logo
Russian, US delegations begin latest round of talks in Saudi Arabia

Russian, US delegations begin latest round of talks in Saudi Arabia

Muscat Daily24-03-2025

Riyadh, KSA – Russia and the US began the latest round of bilateral talks on Monday in Saudi Arabia.
Russian state news agency TASS reported that the negotiations started in Riyadh in a closed format and that Saudi security officials requested journalists at the venue to leave the premises.
On Thursday, Russian presidential aide Yury Ushakov, following a phone call with US National Security Adviser Michael Waltz, announced that the new round of talks would take place on March 24 in Riyadh.
The meeting is aimed 'mainly to work out the prospects for the possible implementation of the well-known initiative concerning the safety of navigation in the Black Sea', Ushakov said in a Kremlin statement, referring to the Black Sea Grain Initiative.
The meeting between the two delegations follows separate talks between Kyiv and Washington's delegations in Saudi Arabia on Sunday, which Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov described as 'productive'.
'President Volodymyr Zelensky's goal is to secure a just and lasting peace for our country and our people – and, by extension, for all of Europe. We are working to make that goal a reality,' said Umerov on Facebook.
Zelensky urges pressure on Russia
Meanwhile, Zelensky on Sunday called on Ukraine's allies to apply new pressure on Moscow to stop the war.
The call came after nearly 150 Russian drones targeted Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities overnight, killing at least seven people.
'New decisions and new pressure on Moscow are needed to put an end to these strikes and this war,' Zelensky posted on social media ahead of talks on a partial ceasefire.
In a post on Instagram earlier, Zelensky also said, over 1,580 guided aerial bombs, nearly 1,100 attack drones, and 15 missiles of various types were used against the Ukrainian people this week alone, stressing that all of this weaponry contains at least 102,000 foreign components.
'That's why sanctions against Russian terrorists must be more effective. Every loophole that allows them to bypass the sanctions regime must be eliminated,' he wrote.
'Difficult negotiations'
Meanwhile, Russia downplayed expectations of a quick resolution to the war in Ukraine, saying talks were just beginning and that 'difficult negotiations' lay ahead.
'We are only at the beginning of this path,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian state TV.
According to Peskov, Russia's 'main' focus in its talks with the United States would be to discuss the possible resumption of a 2022 Black Sea grain deal, which would ensure safe navigation for Ukrainian agricultural exports in the Black Sea.
US expects real progress in talks
US President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff said he expects Ukraine and Russia to make progress on a ceasefire in the Black Sea at the talks in Saudi Arabia.
'I think you're going to see in Saudi Arabia on Monday some real progress, particularly as it affects a Black Sea ceasefire on ships between both countries. And from that, you'll naturally gravitate to a full-on shooting ceasefire,' he told Fox News.
Witkoff also said he believes Russian President Vladimir Putin wants peace and is not planning to invade 'all of Europe'.
'I feel that he wants peace,' Witkoff said.
Meanwhile, White House National Security Adviser Mike Waltz said the United States is discussing a range of confidence-building measures aimed at ending the war, including the future of Ukrainian children taken to Russia.
Earlier, Putin rejected a joint US-Ukrainian proposal for a full and immediate 30-day ceasefire. Instead, he proposed halting strikes only on energy facilities. But on the eve of the negotiations, both sides launched new drone attacks.
Agencies

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Opinion- How the attacks on Iran are part of a much bigger global struggle
Opinion- How the attacks on Iran are part of a much bigger global struggle

Observer

time6 hours ago

  • Observer

Opinion- How the attacks on Iran are part of a much bigger global struggle

There are so many things to say in the wake of the US bombing of three key Iranian nuclear facilities that it is easy to get lost in the gripping details. So for now, let me try to step back and explore the global, regional and local forces shaping this story. What's really going on here? It is a very, very big drama, and it is not confined to the Middle East. To my mind, Vladimir Putin's war of Ukraine in 2022, with the sole aim of wiping its democracy off the map and absorbing it into Russia, and the attacks on Israel in 2023 by Hamas and friendly nations in Lebanon, Yemen and Iraq were manifestations of a global struggle between the forces of inclusion and the forces of resistance. That is a struggle between countries and leaders who see the world and their nations benefiting from more trade, more cooperation against global threats and more decent, if not democratic, governance — versus regimes whose leaders thrive on resisting those trends because conflict enables them to keep their people down, their armies strong and their thieving of their treasuries easy. The forces of inclusion had steadily been growing stronger. Ukraine in 2022 was getting closer to joining the European Union. This would have been the biggest expansion of a whole and free Europe since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, because it would have added to the West a huge agricultural, technological and military power and left Russia more isolated — and looking more out of step to its own people — than ever. At the very same time, the Biden administration was making rapid headway on a deal for the US to forge a security alliance with Saudi Arabia. In return, Saudi Arabia would normalise relations with Israel, and Israel would begin talks with the Palestinians on possible statehood. This would have been the biggest expansion of an integrated Middle East since the Camp David peace treaty between Egypt and Israel in 1979. In short, Ukraine looked poised to join the West, and Israel looked poised to join the East. So what happened? Putin attacked Ukraine to stop the first movement, and Hamas and Iran and others attacked Israel to stop the second. As such, my first question in the aftermath of Sunday morning's strike on Iran is: Does President Trump understand whose side of this global struggle Putin is on? Iran and Russia are close allies for a reason. Iran has been providing Russia with the drones it has used to more effectively kill Ukrainian soldiers and civilians. I do not ask Trump to drop a bomb on Russia, but I do ask him to provide Ukraine with the military, economic and diplomatic support it needs to resist Russia - every bit as much as the US is doing for Israel to defeat Hamas and Iran. China has always had a foot in each camp. Its economy depends on a healthy and growing world of inclusion, but its political leadership has also maintained strong ties to the world of resistance. So Beijing plays in both leagues - buying oil from Iran but always worried that if Iran got a nuclear bomb, it might one day give a copy to fighters from Xinjiang. That said, China's oil purchases from Iran are a crucial part of this story. Those purchases are Tehran's biggest source of external income. As my colleague Keith Bradsher reported from Shanghai, oil sales to China are today 6 per cent of Iran's economy and equal to about half of government spending. - The New York Times Thomas L Friedman The writer is an American political commentator and author

