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Kremlin responds to Zelensky’s new ‘peace summit’ proposal

Russia first needs to understand what the Ukrainian leader meant when he said Moscow should attend, Dmitry Peskov has said

FILE PHOTO. ©  Getty Images / Westend61

The Kremlin has responded to reports that Moscow could be invited to participate in a new Ukraine ‘peace summit.’ The goals and agenda of such an event are unclear, spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said, noting that the previous Western-backed event in Switzerland made no progress in resolving the crisis.

Speaking to the Russian TV channel Zvevda on Tuesday, Peskov responded to Vladimir Zelensky’s view that “Russian representatives should be at the second summit” this autumn. 

The spokesman suggested that the first such event, which took place in Switzerland in June and to which Russia was not invited, “was by no means a peace summit…. Therefore, it is probably necessary to first understand what he [Zelensky] means.” 

The Swiss-hosted event focused on three points of Vladimir Zelensky ‘peace formula,’ including prisoner exchanges, nuclear security and food supplies. The plan, first put forward by Kiev in late 2022, calls on Russia to withdraw from all territories Ukraine claims as its own, and was dismissed by Moscow as being detached from reality. 

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Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova branded the Swiss-hosted summit a “fiasco,” noting that almost half the delegations that were invited – including China – did not show up. She added that the gathering failed to establish a setting for talks on a sustainable peace.

However, on Monday, Vladimir Zelensky suggested that Ukraine and its backers intend to hold a second ‘peace summit’ by November, when the presidential election in the US will take place. He noted that there will be three separate meetings, focusing on energy security, freedom of navigation, and prisoner exchanges, to pave the way for another high-profile conference. 

Bloomberg earlier this month suggested that Kiev’s push to convene a summit before the US presidential election signals “a sense of urgency on the part of Ukraine” as it faces the prospect of a victory for GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, who has repeatedly said he would settle the Ukraine conflict within 24 hours if elected – while criticizing US military support for Kiev.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin said last week that Moscow had no plans to attend any new summits on Ukraine dedicated to promoting what he called Kiev’s “dead-end and ultimatum-like… formula.’”

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