Putin says he is ready to negotiate and compromise with Ukraine
Russian leader Vladimir Putin has said that Russia was prepared to negotiate and compromise with Ukraine and complained that "the other side" - meaning Ukraine - was refusing to reach an agreement. Source: Vladimir Putin during a press conference on 19 December Quote from Putin: "We have always said we were ready to negotiate and compromise.
Russian leader Vladimir Putin has said that Russia was prepared to negotiate and compromise with Ukraine and complained that "the other side" – meaning Ukraine – was refusing to reach an agreement.
Source: Vladimir Putin during a press conference on 19 December
Quote from Putin: "We have always said we were ready to negotiate and compromise. The other side has refused to negotiate, and we are always ready to negotiate. And compromise is always the outcome of negotiations.
We have in fact reached an agreement in Istanbul in late 2022. And I repeat for the hundredth time, the Ukrainian side has initialled this document and generally agreed with it. And then, for some reason, they refused because your ally Johnson [former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson – ed.] came and said that they had to fight to the last Ukrainian…
We are ready, but we need the other side to also be ready to negotiate and to compromise."
Background:
- On 8 December, US President-elect Donald Trump said that Ukraine and Russia need to hold an immediate ceasefire and start negotiations.
- On 12 December, Andrii Yermak, Head of the Ukrainian President’s Office, said he believes that Ukraine is not ready to begin negotiations with Russia due to a lack of weapons, a NATO invitation, and clear security guarantees.
- In April 2022, Russia effectively disrupted peace talks with Ukraine by including a clause in the draft treaty stating that it would have a veto over the international community’s response in the event of a repeated attack on Ukraine.
Read more: From Zelenskyy's "surrender" to Putin's surrender: how the negotiations with Russia are going
Read more: Before and after the counteroffensive: Are there perspectives in peace negotiations with Russia?
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