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Monday, June 23, 2025

Ukraine and Russia end their latest round of direct peace talks in Istanbul

by

GUARDIAN MEDIA NEWSROOM
21 days ago
20250602
In this photo released by the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense, Russian and Ukrainian delegations attend talks at the Ciragan Palace in Istanbul, Turkey, Monday, June 2, 2025. (Ukrainian Ministry of Defense via AP)

In this photo released by the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense, Russian and Ukrainian delegations attend talks at the Ciragan Palace in Istanbul, Turkey, Monday, June 2, 2025. (Ukrainian Ministry of Defense via AP)

Ukrainian Ministry of Defense

Del­e­ga­tions from Rus­sia and Ukraine end­ed their lat­est peace talks Mon­day in Turkey af­ter just over an hour, Ukrain­ian Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Ze­len­skyy and Russ­ian state me­dia said.

Speak­ing in Vil­nius, Lithua­nia, Ze­len­skyy said both sides “ex­changed doc­u­ments through the Turk­ish side, and we are prepar­ing a new re­lease of pris­on­ers of the war.”

Ex­pec­ta­tions were low for any break­through on end­ing the 3-year-old war af­ter a string of stun­ning at­tacks over the week­end.

Kyiv of­fi­cials said a sur­prise drone at­tack Sun­day dam­aged or de­stroyed more than 40 war­planes at air bases deep in­side Rus­sia, in­clud­ing the re­mote Arc­tic, Siber­ian and Far East re­gions more than 7,000 kilo­me­tres (4,300 miles) from Ukraine.

The com­plex and un­prece­dent­ed raid, which struck si­mul­ta­ne­ous­ly in three time zones, took over a year and a half to pre­pare and was “a ma­jor slap in the face for Rus­sia’s mil­i­tary pow­er,” said Va­syl Mal­iuk, the head of the Ukrain­ian se­cu­ri­ty ser­vice who led its plan­ning.

Ze­len­skyy called it a “bril­liant op­er­a­tion” that would go down in his­to­ry. The op­er­a­tion de­stroyed or heav­i­ly dam­aged near­ly a third of Moscow’s strate­gic bomber fleet, ac­cord­ing to Ukrain­ian of­fi­cials.

Rus­sia on Sun­day fired the biggest num­ber of drones — 472 — at Ukraine since its full-scale in­va­sion in 2022, Ukraine’s air force said, in an ap­par­ent ef­fort to over­whelm air de­fens­es. That was part of a re­cent­ly es­ca­lat­ing cam­paign of strikes in civil­ian ar­eas of Ukraine.

Hopes not high for the peace talks

In Lithua­nia, Ze­len­skyy said a new re­lease of pris­on­ers of war was be­ing pre­pared af­ter the Is­tan­bul meet­ing. The pre­vi­ous di­rect talks on May 16 al­so led to a swap of pris­on­ers, with 1,000 on both sides be­ing ex­changed.

Ukraine al­so hand­ed Rus­sia an of­fi­cial list of chil­dren it says were forcibly de­port­ed and must be re­turned, said An­driy Yer­mak, head of Ze­len­skyy’s of­fice.

Turk­ish For­eign Min­is­ter Hakan Fi­dan had chaired the peace talks at Is­tan­bul’s Cira­gan Palace, a res­i­dence dat­ing from the Ot­toman Em­pire.

The talks aimed to dis­cuss both sides’ cease­fire terms, he said, adding that “the whole world’s eyes are fo­cused on the con­tacts and dis­cus­sions you will have here.”

U.S.-led ef­forts to push the two sides in­to ac­cept­ing a cease­fire have so far failed. Ukraine ac­cept­ed that step, but the Krem­lin ef­fec­tive­ly re­ject­ed it.

The Ukrain­ian del­e­ga­tion was led by De­fense Min­is­ter Rustem Umerov, while Vladimir Medin­sky, an aide to Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin, head­ed the Krem­lin team.

The Russ­ian and Ukrain­ian del­e­ga­tions, each num­ber­ing more than a dozen peo­ple, sat at a U-shaped ta­ble across from each oth­er with Turk­ish of­fi­cials be­tween them. Many of the Ukraini­ans wore mil­i­tary fa­tigues.

Re­cent com­ments by se­nior of­fi­cials in both coun­tries in­di­cate they re­main far apart on the key con­di­tions for stop­ping the war.

The In­sti­tute for the Study of War, a Wash­ing­ton-based think tank, said Sun­day that “Rus­sia is at­tempt­ing to de­lay ne­go­ti­a­tions and pro­long the war in or­der to make ad­di­tion­al bat­tle­field gains.”

