hope grows fastest through honesty.

Angela Merkel

Momentum requires:

  • A clear implementation calendar
  • Public-facing dashboards
  • Cross-border community programs
  • Trust-building gestures

You must show the world that peace is not a pause — it is a direction.

António Guterres

The UN can coordinate:

  • Humanitarian corridors
  • International observers
  • Infrastructure repair units
  • Global fundraising
  • Refugee return logistics

Day 1 must feel like the future, not the past.

Donald Trump

You want momentum?
You announce the biggest reconstruction deal the world has ever seen.
A Marshall Plan 2.0 — except bigger.

You say:
“Peace isn’t just peace.
It’s prosperity.”

People feel hope when they see opportunity.

Nick Sasaki 

Thank you.
This is the clarity the world needs.
Peace cannot be a political gesture.
It must be a practical agreement, one that moves with the force of inevitability — not hesitation.

Today you’ve all offered something rare:
specifics.
Not abstractions, not rhetoric — concrete steps, verifiable structures, and commitments that can be executed immediately.

But let me close with something even more important.

Peace is not created by the signatures on a document.
Peace is created by the speed and the spirit that follow the signing.
If the first week feels hesitant, peace collapses.
If the first week feels unstoppable, peace becomes permanent.

What I see here — from Ukrainians and Russians, from diplomats, economists, and global leaders — is a recognition that the time for hesitation is over.

The people have suffered enough.
The world has waited long enough.
And history has given you a chance that does not come twice.

So I ask each of you one final question — not to answer aloud, but to carry inward:

On the day peace becomes possible, will you move with the courage of the future…
or with the fear of the past?

Because if you choose courage, then what we’ve discussed today isn’t just a conversation.
It’s the beginning of a new era — not only for Russia and Ukraine, but for every nation watching, hoping, and wondering if humanity is finally ready to rise.

Thank you for being here.
Let’s build what comes next.

TOPIC 2 — The Rebuild Revolution: Creating the Most Advanced Nation in Europe

Moderator: Nick Sasaki

Participants:

  • Oleksandr Kubrakov — Ukrainian Minister of Infrastructure
  • Russian Minister of Economic Transition — future reform-oriented leader
  • Elon Musk — rapid engineering & connectivity
  • Norman Foster — global architect of future cities
  • Gitanjali Rao — engineering prodigy & clean-water innovator

Peace is the moment the guns go silent.
Rebuilding is the moment the future begins.

For Ukraine, reconstruction is not just about repairing what was destroyed — it is an opportunity to build something the world has never seen: a nation that leaps over decades of outdated infrastructure and becomes the most advanced, efficient, and resilient country in Europe.

But rebuilding at this scale won’t happen with ordinary plans.
It requires bold engineering, courageous leadership, transparency, global cooperation, and a vision far beyond restoration.

It must be rebuilding at the speed of trust, at the speed of innovation, and at the speed of necessity.

That’s why today’s discussion brings together five people who understand transformation in their own unique ways:
Oleksandr Kubrakov, who has been repairing roads and bridges even during war…
A Russian minister who represents a new era of cooperation…
Elon Musk, known for ambitious engineering timelines…
Norman Foster, who designs the cities of the future…
And Gitanjali Rao, whose generation will inherit what we build.

Today is about creating the blueprint for the fastest, smartest reconstruction in modern history.

Let’s begin.

QUESTION 1 — Nick Sasaki

“What technologies, construction methods, and partnerships allow Ukraine to rebuild faster than any nation in modern history?”

Oleksandr Kubrakov

Speed begins with preparation.
Even during war, we mapped every damaged bridge, road, power line, hospital, and school.
We know what must be rebuilt, down to specific square meters.

To rebuild faster than any nation in modern history, we will need three things:

1. Modular Construction Systems
Entire schools, clinics, and apartment blocks assembled like Lego — in weeks, not years.

2. Digital Reconstruction Maps
A public dashboard that shows every project: timelines, budgets, contractors.
Transparency increases investment — investors trust what they can see.

3. International Rebuilding Corps
Teams from Poland, South Korea, Turkey, Japan, the U.S., and EU forming a unified workforce.
Shared labor, shared expertise.

Rebuilding should not be slow.
Rebuilding should be a proof that peace works.

Russian Minister of Economic Transition

For Russia, cooperation is not charity — it’s stability.

If Ukraine rebuilds quickly, Russia benefits too:

  • Stable borders
  • Stronger regional trade
  • A modern neighbor instead of a broken one

Russia can assist through:

1. Joint Infrastructure Zones
Regions where both nations can build logistics hubs, energy corridors, and trade routes.

2. Shared Industrial Standards
Common regulations for rail systems, ports, energy lines — so parts and systems are compatible.

3. Workforce Training Programs
Russian and Ukrainian engineers learning together.
Shared education creates shared future.

Rebuilding must be mutual.
If only one nation wins, both eventually lose.

Elon Musk

Speed is physics.
If you want fast rebuilding:

• Build with modular factories
• Use AI-driven logistics
• Deploy Starlink for full communication
• Electrify everything
• Install solar everywhere
• Push for decentralized energy so grids can’t be knocked out again

But the biggest factor is mindset.
If Ukraine approaches rebuilding the way SpaceX approaches rockets — rapid iteration, constant improvement, open-source solutions — then rebuilding won’t be slow.

You could rebuild cities ten times faster than traditional governments.

