US expects Russia offer soon as Zelensky sounds warning

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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio testifying at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on May 20.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio testifying at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on May 20.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON – US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on May 20 he expected Russia to present a Ukraine ceasefire outline within days that will show if it is serious, as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Moscow of buying time.

President Donald Trump

spoke separately by telephone

on May 19 to Mr Zelensky and Russia’s Vladimir Putin, after Russian and Ukrainian officials met in Istanbul on May 16 for their first direct talks on the conflict in three years.

Mr Putin has consistently rejected proposals for a 30-day truce put forward by Kyiv and its Western allies.

But Mr Rubio said that Mr Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov indicated they would present their own terms “maybe in a number of days, maybe this week, hopefully.”

The Russians will offer “just broad terms that would allow us to move towards a ceasefire, and that ceasefire would then allow us to enter into detailed negotiations to bring about an end of the conflict,” Mr Rubio said.

He said that the presentation will “tell us a lot about their true intentions.”

“If it’s a term sheet that’s realistic and you can work off of it, that’s one thing. If it makes demands that we know are unrealistic, I think that will be indicative.”

Mr Putin after Mr Trump’s call said he was ready to work with Ukraine on a “memorandum” outlining a possible roadmap and different positions on ending the war.

‘Trying to buy time’

Mr Rubio insisted to critical lawmakers that Mr Putin “hasn’t gotten a single concession” from Mr Trump.

But Russia has also not indicated any new flexibility since Mr Trump took office in January with vows to end the war through dialogue.

“It is obvious that Russia is trying to buy time in order to continue its war and occupation,” Mr Zelensky said in a post on social media.

Ms Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told Mr Rubio that Mr Putin’s refusal to go to Istanbul despite the stated willingness of both Mr Zelensky and Mr Trump to meet showed “he believes it’s in Russia’s interest to carry out this war as long as possible.”

The European Union formally on May 20

adopted its 17th round of sanctions on Moscow

, targeting 200 vessels of Russia’s so-called shadow maritime fleet.

Mr Kirill Dmitriev, the head of Russia’s Direct Investment Fund and lead economic negotiator with Washington, attacked the move, saying: “Western politicians and the media are making titanic efforts to disrupt the constructive dialogue between Russia and the United States.”

Mr Rubio said that Mr Trump for now opposed new sanctions for fear that Russia would no longer come to the table.

Moscow appears confident, with its troops advancing on the battlefield and Mr Trump ending Western isolation of the Kremlin.

The memorandum mentioned by Mr Putin “buys time for Russia,” Russian political analyst Konstantin Kalachev said.

“The cessation of hostilities is not a condition for it, which means that Russia can continue its offensive,” he added.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022

and has since destroyed swathes of the country’s east, killed tens of thousands and now controls around one-fifth of its territory.

Trump is no ‘messiah’

People who spoke to AFP both in Kyiv and Moscow were sceptical about peace prospects and thought the Putin-Trump call had not brought them closer.

“I never had any faith in him and now I have none at all,” retired teacher Victoria Kyseliova said in Kyiv, when asked if she was losing confidence in Mr Trump.

Mr Vitaliy, a 53-year-old engineer from Kyiv, said Mr Trump was no “messiah” and that his flurry of diplomacy has changed little.

Ukrainian political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said Mr Trump’s latest calls had only added to the uncertainty.

“This conversation not only failed to clarify the future of the negotiations but further confused the situation,” he said.

He said Mr Trump had fallen for Mr Putin’s tactics of trying to use talks “as a cover to continue and intensify the war.”

In Moscow, there was defiance and confidence.

“I believe that we don’t need these negotiations. We will win anyway,” said Ms Marina, a 70-year-old former engineer. AFP

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