logo
Peace talks? Ukraine and Russia already tried negotiating, but that didn't go well

Peace talks? Ukraine and Russia already tried negotiating, but that didn't go well

Euronews05-02-2025

On 28 February 2022, four days into Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russian forces had already occupied some towns on the Azov Sea coast, got close to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and the city of Mariupol, and were pushing towards Kyiv.
While millions of people across the country were sheltering from relentless missile and drone attacks, Ukrainian and Russian officials sat down for the first attempted negotiations to put an end to the war.
The delegations met on the border with Moscow's key ally, Belarus, following the call between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his counterpart in Minsk, Alexander Lukashenko.
"We agreed that the Ukrainian delegation would meet with the Russian delegation without preconditions on the Ukrainian-Belarusian border, near the Pripyat River," Zelenskyy said, as Ukraine called for an immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of Russian forces. Moscow didn't reveal its aim in the negotiation.
Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin did not participate in person.
Three rounds of talks were held in Belarus before they moved online on 14 March. By that time, Russian forces occupied the towns around Kyiv and started the alleged atrocities against the population of Hostomel, Irpin and Bucha.
When Moscow forces were pushed out of the Kyiv region, some of the starkest photographic and video evidence of Russian brutality in Ukraine emerged, throwing the early negotiations process into disarray.
Visiting Bucha in early April 2022, where bodies of civilians were found on the streets, tied and shot at close range by Russian troops before their withdrawal, Zelenskyy said, "That is real genocide, what you have seen here".
Yet, as Kyiv embarked on war crimes investigations, having discovered the mass graves and Russian torture chambers for the first time, Zelenskyy said the peace talks would continue with Moscow "because Ukraine must have peace."
"We are in Europe in the 21st century. We will continue efforts diplomatically and militarily," he said. Yet, he admitted, "It's very difficult to talk when you see what they've done here."
Ukraine bans talks with Putin
A few months later, in September 2022, Putin announced the illegal seizure of four areas of Ukraine — the regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson — saying they were now Russian territory.
In response, Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council imposed a ban on direct negotiations with Putin, which is still in place.
This January, Zelenskyy explained that the ban was introduced to stop separatism as "the Russians were trying to put pressure on Ukraine through many different corridors that Ukraine could not control".
"Regarding whether we can talk (with Putin) or not (and) the decision of the National Security and Defence Council, why did I sign this decree? Because Putin had begun very quickly to establish a large number of different channels, in collaboration with separatists and officials from other states, in order to influence Ukraine, our independence, and me directly," Zelenskyy explained.
"There were a lot of conversations going on and a lot of shadowy political corridors."
"I quickly put a stop to it. I simply stopped separatism in our country by forbidding anyone – any political figures in Ukraine – from holding any negotiations with the Russian side, with Putin's supporters, during the war," he concluded.
The decision stated that the NSDC had decided to "state the impossibility of holding talks with Russian leader Vladimir Putin."
It did not specify who was forbidden to hold talks.
Zelenskyy emphasised that he is the only one who can negotiate: "I am the president of Ukraine, I lead all the negotiations, and I have forbidden everyone else." Putin, he said, "doesn't like this because he has many channels."
Russian authorities have repeatedly criticised this decision and demanded it be reconsidered.
Putin has used this argument to shift the blame onto Ukraine, claiming that Zelenskyy had no right to sign any peace agreements and referencing the Ukrainian president's decree banning negotiations with the Russian leader in response to Moscow's annexation of four Ukrainian regions.
What about 'Minsk 3'?
However, Zelenskyy and Putin already met at the negotiating table. In December 2019 they met in Paris along with the leaders of France and Germany.
The so-called Normandy Format summit in the French capital was supposed to find a way to end what was then five years of fighting in eastern Ukraine and unfreeze the Minsk peace process, a set of talks that led to two separate agreements that were supposed to be legally binding.
In September 2014, Minsk Protocol (Minsk I), Russia committed to withdrawing illegal armed groups and military equipment from Ukraine.
The February 2015 Minsk II Agreement (Minsk II) promised the removal of all foreign armed forces and mercenaries under OSCE supervision and the disarmament of illegal groups.
Moscow didn't fulfil these promises and instead embarked on its full-scale invasion of Ukraine two years after Zelenskyy and Putin met in Paris.
Ukraine's president has repeatedly reiterated that Kyiv needs strong security guarantees, not "situational agreements".
He said, 'I remember everything that happened as soon as I became president: there was the Minsk deal, there was a contact line, and people were dying along it every day".
"We definitely won't go for a Minsk-3."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia and Ukraine swap more prisoners after Istanbul talks
Russia and Ukraine swap more prisoners after Istanbul talks

LeMonde

time5 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Russia and Ukraine swap more prisoners after Istanbul talks