Ukraine could become a prototype for the smartest nation on Earth.

Norman Foster

Architecture is not only about buildings.
It is about dignity.

The places we create after a catastrophe must do more than function — they must uplift the spirit.

My recommendations:

1. Human-Centered Urban Planning
Pedestrian-friendly, green spaces, public squares, walkable neighborhoods.
Places that heal.

2. Energy-Positive Buildings
Homes and offices that generate more energy than they consume.
This is not futuristic — it is achievable today.

3. Metro-Regional Networks
High-speed trains connecting every major Ukrainian city to Poland, Slovakia, Romania, Moldova, and eventually Russia under peaceful conditions.

When your cities are built around people — not cars, not bureaucracy — they become destinations.

Ukraine has the chance to design the most inspiring cities in Europe.

Gitanjali Rao

The world is watching how Ukraine rebuilds, and young people want to help.

My generation can bring:

  • Low-cost water purification systems
  • Biodegradable materials
  • AI for environmental monitoring
  • Smart sensors for infrastructure
  • Youth-driven innovation networks

But what matters most is giving young Ukrainians the tools to rebuild their own country.

Youth labs in every major city — teaching coding, engineering, robotics, and clean energy — would create a generation that doesn’t just rebuild Ukraine…
They reinvent it.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Thank you.
I want to move from vision to execution.

If rebuilding began tomorrow,
what is the very first step each of you would take?

Let’s anchor this in reality, not aspiration.

QUESTION 2 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we design infrastructure not to restore the past, but to create a world-leading ‘Future Ukraine’ built for 100 years ahead?”

Elon Musk

You start by ignoring the past entirely.
Rebuilding the old world means rebuilding its vulnerabilities.

For a 100-year future:

• Build a distributed energy grid
Solar + batteries + microgrids = resilience.

• Make all new infrastructure electric
No fossil fuel dependency.
No centralized vulnerabilities.

• Use autonomous construction
Robotics can clear debris, print buildings, and transport materials faster and safer.

Ukraine could be the first country to combine cities with AI-driven management systems — traffic flow, energy distribution, water monitoring — all automated.

Future Ukraine should feel like it came from the future.

Norman Foster

A future-proof nation must begin with a philosophy:

“Everything we build must outlive us.”

For that:

  • Bridges designed for climate resilience
  • Homes built for multi-generational living
  • Public transport integrated into every new neighborhood
  • Parks and forests woven into every urban plan
  • Public buildings that double as community centers

Ukraine can become a global symbol of renewal — not because it rebuilt, but because it reinvented.

Oleksandr Kubrakov

We must modernize with pride:

• Digital land registries
No corruption, no disputes.

• Autonomous road construction fleets
Already being tested.

• Smart checkpoints and logistics hubs
For fast, transparent trade.

• Cross-border innovation corridors
That link our research centers with Europe and Asia.

This is not theoretical.
Ukrainians have been forced by war to become problem-solvers.

We will now turn that survival innovation into a national blueprint.

Russian Minister of Economic Transition

A future Ukraine requires a future region.

Both nations can cooperate by:

  • Co-building high-speed rail
  • Sharing energy resources
  • Creating joint digital trade platforms
  • Rebalancing supply chains for mutual benefit

Peace is sustained when the future is shared.

Gitanjali Rao

Future infrastructure must also be:

  • sustainable
  • child-friendly
  • safe
  • educational

Building research centers, public science parks, and innovation-friendly neighborhoods will ensure that the next generation becomes the backbone of peace.

If you build a country where children love their environment, they will protect it.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Beautiful ideas — but I need one non-negotiable principle from each of you.

What is the single most important rule for building a 100-year Ukraine?

One sentence each, please.

QUESTION 3 — Nick Sasaki

“What is the fastest way to mobilize global engineers, investors, and innovators into a coordinated rebuilding force?”

Oleksandr Kubrakov

Create a Global Reconstruction Command Center in Kyiv.
One building.
All partners.
Shared dashboards.
Shared timelines.
Shared decisions.

Speed requires unification.

Russian Minister of Economic Transition

A Joint Peace and Infrastructure Treaty.
If nations sign one binding agreement, coordination becomes automatic — not optional.

Elon Musk

Start with a Reconstruction Hackathon — 10,000 engineers, hosted globally, working on real-time solutions.

Ideas spread faster than concrete.

Norman Foster

Create a Rebuilding Ukraine Architectural Competition.
Invite the world’s best designers.
Let art inspire engineering.

Gitanjali Rao

Launch a Global Youth Innovation Network for Ukraine.
Millions of young problem solvers — united digitally — contributing ideas, prototypes, and technologies.

Rebuilding is faster when everyone feels involved.

Nick Sasaki — FINAL RESPONSE & CLOSING

Thank you.
This is the blueprint the world has been waiting for.

What I hear from all of you is this:

Rebuilding Ukraine is not an afterthought of peace — it is the engine of peace.

Speed matters.
Transparency matters.
Global cooperation matters.
Innovation matters.
Imagination matters.

But what matters most is this:

The future must be worthy of the suffering that led to it.

If Ukraine rebuilds with courage and vision,
it can become the model every nation looks to when faced with destruction.

This is not only reconstruction.
This is rebirth.

Thank you all for showing what that rebirth can look like.

