Kremlin repeats Putin's assertion that Ukraine war is nearly over after Zelenskiy casts doubt

Russia's President Putin reiterated his belief that the Ukraine war is nearing its conclusion, despite Ukrainian President Zelenskiy's assertion that Moscow has no intention of ending the conflict. The Kremlin spokesman cited "trilateral work" wit...

PTI
Vladimir Putin
MOSCOW: The Kremlin repeated Russian President Vladimir Putin's assertion that the war in Ukraine was almost over on Tuesday, after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Moscow had no intention of ending it.

"I think that the matter is coming to an end," Putin told reporters on Saturday of the war, now in its fifth ‌year.

Asked to ⁠comment on ⁠Putin's remarks, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said a certain amount of trilateral work with Ukraine and the United States had been done towards finding a peace deal.


"This accumulated groundwork in terms of the peace process allows us to say that the completion is indeed approaching," Peskov told reporters, though he added that it was difficult to provide specific details at the ⁠current time.

On ‌Monday, Zelenskiy said: "Russia has no intention of ending this war. And we are, unfortunately, preparing for new attacks."

U.S. President Donald ⁠Trump has convened multiple rounds of talks with the warring sides to try to end the conflict, but no peace deal has emerged. Russia, which now occupies around a fifth of Ukraine, wants Kyiv to cede additional territory. Kyiv wants Russian troops to withdraw.
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Peskov said Russia would welcome further U.S. mediation efforts and Putin was prepared to meet Zelenskiy in person once the peace process ‌was finalised.

"And for that finalisation, in order to put a full stop to it, a great deal of preparatory work still needs to be done," he ⁠said, adding that the conflict could end as soon as Kyiv and Zelenskiy "take the necessary decision".

The warring sides agreed to a short, U.S.-mediated ceasefire from May 9-11, coinciding with the anniversary of the Soviet victory over the Nazis in World War Two.

Although neither side reported large-scale airstrikes during the ceasefire, both said fighting continued along the front line and accused each other of drone and artillery attacks.
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