The US and its G7 partners have warned Moscow they could expand sanctions and use frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine, as Donald Trump seeks to win over Vladimir Putin to his ceasefire proposal.
After a week in which Kyiv signed up to the 30-day truce but Moscow signalled reluctance to do so immediately, US secretary of state Marco Rubio and his counterparts achieved a degree of unity on Friday by thrashing out a joint statement on possible steps against Russia.
Their communiquรฉ, released after a G7 meeting in Canada, noted that the foreign ministers discussed imposing further penalties if the Kremlin did not fully implement a ceasefire.
Asked about US sanctions, Rubio cautioned that Trump โdoesnโt want to do that right now, because heโs in the hopes of attracting people on both sides to a process where we can negotiate peace.โ
He added that it was not yet clear whether Russia was playing for time.
โThe question is, are we actually moving towards a ceasefire, or is this a delay tactic?โ the secretary of state said. โIโm not going to answer that because I canโt characterise that for you right now.โ
The G7 statement said ministers had discussed possible measures against Moscow such as โcaps on oil prices, as well as additional support for Ukraine, and other meansโ, notably using revenues from frozen Russian assets.
The G7 froze about โฌ300bn in Central Bank of Russia assets โ mostly cash and government bonds โ in 2022 after Moscowโs full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Rubio, who has previously indicated that Kyiv would have to make territorial concessions, signalled on Friday that Moscow would also have to do so.
โIโve never heard President Trump say that Russia has a right to take all of Ukraine and do whatever they want there,โ he said.
He added that Trumpโs national security team will convene this weekend after the presidentโs envoy Steve Witkoff returns from Moscow to examine the Russian position.
Trump said in a post on his Truth Social network that the previous dayโs discussions with Putin had been โgood and productiveโ.
Until this week, the new administration has focused on putting pressure on Kyiv to agree a rapid end to the war, but doubts expressed by Putin about an immediate ceasefire have shifted attention to Moscow.
โThe ball is now in Russiaโs court when it comes to Ukraine,โ Canadaโs foreign minister Mรฉlanie Joly told reporters on Friday, adding that there was โstrong G7 unityโ on Ukraine.
One official said the communiquรฉ text on Ukraine had been the subject of tense wrangling overnight. The US argued that strong language could disrupt talks with Russia and it was watered down to reach an agreement, they said.
Kyiv and its allies in Britain and France have been keen to overcome a disastrous meeting last month between Trump and his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy by putting measures against Russia back on the US agenda.
Zelenskyyโs government agreed to Trumpโs proposal this week after the US had suspended military assistance and intelligence sharing with Kyiv โ both of which Washington now says it has resumed.
By contrast, Putin said he supported a ceasefire but added that โissuesโ remained that needed to be discussed first.
His reluctance to back the ceasefire proposal comes as Russian forces have made significant advances in the Kursk region, where Ukraine seized more than 1,000 sq km from Russia last summer.
In his Truth Social post Trump claimed the Russian army had surrounded thousands of Ukrainian troops, adding that โI have strongly requested to President Putin that their lives be sparedโ.
Ukraineโs general staff denied that Ukrainian troops had been encircled and said fighting was still ongoing in the Kursk region.
Putin said on Friday that the Ukrainian troops in Kursk should surrender โto carry out Trumpโs appealโ as Zelenskyy dismissed Moscowโs stance on a ceasefire as a stalling tactic.
โThe devil is in the details, and they will start offering you details to drag you into a dialogue, delay certain processes and postpone the end of the warโ, the Ukrainian president said. He added that he hoped for a โstrong reactionโ from Trump to Putinโs position.
Zelenskyy also said the issue of Ukrainian territories occupied by Russian forces would be โthe most difficultโ to solve.
Ceasefire and territories โare the most difficult moments [of a negotiation]โ, he said.
โThe first is difficult because it requires courage and political will, the second because it requires a difficult dialogue.โ
The Europeans and the US are expected to co-ordinate the application of economic pressure on Putin. National security advisers from Britain, France and Germany were in Washington on Friday for talks with Mike Waltz, their US counterpart.
France and Germany, which have long opposed a full-blown seizure of assets held in the EU, are now warming to the idea and are discussing with the UK and others ways in which they could be used.
Additional reporting by Max Seddon in Berlin and George Parker in London