JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy says he will be waiting for Russian leader Putin in Ankara on Thursday for talks

by

GUARDIAN MEDIA NEWSROOM
32 days ago
20250513
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks to journalists during a press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks to journalists during a press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Evgeniy Maloletka

Ukrain­ian Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Ze­len­skyy said Tues­day that he will be wait­ing for Russ­ian coun­ter­part Vladimir Putin in the Turk­ish cap­i­tal this week to con­duct face-to-face talks about the more than three-year war amid heavy pres­sure from the U.S. and Eu­ro­pean lead­ers to reach a set­tle­ment.

Putin hasn’t yet said whether he will be at the talks, which U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump has urged the two sides to at­tend as part of Wash­ing­ton’s ef­forts to stop the fight­ing.

Ze­len­skyy told re­porters in Kyiv that he will be in Ankara on Thurs­day to con­duct the ne­go­ti­a­tions. He will meet with Turk­ish Pres­i­dent Re­cep Tayyip Er­do­gan and the two will wait for Putin to ar­rive, he said.

Ze­len­skyy said he would “do every­thing to agree on a cease­fire, be­cause it is with (Putin) that I must ne­go­ti­ate a cease­fire, as on­ly he can de­cide on it.”

Ze­len­skyy said that if Putin choos­es Is­tan­bul to hold the meet­ing, then both lead­ers will trav­el there from Ankara.

“If Putin does not ar­rive and plays games, it is the fi­nal point that he does not want to end the war,” Ze­len­skyy said.

The Ukrain­ian leader added that if Putin doesn’t show up, Eu­ro­pean and U.S. lead­ers should fol­low through with threats of ad­di­tion­al and heavy sanc­tions against Rus­sia.

Trump has been in­vit­ed to the talks, be­cause “it would give an ad­di­tion­al push for Putin to fly in,” but Trump hasn’t con­firmed his pres­ence, Ze­len­skyy said. The Amer­i­can pres­i­dent will still be on his four-day Mid­dle East trip on Thurs­day.

Wash­ing­ton has been ap­ply­ing strong pres­sure on both sides to come to the ta­ble since Trump took of­fice in Jan­u­ary with a promise to end the war.

Mil­i­tary an­a­lysts say that both sides are prepar­ing a spring-sum­mer cam­paign on the bat­tle­field, where a war of at­tri­tion has killed tens of thou­sands of sol­diers on both sides along the rough­ly 1,000-kilo­me­ter (620-mile) front line. The In­sti­tute for the Study of War, a Wash­ing­ton-based think tank, said Mon­day that Rus­sia is “quick­ly re­plen­ish­ing front-line units with new re­cruits to main­tain the bat­tle­field ini­tia­tive.”

Ger­man leader says ball is in Putin’s court

In­ter­na­tion­al pres­sure has been grow­ing to push Ukraine and Rus­sia in­to find­ing a set­tle­ment.

Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Friedrich Merz pressed again for an un­con­di­tion­al 30-day cease­fire as he met his Greek coun­ter­part in Berlin on Tues­day.

“We are wait­ing for Putin’s agree­ment,” he said.

“We agree that, in case there is no re­al progress this week, we then want to push at Eu­ro­pean lev­el for a sig­nif­i­cant tight­en­ing of sanc­tions,” Merz added. He said that “we will fo­cus on fur­ther ar­eas, such as the en­er­gy sec­tor and the fi­nan­cial mar­ket.”

Merz wel­comed Ze­len­skyy’s readi­ness to trav­el per­son­al­ly to Turkey, “but now it is re­al­ly up to Putin to ac­cept this of­fer of ne­go­ti­a­tions and agree to a cease­fire. The ball is ex­clu­sive­ly in Rus­sia.”

Rus­sia isn’t say­ing whether Putin will at­tend talks

Overnight, Rus­sia launched 10 Sha­hed and de­coy drones at Ukraine, the Ukrain­ian air force said, in its small­est drone bom­bard­ment this year.