Russia and Ukraine exchanged more captured soldiers on Friday, June 20, the latest in a series of prisoner swaps agreed at peace talks in Istanbul earlier this month. The negotiations failed to make progress towards a ceasefire but both countries agreed to free more than 1,000 prisoners of war from each side – all wounded, ill or under 25 years old. "A group of Russian servicemen was returned from the territory controlled by the Kyiv regime. In exchange, a group of Ukrainian prisoners of war was handed over," Russia's defense ministry said in a statement. An AFP reporter saw freed Ukrainian prisoners of war being greeted by tearful relatives after stepping off a bus. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said most of the Ukrainians freed in the swap had been in Russian captivity "for over two years." Neither side said how many soldiers had been freed in Friday's swap. Moscow posted a video of Russian soldiers in military fatigues, chanting "Russia, Russia" with Russian flags draped over them. Zelensky shared images of Ukrainian soldiers, with shaved heads and in the blue-and-yellow national flag, weeping as they called relatives. The two sides have carried out dozens of such exchanges since Russia invaded in 2022 in one of the only areas of dialogue between Moscow and Kyiv. Two rounds of peace talks in Istanbul have failed to result in a pause to the fighting. Russia has rejected calls for an unconditional ceasefire, vowing to press on with its three-year invasion. It is demanding Kyiv cede more territory and give up on Western military support as a precondition to a truce.

Ukraine slams Putin's 'disdain' for peace process after he says 'whole of Ukraine' belongs to Russia
Ukraine slams Putin's 'disdain' for peace process after he says 'whole of Ukraine' belongs to Russia

France 24

time10 hours ago

  • France 24

Ukraine slams Putin's 'disdain' for peace process after he says 'whole of Ukraine' belongs to Russia

Ukraine said Friday that Russian President Vladimir Putin had shown "disdain" for the peace process by suggesting Moscow might seize more Ukrainian territory, including the northeastern city of Sumy. "Putin's cynical statements demonstrate complete disdain for US peace efforts ... The only way to force Russia into peace is to deprive it of its sense of impunity," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga said in a post on X. Putin on Friday told the St Petersburg International Economic Forum that Russians and Ukrainians were one people, "and in that sense the whole of Ukraine is ours". He cautioned that advancing Russian forces could take the Ukrainian city of Sumy as part of a bid to carve out a buffer zone along the border. Putin, who ordered troops into Ukraine in 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine, also said he was not seeking the capitulation of Ukraine or denying Ukraine's sovereignty, but that Ukraine had to be neutral. Russia currently controls about a fifth of Ukraine, including Crimea, more than 99% of the Luhansk region, over 70% of the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, and fragments of the Kharkiv, Sumy and Dnipropetrovsk regions. Kyiv and its Western allies say Moscow's claims to four Ukrainian regions and Crimea are illegal, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly rejected the notion that Russians and Ukrainians are one people. He has also said that Putin's terms for peace are akin to capitulation. Putin said on Friday he was not questioning Ukraine's independence or its people's striving for sovereignty, but he underscored that when Ukraine declared independence as the Soviet Union fell in 1991 it had also declared its neutrality. Putin said Moscow wanted Ukraine to accept the reality on the ground if there was to be a chance of peace – Russia's shorthand for the reality of Russia's control over a chunk of Ukrainian territory bigger than the US state of Virginia. "We have a saying, or a parable," Putin said. "Where the foot of a Russian soldier steps, that is ours."

Putin says recession in Russia 'must not be allowed to happen'
Putin says recession in Russia 'must not be allowed to happen'

France 24

time12 hours ago

  • France 24

Putin says recession in Russia 'must not be allowed to happen'

Economists have warned for months of a slowdown in the Russian economy, with the country posting its slowest quarterly expansion in two years for the first quarter of 2025. The Kremlin has said this was to be expected after two years of rapid growth as it ramped up military expenditure to fund the Ukraine campaign, but officials including the country's economy minister have raised alarm about possible pain ahead. "Some specialists and experts are pointing to the risks of stagnation and even a recession," Putin told attendees at Russia's flagship economic forum in Saint Petersburg. "This must not be allowed to happen under any circumstances," he said. "We need to pursue a competent, well-thought-out budgetary, tax and monetary policy," he added. The Russian economy grew in 2023 and 2024 despite the West's sweeping sanctions, with massive state spending on the military powering a robust expansion. But analysts have long warned that heavy public investment in the defence industry is no longer enough to keep Russia's economy growing and does not reflect a real increase in productivity. At his address to the forum on Friday, Putin was upbeat about Russia's economic prospects and denied the economy was being driven solely by the defence and energy industries. "Yes, of course, the defence industry played its part in this regard, but so did the financial and IT industries," he said. He said the economy needed "balanced growth" and called on officials to keep a "close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises." © 2025 AFP

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