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This combination of file picture shows Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (L) during a press conference in Kyiv on March 3, 2022; and Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) at the National Space Centre construction site in Moscow on February 27, 2022. Photo: AFP

Ukraine war: Zelensky says no deal without Russian withdrawal, Putin must agree to meet to negotiate end of fighting

  • Zelensky said he would not accept a ceasefire deal that allows Russian forces to remain in their current positions insisting ‘we will not accept a frozen conflict’
  • The Ukrainian President emphasised that Russian President Vladimir Putin must agree to meet him to negotiate any deal to end the fighting
Ukraine

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says his country could not accept a deal with Moscow that would allow Russian troops to remain in occupied territory.

Speaking Wednesday to participants in The Wall Street Journal CEO Council Summit, Zelensky said Ukrainian forces had halted the Russian offensive in what he described as the first stage of the conflict. In the second stage, he said, Ukraine would expel Russian troops from its territory and in the third, would move to fully restore its territorial integrity.

Zelenskyy said he would not accept a ceasefire deal that would allow Russian forces to remain in their current positions ‒ insisting that “we will not accept a frozen conflict” ‒ but gave no further details. He warned that Ukraine would be drawn into a “diplomatic quagmire” like the peace agreement for eastern Ukraine that was brokered by France and Germany in 2015.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (L) and Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) arrive to attend a meeting on Ukraine with French President and German chancellor at the Elysee Palace in December 2019 in Paris. Photo: Pool/ AFP

In 2014, Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula and cast its support behind a separatist rebellion in Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland called the Donbas. Russian President Vladimir Putin has named Ukraine’s recognition of the Russian sovereignty over Crimea and its acknowledgement of the separatist regions’ independence as key conditions for halting hostilities.

Zelensky emphasised that Putin must agree to meet him to negotiate any deal to end the fighting.

He said it was important to continue peace talks, but noted that “until the Russian president signs it or makes an official statement I don’t see the point in such agreements.”

EU proposes total ban on Russian oil imports as war in Ukraine grinds on

Meanwhile, the Kremlin has rejected media reports it might formally declare war on Ukraine on May 9, when Russia celebrates the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, and announce a broad mobilisation.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the reports as “untrue” and “nonsense” at a daily conference call with reporters.

Western media reported earlier this month, citing UK and US officials, that Putin might pivot from a “special military operation” to an all-out war with Ukraine, which would allow him to introduce martial law and mobilise reservists.

The reports said Putin could announce the changes during Victory Day celebrations on May 9, Russia’s most important holiday.

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