The re­lent­less fight­ing has frus­trat­ed U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s goal of bring­ing about a quick end to the war. A week ago, he ex­pressed im­pa­tience with Putin as Moscow pound­ed Kyiv and oth­er Ukrain­ian cities with drones and mis­siles for a third straight night. Trump said on so­cial me­dia that Putin “has gone ab­solute­ly CRAZY!”

A round of re­newed di­rect talks, held May 16, al­so in Is­tan­bul, end­ed af­ter less than two hours. While both sides agreed on a large pris­on­er swap, there was no break­through.

Ukraine up­beat af­ter strikes on air bases

Ukraine was tri­umphant af­ter tar­get­ing the dis­tant Russ­ian air bases. The of­fi­cial Russ­ian re­sponse was mut­ed, with the at­tack get­ting lit­tle cov­er­age on state-con­trolled tele­vi­sion. Rus­sia-1 TV chan­nel on Sun­day evening spent a lit­tle over a minute on it with a brief De­fense Min­istry state­ment read out be­fore im­ages shift­ed to Russ­ian drone strikes on Ukrain­ian po­si­tions.

Ze­len­skyy said the set­backs for the Krem­lin would help force it to the ne­go­ti­at­ing ta­ble, even as its pur­sues a sum­mer of­fen­sive on the bat­tle­field.

“Rus­sia must feel what its loss­es mean. That is what will push it to­ward diplo­ma­cy,” he said Mon­day in Vil­nius, Lithua­nia, meet­ing with lead­ers from the Nordic na­tions and coun­tries on NA­TO’s east­ern flank.

Ukraine has oc­ca­sion­al­ly struck air bases host­ing Rus­sia’s nu­clear ca­pa­ble strate­gic bombers since ear­ly in the war, prompt­ing Moscow to re­de­ploy most of them to the re­gions far­ther from the front line.

Be­cause Sun­day’s drones were launched from trucks close to the bases in five Russ­ian re­gions, mil­i­tary de­fens­es had vir­tu­al­ly no time to pre­pare for them.

Many Russ­ian mil­i­tary blog­gers chid­ed the mil­i­tary for its fail­ure to build pro­tec­tive shields for the bombers de­spite pre­vi­ous at­tacks, but the large size of the planes makes that chal­leng­ing.

The at­tacks were “a big blow to Russ­ian strate­gic air­pow­er” and ex­posed sig­nif­i­cant vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties in Moscow’s mil­i­tary ca­pa­bil­i­ties, said Phillips O’Brien, a pro­fes­sor of strate­gic stud­ies at the Uni­ver­si­ty of St. An­drews in Scot­land.

Ed­ward Lu­cas, a se­nior fel­low at the Wash­ing­ton-based Cen­ter for Eu­ro­pean Pol­i­cy Analy­sis, called it “the most au­da­cious at­tack of the war” and “a mil­i­tary and strate­gic game-chang­er.”

“Bat­tered, be­lea­guered, tired, and out­num­bered, Ukraini­ans have, at min­i­mal cost, in com­plete se­cre­cy, and over vast dis­tances, de­stroyed or dam­aged dozens, per­haps more, of Rus­sia’s strate­gic bombers,” he said.

Front-line fight­ing and shelling grinds on

Ze­len­skyy said that “if the Is­tan­bul meet­ing brings noth­ing, that clear­ly means strong new sanc­tions are ur­gent­ly, ur­gent­ly need­ed” against Rus­sia.

In­ter­na­tion­al con­cerns about the war’s con­se­quences, as well as trade ten­sions, drove Asian share prices low­er Mon­day while oil prices surged.

Fierce fight­ing has con­tin­ued along the rough­ly 1,000-kilo­me­tre (620-mile) front line, and both sides have hit each oth­er’s ter­ri­to­ry with deep strikes.

Russ­ian forces shelled Ukraine’s south­ern Kher­son re­gion, killing three peo­ple and in­jur­ing 19 oth­ers, in­clud­ing two chil­dren, re­gion­al of­fi­cials said Mon­day.

Al­so, a mis­sile strike and shelling around the south­ern city of Za­por­izhzhia, killing five peo­ple and in­jured nine oth­ers, of­fi­cials said.

Russ­ian air de­fens­es downed 162 Ukrain­ian drones over eight Russ­ian re­gions overnight, as well as over the Crimean Penin­su­la, Rus­sia’s De­fense Min­istry said Mon­day. Moscow il­le­gal­ly an­nexed the penin­su­la in 2014,Crimea,

Ukrain­ian air de­fens­es dam­aged 52 out of 80 drones launched by Rus­sia overnight, the Ukrain­ian air force said. —IS­TAN­BUL (AP)

________

Sto­ry by MEHMET GUZEL | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

As­so­ci­at­ed Press writ­ers Suzan Fraz­er in Ankara, Turkey; Han­na Arhi­ro­va in Kyiv, Ukraine; and Geir Moul­son in Berlin con­tributed to this re­port.


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