Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky raised the stakes ahead of a potential meeting with Vladimir Putin in Turkey by saying he wouldn’t hold talks with any Russian representative other than the president himself.
Zelensky said he would travel to Turkey after US President Donald Trump urged him to meet Putin. The Russian leader had suggested direct talks between Moscow and Kyiv in the country on Thursday in response to the ceasefire-or-sanctions ultimatum given to Moscow by Kyiv’s European allies on Saturday.
Asked by CNN about the goals of the possible meeting – one Putin has not yet agreed to attend despite proposing it himself – Zelensky said anything other than a ceasefire agreement would be a failure.
Aboard Air Force One en route to Qatar Wednesday, Trump suggested he could travel to Turkey for the talks, and that Putin wanted him to attend.
“He’d like me to be there, and that’s a possibility,” Trump told CNN. “I don’t know that he would be there if I’m not there.”
Despite Putin being the first to propose “direct talks” in Turkey, the Kremlin has since prevaricated over whether he will attend. Asked by reporters Wednesday about the make-up of Russia’s delegation, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Moscow will only reveal who it is sending to Turkey once Putin gives the order to do so.
Zelensky said he would not consider meeting any other Russian representatives because “everything in Russia depends” on Putin.
“So I said that on (Thursday) I will go to Turkey and I’m ready to meet Putin and an end to the war was through direct talks with him,” Zelensky told reporters at a news conference.
Russia hopes to deal directly with Ukraine in Istanbul, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told Russian state news agency TASS on Tuesday.
“Our representatives are getting ready for this meeting,” the news agency quoted him as saying.
Although it is not clear whether the US or Russian presidents will show up in Istanbul, Trump has confirmed that Secretary of State Marco Rubio will attend the talks.
The uncertainty over Thursday’s talks comes amid growing international pressure on Moscow to agree to the US-backed plan for a 30-day ceasefire in Ukraine. French President Emmanuel Macron warned Tuesday that if Russia doesn’t comply with those demands, sanctions – including on financial services – could be imposed “in the coming days in close liaison with the United States.”
Going some way to make good on this threat, the European Union on Wednesday unveiled a fresh round of sanctions against Moscow’s “shadow fleet” of oil tankers, used by the Kremlin to circumvent previous Western sanctions against Russian oil exports.
Further sanctions could be imposed by France and Ukraine’s other major European allies if Moscow does not agree to a ceasefire at the planned talks in Turkey.
Two European diplomatic sources told CNN they have low expectations for Thursday and doubt Putin will actually show up.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a US-based conflict monitor, said on Monday that Russian officials already appeared to be setting conditions for Putin to reject the meeting, quoting several key aides as questioning Zelensky’s intentions and calling the proposed meeting “pure spectacle.”
