More Russia-US-Ukraine talks must happen before the two leaders get together, an American official has told the outlet
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky could meet face-to-face in the near future if ongoing talks between their respective countries and the United States continue, according to Axios.
The two-day trilateral peace talks in Abu Dhabi, which ended on Saturday, were the first joint meeting of Russian, US and Ukrainian delegations since the conflict escalated almost four years ago.
Axios cited an unnamed American official on Saturday, saying the negotiations in the UAE “went as well as we could have expected. We feel good where we are now.”
“We are very close to a meeting between Putin and Zelensky,” another US official claimed. More trilateral Russia-US-Ukraine talks “need to happen before a meeting between the leaders. We don’t think we are far away from that. If we continue down the current path we will get to that place,” the source explained.
The official said the next round of trilateral talks, scheduled for February 1 in Abu Dhabi, could open the door to a meeting in Moscow or Kiev. Putin and Zelensky last met in person in Paris in December 2019 during talks brokered by France and Germany. They spoke by phone twice the following year.
In 2022, Zelensky signed a decree banning negotiations with Putin following Russian accession referendums in four former Ukrainian regions. Moscow has repeatedly noted that Kiev has not repealed or amended the ban.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said previously that the Russian president has not ruled out the possibility of holding a summit with Zelensky, but insists that it must be well prepared and serve to sign concrete agreements on ending the conflict, which has been worked out by the experts from the two countries.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos earlier this week, Zelensky claimed Ukraine was open to a ceasefire with Russia, while demanding peace strictly on Kiev’s terms, Western arms, and funding. Moscow maintains that any settlement must be permanent, reflect the realities on the ground and address the root causes of the crisis.
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