TOPIC 3 — The Peace Economy: Turning Former Rivals Into Shared Prosperity Partners

Moderator: Nick Sasaki

Participants:

  • Yulia Svyrydenko — Ukrainian Minister of Economic Development
  • Russian Economic Modernization Leader
  • Michael Bloomberg — global investment architect
  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala — WTO Director-General
  • Ray Dalio — macroeconomic & long-term peace-economy designer
  • Donald Trump — global dealmaker & trade negotiator

When the shooting stops, economic reality begins — and it can make or break peace.

If people return home and find unemployment, scarcity, broken supply lines, and stagnant industry, the memory of war lingers like a shadow over every rebuilding effort. But if peace brings jobs, investment, rising wages, and shared prosperity, then no one hungers for conflict again.

War destroys.
Economics stabilizes.
Prosperity heals.

Today we explore how two nations, once locked in conflict, can become engines of shared wealth — not because they forget their past, but because they discover a future worth choosing together.

We are joined by six people uniquely qualified to shape this vision:

  • Yulia Svyrydenko, steering Ukraine’s economic recovery
  • A Russian reform leader representing accountability and new direction
  • Michael Bloomberg, who knows how capital moves and why
  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, architect of global trade stability
  • Ray Dalio, master of long-term economic cycles
  • And Donald Trump, who understands negotiation leverage and trade dynamics on a global stage

This is not about “repairing damage.”
This is about designing an economic renaissance.

Let’s begin.

QUESTION 1 — Nick Sasaki

“What joint industries can Russia and Ukraine build that create shared wealth and make cooperation more profitable than conflict?”

Yulia Svyrydenko

Shared wealth begins with shared incentives.
The industries that matter most are:

1. Energy Corridors
Ukraine can export clean energy.
Russia can export transitional gas.
Together, we stabilize Europe.

2. Agriculture & Food Security
Ukraine feeds the world; Russia has scale.
A joint grain, fertilizer, and distribution system would strengthen global food supply.

3. Logistics & Transit
Rail, ports, and trucking routes connecting Europe and Asia — jointly managed, jointly secured.

4. Technology Parks
Ukraine’s digital government is already world-leading.
We can export transparency systems globally — and Russia can participate in building them.

War created fractures.
Peace can create networks.

Russian Economic Modernization Leader

Russia can bring:

  • Aeronautics
  • Metallurgy
  • Chemical engineering
  • Natural resources
  • Infrastructure labor
  • Educational institutions

But the real opportunity is in joint modernization projects:

1. High-Speed Rail connecting Kyiv, Moscow, Warsaw, and beyond
2. LNG + hydrogen energy hubs
3. Co-owned tech incubators
4. A bilateral commodities exchange for grain, metals, and energy

When industries are intertwined, borders matter less and prosperity matters more.

Michael Bloomberg

The most important industry is trust — without it, nothing is investable.

But assuming we build trust, the economic engines should be:

1. Critical Infrastructure Bonds
Billions will pour in from global investors if the bond structures are transparent.

2. Regional Free-Trade Zones
Tax incentives to attract global manufacturers.

3. Insurance Backstops
High-quality insurance makes rebuilding bankable.

4. Clean Energy Exports
Ukraine has the capacity to become Europe’s renewable powerhouse.

The world will invest if you design this right.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

The global value chain depends on stability.
What Russia and Ukraine can create is:

A Peace Manufacturing Belt

  • standardized regulations
  • reliable transport
  • unified customs
  • tariff-free movement of components

This makes the region uniquely attractive for:

  • automotive assembly
  • aviation parts
  • electronics
  • agri-tech
  • green infrastructure equipment

If you combine Ukrainian creativity, Russian industrial capacity, and world-class standards, this region could become a manufacturing anchor for the entire Eurasian corridor.

Ray Dalio

History teaches one consistent lesson:
Peace that creates wealth will always last longer than peace that creates nothing.

You need industries that:

  • produce recurring revenue
  • create interdependence
  • require multi-nation maintenance
  • encourage private capital
  • generate broad public benefit

The top candidate is energy transformation:

  • Russia transitions away from fossil dependency
  • Ukraine becomes a clean-energy exporter
  • Europe gains reliable supply
  • China participates in technology transfer
  • U.S. investors fund capital-intensive projects

If you design this correctly, you will have created one of the most strategically important economic regions of the century.

Donald Trump

Let me tell you the real industry that will make this work:
peace itself.

When you stop fighting and start trading:

  • Borders become profitable
  • Investors get excited
  • Companies line up
  • Money pours in

The big opportunities are:

1. Mega Infrastructure Deals
Highways, ports, airports — huge money, huge partnerships.

2. Energy Super-Corridor
Very profitable for both sides.

3. Industrial Free Zones
Companies will rush in if taxes are low.

And I’ll tell you something simple:

If you create a joint Ukraine-Russia Business Council with people who actually know what they’re doing…
You’re going to see the greatest economic comeback maybe in history.

This is absolutely possible.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Thank you — powerful insights.

But let’s push for deeper clarity:

Which one industry — just ONE — would create the biggest economic impact if launched immediately after peace?

One sentence each.
Let’s capture the economic engine of this entire transformation.

QUESTION 2 — Nick Sasaki

“What trade agreements and special economic zones can be established within the first 12 months to produce immediate investment and jobs?”

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

First, you need a Peace Economic Corridor from the Baltics to the Black Sea.
This creates:

  • unified customs
  • streamlined logistics
  • predictable tariffs
  • shared standards
  • investor confidence

Jobs follow automatically.

