ISTANBUL, Turkey
Russian President Vladimir Putin is not among the names listed by the Kremlin as being due to attend peace talks on the war in Ukraine in Istanbul on Thursday, despite calls from Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky for him to attend.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin on Wednesday signed an order on the composition of his country’s
delegation, which is due to hold direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul on
Thursday.
The order, which was posted on
the Kremlin website, read that the delegation will be led by presidential aide
Vladimir Medinsky, and will also include Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail
Galuzin, Director of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Russian General
Staff Igor Kostyukov, and Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin.Russia presidential aide
Vladimir Medinsky
Zelensky had previously said
he would attend the talks and meet Putin in person if the Russian president
agreed, and said he would do everything he could to ensure the face-to-face
meeting took place.
US President Donald Trump will
also not be attending, according to media reports, despite previously hinting
he would if Putin were there.
Zelensky will be in the
Turkish capital Ankara on Thursday to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
He said he would attend direct
talks in Istanbul with Russia, but only if Putin also attended.
"I am waiting to see who
will come from Russia, and then I will decide which steps Ukraine should take.
So far, the signals from them in the media are unconvincing," he said in
his nightly video address on Wednesday.
Putin and Zelensky have not
met in person since December 2019. Russia and Ukraine last held direct
negotiations in March 2022 in Istanbul, shortly after Moscow launched its
full-scale invasion of its neighbour.
Fighting has raged in Ukraine
since then. Russian forces have slowly expanded the amount of territory they
control over the past year, mostly in the east of Ukraine.
On Sunday Putin called for
direct talks between Russia and Ukraine in Turkey's largest city "without
pre-conditions". Zelensky then announced he would go in person and
expected the Russian president to travel as well.
Putin's suggestion of direct
talks in Istanbul followed Western powers' call for a 30-day ceasefire, after
European leaders met in Kyiv on Saturday.
After Trump called for Ukraine
to accept the offer on Sunday, Zelensky said he would travel there himself.
"There is no point in
prolonging the killings. And I will be waiting for Putin in Türkiye on
Thursday. Personally," Zelensky wrote in a social media post.
Earlier on Wednesday, Trump
had floated the possibility of joining the meeting himself if Putin did.
The US president, who is
currently in Qatar, told reporters he did not know if his Russian counterpart
would attend "if I'm not there".
"I know he would like me
to be there, and that's a possibility. If we could end the war, I'd be thinking
about that," Trump said.
The US is expected to send a
high-level delegation to the talks.
The country's top diplomat,
Marco Rubio, arrived in Turkey on Wednesday, where he will meet Nato foreign
ministers on Thursday.
Ahead of that meeting,
Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said he met Rubio on Wednesday
evening. Sybiha said he had reaffirmed Ukraine's commitment to US peace efforts
and called on Russia to "reciprocate Ukraine's constructive steps".
Rubio plans to travel onwards
to Istanbul on Friday, where the State Department says he will attend talks
with European counterparts to discuss the war in Ukraine.
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