# [FLASH] Russia, Ukraine Confirm Three‑Day US‑Brokered Ceasefire, POW Mega‑Swap

*Friday, May 8, 2026 at 7:29 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-08T19:29:13.027Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, Ceasefire, POWExchange, UnitedStates, EuropeSecurity, GlobalMarkets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6246.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 18:03 and 18:50 UTC on 8 May, Russia and Ukraine publicly confirmed acceptance of Donald Trump’s initiative for a nationwide ceasefire from 9–11 May and a 1,000‑for‑1,000 prisoner‑of‑war exchange. President Zelensky and Kremlin aide Ushakov both stated that the United States mediated the deal, tying it to Russia’s 9 May Victory Day. This is the first mutually acknowledged, time‑bounded truce with a large POW swap since the current phase of the war began and could alter battlefield and political dynamics if it holds.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 18:03–18:50 UTC on 8 May 2026, a cluster of high‑credibility reports confirmed a US‑brokered ceasefire agreement between Russia and Ukraine:

- At 18:03 UTC (Report 34), Donald Trump announced a THREE DAY CEASEFIRE in the war between Russia and Ukraine for 9, 10, and 11 May, including a suspension of all kinetic activity and a 1,000‑for‑1,000 POW swap.
- At 18:34 and 18:30–18:48 UTC (Reports 31, 30, 10, 11), further posts amplified Trump’s statement, adding that Zelensky ordered Ukrainian forces not to strike the 9 May Moscow parade and saying, “Red Square is less important to us than the lives of Ukrainian prisoners.”
- At 18:42 and 18:48 UTC (Reports 8, 7, 10, 11), Ukrainian‑language sources quote Zelensky confirming that, via US‑mediated talks, Ukraine received Russia’s consent to a 1,000‑for‑1,000 POW exchange, tied to a ceasefire on 9, 10, and 11 May.
- At 18:47–18:50 UTC (Reports 4, 18), Russian outlets and Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov state that Russia has agreed to Trump’s ceasefire and prisoner‑swap initiative, referencing an earlier Putin‑Trump conversation and the symbolism of the 81st anniversary of Victory over Nazism.

Collectively, these establish that both belligerent states and the US mediator are publicly aligned on: (a) a nationwide ceasefire window of 9–11 May, and (b) a large‑scale POW exchange of roughly 1,000 personnel per side.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- Ukraine: President Volodymyr Zelensky personally announced acceptance of the ceasefire and POW swap and signed a decree excluding Moscow’s Red Square from Ukrainian strike plans during this period. Implementation will run through the Ukrainian General Staff and intelligence services handling POW logistics.
- Russia: The Kremlin, via aide Yuri Ushakov, confirmed acceptance. Operational control lies with the Russian General Staff and associated security services managing prisoner handling and frontline units.
- United States: Donald Trump is presented as the political broker. US channels have coordinated with both Moscow and Kyiv; detailed enforcement mechanisms are not publicly specified.

This is not an informal local truce but a top‑down, head‑of‑state‑endorsed pause with clear dates and a concrete deliverable (POW swap), giving it higher durability than previous ad hoc arrangements.

3. Immediate military and security implications

- Battlefield tempo: If implemented, major offensive operations and long‑range strikes across the theater should pause from 00:00 on 9 May Kyiv/Moscow time through 23:59 on 11 May. Forces will likely use the window to rest, reconstitute, and reposition under the cover of the ceasefire.
- POW dynamics: A 1,000‑for‑1,000 exchange is large by recent standards and may return experienced personnel to both sides, with medium‑term implications for unit cohesion and morale.
- Force protection risk: Ceasefire windows often generate mistrust and localized violations. Each side will suspect the other of using the pause for intelligence collection and logistics. Expect increased ISR, electronic surveillance, and potential small‑scale incidents at the contact line.
- Strategic messaging: Russia ties the ceasefire to Victory Day optics and domestic legitimacy. Ukraine frames it as prioritizing the lives of prisoners over symbolic strikes on Moscow.

4. Market and economic impact

- Energy: Compared to the simultaneously ongoing Strait of Hormuz disruption (no registered commercial vessels transiting since Tuesday), this Ukraine ceasefire has secondary impact on oil and gas. It marginally reduces tail risks around Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure during 9–11 May, but does not change structural supply constraints.
- European risk assets: A credible pause should be modestly supportive for European equities, credit, and EUR sentiment over the next 24–48 hours, as it lowers the near‑term probability of surprise escalatory events around 9 May.
- Defense sector: Defense equities tied to high‑tempo Ukraine consumption (artillery, missiles, drones) could see short‑term consolidation on expectations of slower expenditure during the truce. This effect is likely limited given the short duration.
- Safe havens: Gold and core sovereign bonds may see minor profit‑taking if markets interpret this as a step toward broader de‑escalation, but the impact will compete with the far more acute Iran–US Gulf confrontation.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Verification and modalities: Expect additional communiqués tonight (8 May UTC) specifying ceasefire start/end times, monitoring mechanisms, and POW exchange logistics, potentially through the ICRC or other intermediaries.
- Local violations: There is a high probability of mutual accusations of minor ceasefire breaches, but as long as no large‑scale strike or offensive is launched, the overall truce is likely to hold for its three‑day window.
- Diplomatic positioning: The US, Russia, and Ukraine will all seek to claim political credit—Trump as peacemaker, Moscow as defender of Victory Day traditions, Kyiv as protector of its POWs. Other Western capitals may cautiously welcome the pause while pressing for extension.
- Post‑ceasefire outlook: Unless this window is explicitly extended, both sides are likely to resume operations on or after 12 May, potentially with refreshed forces and adjusted tactics. Markets should not price this as a durable end to the conflict but as a tactical pause with limited but non‑trivial risk relief.

Given the scale of the war, the mutual confirmation by both capitals, and the involvement of a US mediator, this development meets the threshold for a Tier 1 FLASH alert, even though initial headlines were already carried earlier; the last 30 minutes provide crucial confirmation, parameters, and implementation details.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Reduced near-term escalation risk in Europe should modestly support risk assets and slightly pressure safe havens (gold) while having limited direct impact on oil compared with the ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis. Defense names with heavy Ukraine exposure may see short-term volatility, and European equities and EUR could gain on lower perceived tail risk if the truce holds.