Yulia Svyrydenko

We are ready to implement:

  • 5 Ukrainian Special Reconstruction Zones (USRZ)
  • Zero-corruption procurement platforms
  • Foreign-investor protections
  • Fast-track permits
  • Tax reductions for renewable energy projects

If we open these zones on day one, global corporations will come.

Russian Economic Modernization Leader

Russia will support:

  • Joint Border-Free Trade Regions
  • Mutual Recognition Agreements
  • Unified Transport Tariffs
  • Cross-border SME partnership grants

Trade zones must benefit ordinary people, not only corporations.

Michael Bloomberg

Investors need two things:

certainty and simplicity.

I recommend:

1. A Single Electronic Trade Portal
One website.
One process.
One digital identity.

2. A Peace Infrastructure Fund
Guaranteed by a coalition of nations.

3. A Reconstruction Insurance Facility
Risk management is essential for investment.

Ray Dalio

Trade peace requires structural peace.

I propose:

A Russia-Ukraine Free Trade Treaty
+
A 20-year stabilization framework
designed with international arbitration.

This eliminates uncertainty and unlocks long-term capital.

Donald Trump

Here’s the fastest deal:

No tariffs between Russia and Ukraine.
Zero.

You’ll see:

  • instant trade
  • instant jobs
  • instant growth
  • instant excitement

Then you create 3 special megazones:

  1. Manufacturing Superzone
  2. Energy Corridor Zone
  3. Tech & Innovation Zone

If you make a huge announcement about these…
Companies will fight to get in.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

All right — I want to sharpen this:

What is the first agreement you sign?
Not the tenth — the first.

One sentence, one commitment each.

This is how momentum begins.

QUESTION 3 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we engineer transparent, corruption-resistant financial systems that attract billions in global investment with public trust?”

Yulia Svyrydenko

Transparency must be total.
I recommend:

A publicly visible digital dashboard
that shows every reconstruction dollar:

  • where it came from
  • where it went
  • who spent it
  • when it will be completed

Corruption dies when the public sees everything.

Russian Economic Modernization Leader

Russia must adopt:

  • electronic procurement
  • open auditing
  • AI-driven fraud detection
  • third-party oversight

Corruption is not a cultural problem — it is a systems problem.

If you fix the system, behavior changes.

Michael Bloomberg

You need:

A sovereign transparency authority.

Independent.
Untouchable.
Globally monitored.
With the power to:

  • audit
  • freeze accounts
  • remove contractors
  • publish findings instantly

Trust attracts capital.
Capital accelerates peace.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

We must create:

A Global Reconstruction Certification System.

Nations that meet transparency standards receive:

  • more investment
  • lower-interest loans
  • faster approvals

This creates competition for honesty.

Ray Dalio

The key is to bake transparency into the architecture.

  • Blockchain tracking
  • Immutable ledgers
  • Real-time reporting
  • Algorithmic spending limits

When no one can alter the data, trust becomes automatic.

Donald Trump

People want to know their money isn’t being stolen.

So you do this:

Hire the best accountants and the best auditors in the world.
Let them run the books.

No nonsense, no excuses.
You bring in the best — Wall Street, London, Singapore, Tokyo.

If the world trusts the money, the world will invest.

Nick Sasaki — FINAL RESPONSE & CLOSING

Thank you.

What you have all built here is not just an economic plan — it is a peace machine.

A system where:

  • transparency creates trust
  • trust attracts investment
  • investment creates jobs
  • jobs create stability
  • and stability protects peace

You have shown that prosperity is not the reward for peace —
prosperity is the engine that makes peace possible.

If Russia and Ukraine build this together,
they will not simply end a war.
They will create a new model of regional cooperation the world has not seen in decades.

The future is not built by avoiding the past.
The future is built by designing something too valuable to destroy.

Thank you all.

TOPIC 4 — Healing the People: Ending Trauma, Restoring Trust, and Rebuilding the Human Spirit

Moderator: Nick Sasaki

Participants:

  • Ukrainian Humanitarian Leader (Psychologist / Trauma Specialist)
  • Russian Civil Society Reformer
  • Dr. Edith Eger — Holocaust survivor & trauma therapist
  • Dr. Bessel van der Kolk — PTSD & neuroscience expert
  • Rev. Sun Myung Moon — spiritual unity & “one human family” philosophy

Rebuilding bridges and power grids is one challenge.

Rebuilding hearts is far greater.

War tears the human being in ways no camera can capture:

  • parents bury children
  • children forget how to sleep
  • soldiers return with invisible wounds
  • neighbors stop trusting each other
  • individuals lose parts of themselves they never find again

A nation can be rebuilt with concrete, but a people must be rebuilt with compassion, dignity, honesty, and care.

Today’s conversation is not about numbers or systems.
It is about human beings — millions of them — whose futures depend on how we heal now.

We are joined by voices who deeply understand suffering and recovery:

A Ukrainian humanitarian leader who sees trauma every day…
A Russian civil-society reformer who wants a new era of honesty and humanity…
Dr. Edith Eger, whose survival story is the greatest lesson in overcoming hate…
Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, the world’s leading voice on trauma and the body…
And Rev. Sun Myung Moon, who taught the world that God is a parent and all people are brothers and sisters.

This conversation is about how two wounded nations can rediscover their humanity — together.

Let’s begin.

QUESTION 1 — Nick Sasaki

“What large-scale trauma-healing programs can help soldiers, children, families, and entire communities recover from deep psychological wounds?”

