Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed on Tuesday to seek a limited 30-day ceasefire against energy and infrastructure targets in Ukraine, while talks aimed at advancing toward a broader peace plan will begin โimmediately,โ the White House said.
Putin stopped short of accepting a broader U.S.-backed 30-day ceasefire that Ukraine has said it is ready to accept. The Russian president raised โsignificant pointsโ about preventing such a truce from being used by Ukraine to mobilize more soldiers and rearm itself, the Kremlin said in a statement following a lengthy phone call between the two leaders.
Putin also emphasized that the โcomplete cessation of foreign military assistance and the provision of intelligence information to Kyivโ is a condition for any permanent peace deal.
The two countries plan to begin negotiations โimmediatelyโ in the Middle East on a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea, according to a readout from the White House.
โThe leaders agreed that the movement to peace will begin with an energy and infrastructure ceasefire, as well as technical negotiations on implementation of a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea, full ceasefire and permanent peace,โ the readout said.
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Trump had been pressuring Putin to agree to a U.S.-backed 30-day ceasefire that Ukraine has already accepted as part of a move toward a permanent peace deal to end Europeโs biggest conflict since the Second World War. The war has killed or wounded hundreds of thousands of people, displaced millions and reduced entire towns to rubble.
Trump has hinted that a permanent peace deal could include territorial concessions by Kyiv and control of Ukraineโs Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
The U.S. presidentโs overtures to Putin since returning to the White House in January have left traditional U.S. allies wary.
Ukraine and its Western allies have long described Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine as an imperialist land grab, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has accused Putin of deliberately prolonging the war.
Zelenskyy, who arrived in Finland on Tuesday to discuss the NATO stateโs support for Ukraine, says Ukraineโs sovereignty is not negotiable and Russia must surrender the territory it has seized. He says Moscowโs ambitions will not stop at Ukraine if it is allowed to keep the territory it has seized.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned on Tuesday that Russia had massively expanded its military-industrial production capacity in preparation for โfuture confrontation with European democracies.โ
Speaking to Trump late on Monday, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer โreiterated that all must work together to put Ukraine in the strongest possible position to secure a just and lasting peace,โ the British leaderโs spokesperson said.
Russia seized the Crimea peninsula from Ukraine in 2014 and most of four eastern Ukrainian regions following its invasion in February 2022. All told, it controls about a fifth of Ukrainian territory.
Putin said he sent troops into Ukraine because NATOโs creeping expansion threatened Russiaโs security. He has demanded Ukraine drop any ambition of joining the Western military alliance.
Putin has also said Russia must keep control of Ukrainian territory it has seized, Western sanctions should be eased and Kyiv must stage a presidential election. Zelenskyy, elected in 2019, has remained in office under martial law he imposed because of the war.