RT.com
16 Feb 2025, 23:54 GMT+10
Third countries have previously forced Kiev to renege on its promises, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said
Russia will need to take Ukraine's lack of independence into account in any future negotiations, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said.
Given that in the past, Kiev backtracked on its promises at the behest of other countries, Moscow will need to consider this lack of autonomy in any upcoming talks, Peskov said in an interview published by Russia 1 TV journalist Pavel Zarubin on Sunday.
"That country cannot really answer for its words," the spokesman said. "Each time it is necessary to make a certain adjustment when negotiating with them, for their deficit of sovereignty and the deficit of trust in them. Which will not go anywhere," Peskov added.
The Kremlin spokesman cited the ill-fated 2014-2015 Minsk Agreements and the failed negotiations Moscow and Kiev held in Istanbul in 2022, soon after the full-blown escalation of the Ukraine conflict.
The Minsk ceasefire, which was ostensibly intended to freeze the conflict between Kiev and the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics, was in fact only "an attempt to give Ukraine time" to build strength, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel admitted to Die Zeit in 2022.
"Ukraine would have been whole," if the Minsk agreements had been followed, "and there would have been no civil war, and Russian people in the Donbass would have had no desire to separate from Ukraine," Peskov claimed.
Similarly, Moscow and Kiev had already agreed on several points during the initial peace talks in Istanbul in 2022, the spokesman added.
"The [papers] were ready, they were ready to be signed. Then another side said, no, you can't. And they were thrown out," he said.
According to Ukrainian MP David Arakhamia, who was Kiev's chief negotiator at the talks, then UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson came in person to demand that nothing be signed and that Ukraine continue fighting.
Moscow has ruled out any temporary solution akin to the Minsk agreements, insisting on a permanent, legally binding solution that addresses the core causes of the conflict. Any such settlement would need to be based on the points previously agreed upon in Istanbul, adjusted for the territorial "realities on the ground," Russia has stated.
(RT.com)
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