Russian strikes kill 11 in Ukraine region under pressure
Russian strikes kill 11 in Ukraine region under pressure

Observer

time2 days ago

  • Observer

Russian strikes kill 11 in Ukraine region under pressure

KYIV: Russian missiles on Tuesday crashed into schools, hospitals and kindergartens in central Ukraine, killing at least 11 and wounding dozens more in a region coming under mounting pressure. The attacks came as President Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in the Netherlands to meet with allies on the sidelines of the Nato defence alliance summit. He is expected to meet with US President Donald Trump to discuss more sanctions on Russia and arms procurement, a senior Ukrainian source said. Emergency services in the Dnipropetrovsk region, now threatened by Russian battlefield advances, published photos of rescuers helping civilians covered in blood after the attack. "This is not a fight where it's hard to choose a side. Standing with Ukraine means defending life," Zelensky said after the attack. Ukraine's foreign minister said the strikes amounted to a "rejection of peace" from Russia, which has rejected US and Ukrainian ceasefire proposals. "It is a matter of credibility for allies to step up pressure on Moscow," Andriy Sybiga said. Ukrainian police said 11 residents of Dnipro were killed and two more were left dead in the nearby town of Samar. More than 100 people were wounded, according to a statement. Police added that an administrative building, shops, educational facilities and a children's hospital were damaged. Russian forces, which attacked Ukraine just over three years ago, recently claimed to have reached the border of the central industrial Dnipropetrovsk region, to gain a foothold there for the first time of the war. The attacks on Dnipro city, the region's capital, came just hours after deadly overnight drone attacks. Three people including a toddler were killed earlier in the northeastern Sumy region that borders Russia during the barrage, local officials said. Oleg Grygorov, head of the Sumy region's military administration, said a five-year-old boy was pulled from the rubble of a destroyed house. "The strike took the lives of people from different families. They all lived on the same street. They went to sleep in their homes but the Russian drones interrupted their sleep — forever," he said. One man died next to his spouse in a Ukrainian drone strike on Russia's western border region of Belgorod, the region's governor said, adding that the woman survived the attack. Another drone had targeted a residential building in Moscow overnight, wounding two people, including a pregnant woman, the local authorities said. — AFP

Putin stresses "unprovoked aggression" in Araqchi meeting
Putin stresses "unprovoked aggression" in Araqchi meeting

Observer

time3 days ago

  • Observer

Putin stresses "unprovoked aggression" in Araqchi meeting

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin told Iran's foreign minister on Monday there was no justification for the US bombing of his country and that Moscow was trying to help the Iranian people. Putin hosted Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in Moscow two days after US President Donald Trump sent US bomber planes to strike Iran's three main nuclear sites. "The absolutely unprovoked aggression against Iran has no basis and no justification," Putin told Araqchi in televised comments. "For our part, we are making efforts to assist the Iranian people," he added. "I am very glad that you are in Moscow today, this will give us the opportunity to discuss all these pressing issues and think together about how we could get out of today's situation." Araqchi told Putin that Iran was conducting legitimate self-defence, and thanked Russia for condemning the US actions. He conveyed best wishes to Putin from Iran's supreme leader and president. "Russia is today on the right side of history and international law," said Araqchi. It was unclear, however, what Russia might do to support Iran, an important ally with which Putin signed a strategic cooperation treaty in January. That agreement did not include a mutual defence clause. Before Saturday's US strikes, Moscow had warned that US military intervention could destabilise the entire region and plunge it into the "abyss". Asked what Russia was ready to do to help Tehran, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "It all depends on what Iran needs". He said the fact that Moscow had offered to mediate in the crisis was itself a form of support. Peskov condemned the US attacks. "An increase in the number of participants in this conflict is happening - or rather, has happened. A new spiral of escalation of tension in the region," Peskov told reporters. "And, of course, we condemn this and express regret in this regard, deep regret. In addition, of course, it remains to be seen what happened to (Iran's) nuclear facilities, whether there is a radiation hazard." Peskov said Trump had not told Putin in detail about the planned strikes in advance. "There was no detailed information. The topic of Iran itself was repeatedly discussed by the presidents during their most recent conversations, certain proposals were voiced by Russia, but there was no direct detailed information about this," he said. Putin has repeatedly offered to mediate between the US and Iran, and has conveyed Moscow's ideas on resolving the conflict to them while ensuring Iran's access to civil nuclear energy. Putin said Israel had given Moscow assurance on the safety of Russian specialists helping to build two more reactors at the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran during air strikes. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Russia is stepping up production of its Oreshnik intermediate-range hypersonic missile, which it launched for the first time against Ukraine last November. "Serial production of the latest Oreshnik medium-range missile system is under way," Putin told a graduating class of military cadets in televised comments. The system has "proven itself very well in combat conditions," he added. — Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store