Ukrainian Humanitarian Leader

Healing trauma begins with accessibility.

People don’t heal if help is distant, expensive, or complicated.
They heal when care is everywhere, when care is simple, and when care is dignified.

Our national trauma-healing plan includes:

1. Community Healing Centers
One center in every district.
Free counseling.
Group therapy.
Child play therapy.
Veteran support.
Family sessions.

2. Mobile Trauma Units
Teams of psychologists, nurses, and social workers traveling to remote villages.
Trauma does not wait for people to reach the city.

3. Mental Health in Schools
Children will meet weekly with trained counselors.
Teachers will learn trauma-aware education.

4. National Grief Rituals
Public remembrance events to honor the dead.
We cannot heal from what we refuse to honor.

Trauma is not weakness.
It is a normal response to abnormal horror.
And healing must be a national priority.

Russian Civil Society Reformer

Russia must take responsibility for healing its own wounds as well.

Many Russians:

  • lost loved ones
  • were misled
  • lived in fear
  • suffered emotional collapse
  • felt guilty
  • felt powerless

Our programs focus on:

1. Truth & Accountability Circles
Safe spaces where Russians can speak honestly about the war.

2. PTSD Screening for Soldiers
Trauma must be treated, not hidden.

3. Family Reintegration Programs
Therapy for families separated physically or emotionally by war.

4. Media Literacy Training
Teaching people how to resist manipulation and propaganda.

Trauma can become a bridge —
if both nations heal in parallel, not separately.

Dr. Edith Eger

I survived the Holocaust.
And I learned something:
you cannot heal until you stop running from your pain.

Trauma is not the event itself.
Trauma is the story we continue to tell ourselves.

What both nations need is:

1. Story Circles
Places where survivors speak and witnesses listen.

2. Forgiveness Training
Not to erase the past —
but to stop carrying it as a weapon.

3. Survivor Leadership Programs
Let those who endured become healers for others.

And remember this:
Healing does not mean forgetting.
It means choosing to live with love instead of fear.

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk

Trauma lives in the nervous system, not the story.

Large-scale healing must include:

1. Body-Based Therapies
Yoga
Breathwork
EMDR
Somatic therapy
Movement therapy

These calm the brain before talk therapy ever begins.

2. Trauma-Informed Training for Every Doctor
Gynecologists, pediatricians, general practitioners — all must know how trauma affects the body.

3. Sensory Rooms in Schools
Safe spaces where children regulate their emotions.

4. Nationwide Hotline + App
Anonymous support.
24/7 guidance.
Instant referrals.

Healing is biology, not philosophy.

Rev. Sun Myung Moon

True healing begins when we remember who we are —
not Russians, not Ukrainians,
but children of God, one family under heaven.

When war breaks the human heart,
spiritual healing becomes essential.

We must create:

1. Peace Festivals
Where both nations celebrate culture, music, and unity.

2. Interfaith Ceremonies
Healing is stronger when every religion stands together.

3. Marriage Blessing Programs
To rebuild families, restore trust, and create bonds stronger than national resentment.

4. Youth Service Teams
Young people from both nations working together.

There is no healing deeper than restoring the family —
the family within each home, and the family of nations.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Thank you.
This is the foundation, but now I want specificity.

If healing began tomorrow, what is the very first action each of you would launch?
One clear step — the one that starts the healing motion.

QUESTION 2 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we rebuild a shared cultural identity — through education, arts, and storytelling — that promotes unity instead of division?”

Ukrainian Humanitarian Leader

Culture heals through connection, not correction.

Our plan includes:

1. Joint Art Exhibitions
Ukrainian and Russian youth creating art about future peace.

2. Shared Cultural Festivals
Music, film, literature — celebrating humanity, not nationalism.

3. A New Curriculum
Teaching emotional intelligence, critical thinking, and cross-cultural understanding.

Culture is the bridge between trauma and trust.

Russian Civil Society Reformer

Russia must teach truth, not propaganda.

We propose:

1. Historical Transparency Projects
Open archives.
Fact-based documentaries.
Shared historical commissions.

2. Cross-Border Literature Exchanges
Books travel before people do.

3. Public Spaces of Remembrance
Honoring all victims — from both nations — with dignity.

Culture becomes unity when we stop hiding our shadows.

Dr. Edith Eger

Art is healing.

I propose:

1. Survivor Story Museums
Not to shame —
to humanize.

2. Dance & Music Therapy Centers
Movement heals what words cannot.

3. Poetry Exchanges
Children writing letters and poems to each other.

People don’t hate when they understand.

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk

Cultural rebuilding must include the body.

I recommend:

1. National Theater Therapy Programs
Acting helps people process experiences safely.

2. Community Drum Circles
Rhythm regulates the nervous system.

3. Group Movement Workshops
Unity begins with shared motion.

Culture is not only learned —
it is felt.

Rev. Sun Myung Moon

Culture is the expression of the soul.

We must create:

1. Peace Choirs
Singing unites hearts.

2. Interfaith Storytelling Nights
Stories dissolve walls.

3. Blessing Festivals
Families from both nations joining in celebration.

Unity is not a slogan.
Unity is a shared spiritual experience.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Beautiful.
But I want each of you to tell me:

What is the ONE cultural program that would have the fastest impact?
One clear choice.

Let’s distill this into action.