The Krem­lin hasn’t di­rect­ly re­spond­ed to Ze­len­skyy’s chal­lenge for Putin to meet him in per­son at the ne­go­ti­at­ing ta­ble.

Krem­lin spokesman Dmit­ry Peskov re­fused for the sec­ond straight day Tues­day to tell re­porters whether Putin will trav­el to Is­tan­bul and who else will rep­re­sent Rus­sia at the po­ten­tial talks.

“As soon as the pres­i­dent con­sid­ers it nec­es­sary, we will make an an­nounce­ment,” Peskov said.

Rus­sia has said that it would send a del­e­ga­tion to Is­tan­bul with­out pre­con­di­tions.

Eu­ro­pean lead­ers say Putin is drag­ging his feet

Ze­len­skyy won’t be meet­ing with any Russ­ian of­fi­cials in Is­tan­bul oth­er than Putin, Mykhai­lo Podolyak, an ad­vis­er to Ze­len­skyy, said Tues­day on a YouTube show run by promi­nent Russ­ian jour­nal­ists in ex­ile.

Low­er-lev­el talks would amount to sim­ply “drag­ging out” any peace process, Podolyak said.

Eu­ro­pean lead­ers have re­cent­ly ac­cused Putin of drag­ging his feet in peace ef­forts, while he at­tempts to press his big­ger army’s bat­tle­field ini­tia­tive and cap­ture more Ukrain­ian land.

Rus­sia ef­fec­tive­ly re­ject­ed an un­con­di­tion­al 30-day cease­fire de­mand­ed by Ukraine and West­ern Eu­ro­pean lead­ers from Mon­day, when it fired more than 100 drones at Ukraine. Putin in­stead of­fered di­rect peace talks.

But the wran­gling over whether a cease­fire should come be­fore the talks be­gin has con­tin­ued.

“Ukraine is ready for any for­mat of ne­go­ti­a­tions with Rus­sia, but a cease­fire must come first,” An­drii Yer­mak, the head of Ukraine’s pres­i­den­tial of­fice, said Tues­day.

Ne­go­ti­a­tions are im­pos­si­ble while “the Ukrain­ian peo­ple are un­der at­tack by Russ­ian mis­siles and drones around the clock,” Yer­mak said in a video ad­dress to the Copen­hagen Democ­ra­cy Sum­mit 2025.

Putin has re­peat­ed­ly ques­tioned the le­git­i­ma­cy of the Ukrain­ian gov­ern­ment, es­pe­cial­ly Ze­len­skyy him­self, say­ing his term ex­pired last year. Un­der Ukraine’s con­sti­tu­tion, it’s il­le­gal for the coun­try to hold a na­tion­al elec­tion while it’s un­der mar­tial law, as it now is.

Ze­len­skyy dis­missed claims that a de­cree en­act­ed by him in 2022 pro­hib­it­ed him from meet­ing Putin, say­ing that the claim was Russ­ian pro­pa­gan­da.

Putin and Ze­len­skyy have on­ly met once, in 2019.

In the war’s ear­ly months, Ze­len­skyy re­peat­ed­ly called for a per­son­al meet­ing with Putin but was re­buffed. Af­ter the Krem­lin’s de­ci­sion in Sep­tem­ber 2022 to il­le­gal­ly an­nex four re­gions of Ukraine — Donet­sk, Luhan­sk, Kher­son and Za­por­izhzhia — Ze­len­skyy is­sued the de­cree de­clar­ing that hold­ing ne­go­ti­a­tions with Putin had be­come im­pos­si­ble.

On Tues­day, Ze­len­skyy said that this de­cree af­fect­ed oth­er Ukrain­ian of­fi­cials who were di­rect­ly ne­go­ti­at­ing with the Russ­ian leader. —KYIV, Ukraine (AP)

__________

Sto­ry by IL­LIA NOVIKOV and SAMYA KUL­LAB | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

Geir Moul­son con­tributed to this re­port from Berlin.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored