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Putin ponders: should Russia try to take Ukraine’s capital Kyiv again?

  • Vladimir Putin said Ukraine’s counteroffensive had failed so far, and that there was no need now for martial law or a new Russian mobilisation
  • President made the comments during a far-ranging meeting with Russian military correspondents and war bloggers in Moscow

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Russian President Vladimir Putin visits wounded in military hospital on country’s national day

Russian President Vladimir Putin visits wounded in military hospital on country’s national day

President Vladimir Putin said that any further mobilisation would depend on what Russia wanted to achieve in the war in Ukraine, adding that he faced a question only he could answer – should Russia try to take Kyiv again?

More than 15 months since Putin sent troops into Ukraine, Russian and Ukrainian forces are still battling with artillery, tanks and drones along a 1,000km (600-mile) front line, though well away from the capital Kyiv.

Using the word “war” several times, Putin offered a barrage of warnings to the West, suggesting Russia may have to impose a “sanitary zone” in Ukraine to prevent it attacking Russia and saying Moscow was considering ditching the Black Sea grain deal.

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Russia, he said, had no need for nationwide martial law and would keep responding to breaches of its red lines. Many in the United States, Putin said, did not want World War Three, though Washington gave the impression it was unafraid of escalation.

But his most puzzling remark was about Kyiv, which Russian forces tried – and failed – to capture just hours after Putin ordered troops into Ukraine on February 24 last year.

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“Should we return there or not? Why am I asking such a rhetorical question?” Putin told 18 Russian war correspondents and bloggers in the Kremlin on Tuesday.

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