Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
U.S.
and Ukrainian officials are meeting in Switzerland after the release of a U.S.-drafted peace plan aimed at ending the war with Russia.
NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports many Ukrainians say the proposal gives up too much.
In the western city of Ternopil,
bulldozers sift through rubble looking for bodies at an apartment block hit by Russian missiles this week.
More than 30 people were killed, including several children.
Others are still missing.
Since Russia's full-scale invasion, thousands of Ukrainian civilians have been killed.
They're proposing some kind of peace for us, without us.
Resident Inga Shkarupa says the US peace plan is pro-Russian and done behind Ukraine's back.
We're paying the price.
People are dying.
Cities are getting destroyed.
And everybody's doing nothing towards Russia.
Nothing.
Shkarupa says people here feel betrayed by the U.S.
Eleanor Beardsley, NPR News, Ternopil, Ukraine.
Climate negotiations at the United Nations' COP30 conference ended on Saturday with a last-minute deal.
The resolution calls for an increase in money going to nations affected by global warming to help them adapt.