Russia and Ukraine fail to make breakthrough as leaders hold late-night talks
Vladimir Putin said he will 'do everything' to help future peace process but shrugged off Kiev’s claims it had captured 10 Russian troops on its territory

Talks between the leaders of Russia and Ukraine apparently failed to make a major breakthrough towards ending brutal fighting in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday as strongman Vladimir Putin played down the entry by his troops into the former Soviet state.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Putin sat down for a crunch one-on-one in the Belarusian capital Minsk after marathon talks involving top EU officials as tensions spiked after Moscow admitted for the first time that its troops had crossed into Ukraine.
Poroshenko said there were “some results” but there seemed to be no significant compromises to help end four months of clashes between government forces and pro-Russia fighters that some fear could spill over into all-out war between the two neighbours.
The Russian leader said he would “do everything” to help a future peace process but did little to soothe tensions when he shrugged off Kiev’s claims it had captured 10 Russian troops on its territory, with military sources in Moscow earlier saying they crossed over “by accident”.
“I have not yet received a report from the defence ministry. But from what I have heard, they were patrolling the border and could have ended up on Ukrainian territory,” Putin told journalists, adding that Ukrainian troops had previously crossed into Russia.