WASHINGTON, United States
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin agreed Tuesday on a halt in Russian attacks against Ukrainian energy targets — but fell far short of securing a full ceasefire in a highly anticipated phone call.
The US and Russian leaders
spoke for more than an hour and a half and both expressed hopes for repairing
relations between the countries.
However, there was no agreement from the Russian president for Washington’s
proposed full 30-day ceasefire in Russia’s invasion of its pro-Western
neighbor.
The Kremlin said Putin agreed
to pause strikes on Ukraine energy targets for 30 days and that Putin had
already given the order to his military. The White House said separately that
the “leaders agreed that the movement to peace will begin with an energy and
infrastructure ceasefire.”
Russia has launched a series
of devastating attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure throughout the
three-year-old war. According to the Kremlin statement, Ukraine — which has
bombed multiple Russian oil installations — had also agreed to the truce on energy
targets, although Kyiv had yet to comment.
The two leaders agreed that
broader truce talks would “begin immediately in the Middle East,” the White
House said in its statement, also citing a “huge upside” if Russia and the
United States improve their relations.
But the Kremlin statement said
a “key condition” for peace would be ending Western military and intelligence
support to Ukraine’s embattled military — a position that will alarm Kyiv and
European capitals that have already accused Putin of stalling.
Trump had already made clear
before the call that he was ready to discuss “dividing up certain assets” —
what parts of occupied Ukraine that Russia would be allowed to keep.
The US president had said on
his Truth Social network on the eve of the call that “many elements of a final
agreement have been agreed to, but much remains” to be settled.
US allies, alarmed by Trump’s
recent pivot toward Russia, fear the Republican will give too much ground to
the Russian president, a leader for whom he has repeatedly expressed
admiration.
Kyiv had already agreed to the
US proposal to halt fighting for 30 days. It said on Tuesday before the call
that it expected Moscow to “unconditionally” accept to the ceasefire.
“It is time for Russia to show
whether it really wants peace,” Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga said.
But Putin has repeatedly said
that there were further issues that needed discussion, which Tuesday’s call
apparently failed to fully resolve.
Putin gave a hard-line
anti-Western speech Tuesday before the call, saying the West would still try to
undermine Russia even if it lifted sanctions imposed over its invasion of
Ukraine.
He mocked the G7 group of rich
democracies — from which Russia was expelled in 2018 — to wild applause from
the audience, saying it was too small to “see on a map.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky has warned Putin does not want peace and is trying to achieve a better
position militarily ahead of any halt in fighting.
Russia has attacked Ukraine
with near daily barrages of drones and missiles for more than three years,
occupying some 20 percent southern and eastern Ukraine and pressing a grinding
advance in recent months.
The Kremlin has also hailed
Moscow’s quick offensive in the Kursk region, parts of which Ukraine seized
last year and was hoping to use as a bargaining chip.
The push toward a ceasefire
began in February when Trump announced that he had spoken to Putin — a surprise
call that broke Western efforts to isolate the Russian leader while his
invasion continues.
As Trump upended years of US
policy he then had a televised shouting match with Zelensky in the Oval Office
on February 28, which led to the United States temporarily suspending its
billions of dollars in military aid to Kyiv.
On Sunday Trump said he would
discuss issues of “land” and “power plants” with Putin — a likely reference to
the Moscow-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant.
Trump is however intent on
delivering on an election pledge to end fighting in Ukraine, blaming his
predecessor Joe Biden’s policy on Russia for fueling the war.
“It must end NOW,” he said on
Truth Social.
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