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EU, UK leaders to speak with Trump before his Putin call as Ukraine hit

EU, UK leaders to speak with Trump before his Putin call as Ukraine hit

Al Jazeera18-05-2025

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has said he and the leaders of the United Kingdom, France and Poland aim to speak with Donald Trump in advance of the United States president's planned call with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, on Monday, in a flurry of diplomacy after inconclusive direct Russia-Ukraine talks in Istanbul.
In remarks to reporters on Sunday, Merz said he discussed the issue with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio while the two men were attending the inaugural mass of Pope Leo XIV in the Vatican. Merz said he also spoke at length at the Vatican with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
'I spoke with Marco Rubio, including about the call tomorrow. We agreed that we will speak again with the four state leaders and the US president in preparation of this conversation [with Putin],' Merz said.
Trump said he planned to speak to Putin and Zelenskyy to discuss ways to stop the war's 'bloodbath'.
In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed to Russian news agencies that preparations were under way for a conversation between Putin and Trump.
The talks in the Turkish city of Istanbul on Friday were the first time the sides had held face-to-face talks since March 2022, weeks after Russia's full-scale invasion of its neighbour.
The brief talks yielded only an agreement to swap 1,000 prisoners of war, according to the heads of both delegations, in what would be their biggest such exchange since the war began.
A senior Ukrainian official familiar with the talks said Russian negotiators demanded Ukraine pull its troops out of all Ukrainian regions claimed by Moscow before they would agree to a ceasefire. That is a red line for Ukraine, and as it stands, Russia does not have full control in those regions.
Meanwhile, Zelenskyy met US Vice President JD Vance and Rubio on the sidelines of the papal inauguration, according to a source in the Ukrainian delegation. It was the first meeting between Zelenskyy and Vance since they publicly clashed during talks at the White House in February over the future of the war in Ukraine.
In the meantime, Ukraine has claimed Russia is planning to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile late on Sunday to intimidate it and its Western allies.
Ukraine's military intelligence agency, GUR, said Russia was planning to conduct a 'training and combat' launch of the missile.
GUR said in a statement on the Telegram app that the launch was ordered to be implemented from Russia's Sverdlovsk region, adding that the flight range for the missile was more than 10,000km (6,200 miles).
Ukraine on Sunday also said Russia had launched a record number of drones overnight, targeting various regions, including that of the capital, where a woman was killed.
Its air force said Russia launched '273 Shahed attack drones and various types of imitator drones', of which 88 were destroyed and 128 went astray, 'without negative consequences'.
Deputy Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said it was a 'record' number of drones. 'Russia has a clear goal – to continue killing civilians,' she said.
Al Jazeera's Zein Basravi, reporting from Kyiv, said overnight, 'air raid sirens began, and they went on for nearly nine hours'.
'We see these massive drone strikes and we see crowds of people seeking shelter, seeking safety, in those deep underground subway stations in the capital and in other areas of the country, once again,' Basravi said.
The Russian military said it intercepted 25 Ukrainian drones overnight and on Sunday morning. It also claimed it had captured Bahatyr, another village in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region, as it intensifies the war effort despite the talks.
Russia's overnight drone attacks were roundly condemned by Ukrainian officials.
Zelenskyy reiterated his call for stronger sanctions on Moscow after a Russian drone killed nine bus passengers in the Sumy region of northeastern Ukraine on Saturday. 'This was a deliberate killing of civilians,' he said.
'Pressure must be exerted on Russia to stop the killings. Without tougher sanctions, without stronger pressure, Russia will not seek real diplomacy.'
Russia, which denies targeting civilians, said it struck a military target in Sumy. Its Ministry of Defence claimed another settlement was captured in eastern Ukraine.
Zelenskyy's top aide, Andriy Yermak, also decried the attacks.
'For Russia, the negotiations in Istanbul are just a pretence. Putin wants war,' Yermak said.
In an interview with Russian state TV, Putin said Moscow's aim was to 'eliminate the causes that triggered this crisis, create the conditions for a lasting peace and guarantee Russia's security', without elaborating further.
Russia's references to the 'root causes' of the conflict typically refer to alleged grievances with Kyiv and the West that Moscow has put forward as justification for launching the invasion in February 2022.
They include pledges to 'de-Nazify' and demilitarise Ukraine, protect Russian speakers in the country's east, push back against NATO expansion and stop Ukraine's westward geopolitical drift.
Ukraine and the West have rejected all of them, saying Russia's offensive is nothing more than an imperial-style land grab.
Tens of thousands have been killed since Russia started the war, with millions forced to flee their homes.
Putin said the Russian army, which occupies about 20 percent of Ukraine, had the 'troops and means required' to achieve its goals.
The US Department of State said in a statement that Rubio and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, spoke with each other on Saturday. During the call, Rubio welcomed the prisoner exchange agreement reached in Istanbul, the department's spokesperson said.
Ukraine's top negotiator, Defence Minister Rustem Umerov, said the 'next step' would be a meeting between the two warring presidents.
Russia said it had taken note of the request, but added the swap of POWs had to be completed first, and both sides then needed to present their visions for a ceasefire before the next round of negotiations could be arranged.

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