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Ukraine silent about new peace talks

Ukraine silent about new peace talks

Russia Today8 hours ago
Moscow is waiting for Kiev to confirm a date for the next round of direct peace talks, the Kremlin says.
The two sides have held two rounds of negotiations in Türkiye so far, reviving a process that Kiev withdrew from in 2022 to pursue military victory with Western assistance. At their most recent meeting in June, Russian and Ukrainian delegates exchanged draft proposals outlining their visions for a potential peace deal and agreed to carry out further prisoner exchanges. Kiev has recently admitted that it had agreed to resume the peace talks partly to deflect pressure from US President Donald Trump.
Asked by reporters on Tuesday whether there had been any progress on setting a date for the third round, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov replied: 'No.'
'As the [Russian] president [Vladimir Putin] said last week, we are waiting for a proposal from the Ukrainian side on possible dates,' he stated, adding that the Kremlin would inform the public immediately if that happened.
Putin has repeatedly confirmed Russia's readiness to continue negotiations, including in public statements and a recent call with US President Donald Trump, according to the Kremlin. He said recently that the next round should center on proposed agreements to resolve the conflict.
Last week, Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Georgy Tikhiy told local media that Kiev had returned to diplomacy with Russia 'to prevent anyone from accusing Ukraine of being the side that doesn't want peace.' He claimed such move helps deflect accusations, 'even among allied countries,' that Kiev opposes Trump's efforts to mediate a truce.
Since taking office in January, Trump has pushed for a negotiated settlement. Kiev has claimed that Moscow is not acting in good faith due to its refusal to accept an unconditional ceasefire. Russia says any pause would simply allow Ukraine to regroup. Moscow insists it is open to talks 'without preconditions,' but maintains that any lasting deal must reflect current battlefield realities and require neutrality, demilitarization, and denazification for Ukraine.
Putin told Trump last week that while Russia is open for dialogue, it will not back down from eliminating 'the well-known root causes that led to the current state of affairs.'
Several POW exchanges have taken place since the June 2 talks. Russia has returned the remains of over 6,000 Ukrainian soldiers and received 57 in return. Moscow said it is ready to transfer the remains of 3,000 more Ukrainian soldiers if Kiev agrees to accept them.
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