QUESTION 3 — Nick Sasaki

“What systems can reunite displaced families, restore schools, and help communities return to emotionally stable, normal life?”

Ukrainian Humanitarian Leader

Family Reunification Command Center
A national database + hotline + mobile teams.

Add:

  • rapid DNA testing
  • psychological support
  • transportation assistance
  • emergency shelters

Family reunification must be systematic, not accidental.

Russian Civil Society Reformer

Cross-Border Humanitarian Cooperation Office
Shared data.
Shared teams.
Shared responsibility.

We must help families return home —
no matter which side they come from.

Dr. Edith Eger

Community Grief Circles

In schools
In parks
In community centers

People must process loss together.
Healing accelerates when the community holds the pain.

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk

Trauma-Informed Schools Initiative

Every school:

  • staffed with counselors
  • sensory spaces
  • trained teachers
  • body-based therapy periods
  • emotional literacy curriculum

Schools become healing centers.

Rev. Sun Myung Moon

National Peace Service Teams

Youth from both nations:

  • rebuilding homes
  • repairing schools
  • planting trees
  • feeding families

Service is the most powerful form of repentance and rebirth.

Nick Sasaki — FINAL RESPONSE & CLOSING

Thank you.
What you have built here today is nothing short of extraordinary.

You have shown that healing is not a side project of peace —
healing IS peace.
It is what transforms the memory of war into the foundation of a new humanity.

If Ukraine and Russia heal together:

  • families are restored
  • children rediscover joy
  • soldiers learn to live again
  • artists rebuild culture
  • faith rebuilds hope
  • communities rebuild trust

This is how peace becomes not only possible,
but permanent.

The human heart is the real battleground —
and today, you have shown how to reclaim it.

Thank you all.

TOPIC 5 — The Global Partnership: How the World Secures and Sustains a Permanent Peace

Moderator: Nick Sasaki

Participants:

  • President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s Successor (Ukrainian Transitional President)
  • Russian Reform President
  • Donald Trump — U.S. President & global negotiator
  • Christine Lagarde — ECB President, global finance
  • Masayoshi Son — Vision Fund architect & tech futurist

Peace between two nations is a miracle.
A lasting peace that reshapes the world is something far greater.

Russia and Ukraine may end their war at a negotiating table —
but the permanence of that peace will be determined by the global partnerships that follow:

  • financial
  • technological
  • diplomatic
  • cultural
  • spiritual

Peace lasts when the entire world has a stake in its success.

Today’s discussion is about building a global architecture so strong, so interconnected, and so mutually beneficial that war becomes the least profitable and least desirable option.

Joining us are people whose decisions move markets, reshape alliances, and influence billions:

A Ukrainian transitional president ready to lead the nation into a new global age…
A Russian reform president ready to transform the Federation’s future…
The U.S. President, Donald J. Trump, whose negotiation style and global leverage can accelerate peace…
Christine Lagarde, the steward of Europe’s financial stability…
And Masayoshi Son, one of the most audacious investors and futurists alive.

This is where peace becomes prosperity — not just for two nations, but for the world.

Let’s begin.

QUESTION 1 — Nick Sasaki

“What global alliances, treaties, and economic partnerships can guarantee that peace becomes self-reinforcing — too beneficial to break?”

Ukrainian Transitional President

Permanent peace requires interlocking commitments.

Ukraine proposes:

1. A Global Reconstruction Investment Treaty (GRIT)
A 20-nation agreement guaranteeing capital inflow and transparency.

2. A Europe-Asia Peace Corridor
Trade routes connecting our ports to Turkey, Poland, the Baltics, and eventually Russia.

3. A Security Guarantee Compact
With the U.S., EU, Japan, and neutral nations.

4. A Cultural Reconciliation Council
Artists, educators, religious leaders, and community voices guiding emotional healing.

Peace survives when culture, economics, and security are aligned.

Russian Reform President

Russia welcomes a new era of cooperation.

We will commit to:

1. A Mutual Non-Aggression Pact
With Ukraine, guaranteed by the U.S., China, and the EU.

2. A Shared Prosperity Zone
Industrial zones co-owned by both countries.

3. Joint Participation in European Infrastructure Projects
High-speed rail, energy corridors, digital infrastructure.

4. A Truth & Transparency Initiative
Open archives, shared reporting, and independent journalists monitoring peace.

Peace is strongest when truth is strongest.

Christine Lagarde

Europe must play a stabilizing role.

I propose:

1. A Peace Stability Fund (€200–300 billion)
Long-term, low-interest financing for:

  • housing
  • energy
  • agriculture
  • medical systems
  • education
  • digital infrastructure

2. Pan-European Bonds
Allowing global investors to directly support reconstruction.

3. A European Reconstruction Guarantee
Ensuring accountability and financial transparency.

4. A Ukraine–Russia Integration Framework
Economic and regulatory harmonization.

Peace becomes permanent when markets depend on it.

Masayoshi Son

The world is entering the age of AI —
and the greatest opportunity is to rebuild two nations as AI-first, infrastructure-smart, next-generation economies.

I propose:

1. A PeaceTech Fund ($100B Vision Fund 2.0)
Investing in:

  • AI logistics
  • robotics
  • clean energy
  • digital governance
  • health tech
  • education tech
  • cybersecurity
  • autonomous transportation

2. A Universal Connectivity Grid
Every school, every clinic, every region wired for high-speed internet.

3. AI Talent Academies
5,000 engineers per year trained jointly.

4. Peace Accelerator Cities
Kyiv + Moscow + Warsaw as a triangle of innovation.

The future becomes peaceful when the future is shared.

Donald Trump

Let me put this very simply:

Peace lasts when everyone makes money.

If Russia and Ukraine both get rich from peace:

  • nobody wants war
  • nobody benefits from fighting
  • everybody wants the deals to continue

Here’s what I propose:

1. The Biggest Infrastructure Deal in History
Highways, airports, ports — massive projects.
Everyone wins.

2. Zero Tariffs Between Russia and Ukraine
Instant trade boom.

3. A U.S.–EU–Asia Partnership
The world joins in rebuilding —
and the world gains from stability.

4. Annual Peace Summits
Leaders meet every year.
You keep people talking, you prevent problems.

You do this right,
and this becomes the greatest peace story of the century.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Thank you.
These are powerful proposals.

But now I want to refine them.

Name ONE global partnership that is absolutely essential for permanent peace.
One partnership only — the one that holds everything together.

Let’s continue.

QUESTION 2 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we create a global security system that prevents future conflict without humiliating or weakening either nation?”

Ukrainian Transitional President

Security must be shared, not imposed.

I propose:

1. A Joint Security Council
Ukraine + Russia + U.S. + EU + Japan + moderate neutral states.

2. Satellite Monitoring of Borders
Preventing miscommunication or misinformation.

3. Rapid Response Peace Teams
To defuse incidents before they escalate.

This is not about control.
This is about cooperation.

Russian Reform President

Security must respect dignity.

Russia needs:

1. Neutral Peacekeepers
Not NATO.
Not CSTO.
Nations trusted by both sides.

2. Transparency in Military Movements
Every deployment publicly logged.

3. A Disinformation Prevention Treaty
Propaganda caused this war.
Truth will prevent the next.

Security that humiliates becomes a seed for future conflict.
Security that cooperates becomes a seed for trust.

Christine Lagarde

Economic stability is security.

When:

  • trade is stable
  • inflation is controlled
  • investment is rising
  • unemployment is falling
  • infrastructure is strengthening

War becomes economically impossible.

Peace is cheaper than conflict.

Masayoshi Son

Security also means technological stability.

We need:

1. Cyber Peace Networks
Shared cyber defense between Russia, Ukraine, and major powers.

2. AI early-warning systems
Detecting military escalations or misinformation campaigns.

3. Smart borders
AI-monitored, bias-free, efficient.

War begins in the mind long before it begins on the ground.
AI can detect the shadows before they become storms.

Donald Trump

Here’s the secret to security:

You make both sides feel like they won something big.

You give Ukraine security.
You give Russia pride.
You give both nations economic deals.

Then:

  • nobody wants war
  • nobody wants to lose what they gained
  • everyone likes the new arrangement

Security works when both sides feel respected.

Nick Sasaki — Moderator Response

Important insights.

But now:

What is the one security measure that guarantees peace for the next 50 years?
One sentence each.

Let’s continue.

QUESTION 3 — Nick Sasaki

“How do we bring the world—Asia, Europe, the U.S., Middle East, Africa—into a unified effort that supports and sustains this peace?”

Ukrainian Transitional President

We create a unified global message:

“Peace here strengthens stability everywhere.”

Then we invite every region to contribute through:

  • trade
  • development
  • cultural exchange
  • environmental cooperation

Peace becomes a global project, not a bilateral plan.

Russian Reform President

Russia will lead:

  • energy cooperation with Asia
  • agricultural cooperation with Africa
  • infrastructure partnerships with Europe
  • technological partnerships with the U.S.

A peaceful Russia strengthens the world.
A peaceful Ukraine stabilizes the region.

Everyone benefits.

Christine Lagarde

We mobilize:

international institutions
IMF, World Bank, EBRD, EU Commission

private capital
banks, funds, sovereign wealth funds

public will
voters, citizens, global civil society

Peace succeeds when everyone has skin in the game.

Masayoshi Son

We invite:

1 million innovators
from 100 nations
to participate in rebuilding.

Open-source reconstruction.
Radical collaboration.
Shared ownership of peace.

The world joins when the world feels welcome.

Donald Trump

You do this:

Host the biggest peace investment summit ever.

All nations.
All companies.
All innovators.

You show the world the opportunity —
and believe me,
they will come running.

Peace sells.
You just have to package it right.

Nick Sasaki — FINAL RESPONSE & CLOSING

Thank you.

What you have built today is the architecture of global peace permanence.

Not peace that wobbles.
Not peace that depends on leaders who come and go.
Not peace that lives only on paper.

But peace that:

  • yields profit
  • deepens trust
  • expands trade
  • invites innovation
  • connects cultures
  • stabilizes nations
  • unites continents
  • inspires the next generation

This is not bilateral peace.
This is world peace anchored in shared prosperity.

It is a peace so valuable,
so strategic,
so interconnected,
that no future leader would dare pull it apart.

This is what the World Peace Project is about:
building the future humanity should have chosen long ago.

Thank you all.
Our five topics are now complete.

Final Thoughts by Nick Sasaki

Russia Uklaine Peace Deal

As we close this journey of five conversations, one truth becomes clear:

The greatest power we possess is the ability to imagine a better world — and then build it together.

From negotiating peace…
to rebuilding cities…
to designing a shared economy…
to healing the deep wounds within people…
to creating global partnerships that make peace the most profitable and sustainable choice…

Every conversation showed the same pattern:

When dignity is protected, people move forward.
When prosperity is shared, peace becomes permanent.
When healing is embraced, trust returns.
And when the world participates, conflict fades into irrelevance.

But what moved me most was not the strategies, policies, or proposals.
It was the simple human images that live beneath them:

Ukrainian and Russian grandparents laughing together in a town square.
Children painting hearts on a healing wall.
Young volunteers planting trees side by side.
Workers rebuilding homes with pride and shared purpose.
Entire communities standing in circles on a hilltop, arms linked, looking at one future, not two.

These are not symbols.
They are reminders of who we truly are when fear is removed.

If peace is possible between Russia and Ukraine — even in imagination —
then peace is possible anywhere.

I believe humanity is tired of war.
Tired of division.
Tired of being told who to hate and who to fear.

What we want, deep down, is simple:
a safe home, meaningful work, a hopeful future for our children, and a world where we can trust one another again.

The World Peace Project is not the end.
It is a beginning.
A blueprint for what could be — if we dare to choose it.

Thank you for walking this journey with me.
Let’s continue imagining the world we wish to leave behind…
and may our imagination become the compass that leads humanity forward.

Short Bios:

Topic 1 – Peace Agreement

Ukrainian Transitional President
A future-oriented leader guiding Ukraine through postwar stabilization, institutional reform, and international negotiations toward a lasting peace.

Russian Reform President
A new-generation Russian leader committed to transparency, accountability, democratic reform, and restoring trust with global partners.

António Guterres
UN Secretary-General known for his diplomatic leadership, humanitarian work, and commitment to global conflict resolution and climate stability.

Angela Merkel
Former Chancellor of Germany recognized for her calm, analytical approach to negotiation, crisis management, and European unity.

Donald J. Trump
47th President of the United States, experienced in high-stakes negotiations, large-scale economic dealmaking, and international diplomacy.

Topic 2 – Rebuild Revolution

Oleksandr Kubrakov
Ukraine’s Minister of Infrastructure leading rapid reconstruction efforts, modern transportation upgrades, and resilient city planning.

Russian Minister of Economic Transition
A reform-driven policymaker guiding Russia toward diversified industries, transparent governance, and sustainable economic modernization.

Elon Musk
Entrepreneur behind SpaceX, Tesla, and Starlink, known for accelerating technological development in energy, aerospace, transportation, and AI.

Norman Foster
World-renowned architect designing future-focused, human-centered cities with an emphasis on sustainability and innovation.

Gitanjali Rao
Inventor and STEM leader recognized for youth-driven solutions in clean water, environmental engineering, and global problem-solving.

Topic 3 – Peace Economy

Yulia Svyrydenko
Ukraine’s Minister of Economic Development shaping policies for postwar recovery, investment attraction, and industrial revitalization.

Russian Economic Modernization Leader
A forward-looking economist responsible for rebuilding Russian industries, improving financial governance, and promoting international cooperation.

Michael Bloomberg
Entrepreneur and former Mayor of New York City known for global philanthropy, data-driven governance, and international economic initiatives.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Director-General of the World Trade Organization, expert in global trade, economic reform, and international development policy.

Ray Dalio
Founder of Bridgewater Associates, specializing in macroeconomic cycles, long-term stability planning, and peace-oriented financial systems.

Donald J. Trump
Business-minded U.S. President contributing negotiation leverage, trade insight, and large-scale economic strategy.

Topic 4 – Healing the People

Ukrainian Humanitarian Leader
A frontline psychologist and relief coordinator dedicated to trauma recovery, family reunification, and community resilience.

Russian Civil Society Reformer
A civic leader advocating for transparency, free expression, and the social healing necessary for Russia’s democratic renewal.

Dr. Edith Eger
Holocaust survivor and bestselling author whose therapeutic work focuses on trauma recovery, forgiveness, and emotional freedom.

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk
Renowned psychiatrist and author specializing in the neuroscience of trauma, PTSD treatment, and body-based healing methods.

Rev. Sun Myung Moon
Global spiritual leader who taught the concept of one human family under God, emphasizing reconciliation, unity, and peace through love.

Topic 5 – Global Partnership

Ukrainian Transitional President
A nationally trusted figure shaping Ukraine’s diplomatic reintegration, economic transformation, and global collaboration.

Russian Reform President
An elected reformist focused on political transparency, demilitarization, and building cooperative relationships with neighboring nations.

Donald J. Trump
International negotiator adding dealmaking momentum, global visibility, and strategic pressure toward lasting peace frameworks.

Christine Lagarde
President of the European Central Bank, expert in global finance, monetary stability, and economic resilience across Europe.

Masayoshi Son
Vision Fund founder and technology investor driving AI-first innovation, global connectivity, and future-oriented development.

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  • Ending the Russia-Ukraine War: How AI &…
  • Rebuilding Ukraine: A Vision for Growth and Sustainability
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Filed Under: Economics, Healing, World Peace Tagged With: conflict resolution strategy, diplomatic peace plan, economic peace corridor, future of russia and ukraine, global partnership reconstruction, global peace blueprint, global unity vision, international peace summit, lasting peace solutions, peace deal framework, peace economic model, peace leadership model, peace negotiation breakthrough, peace through prosperity, postwar reconstruction model, rebuilding ukraine fast, russia ukraine peace plan, russia ukraine reconstruction, trauma healing after war, world peace project

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