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Ukraine peace talks, EU militarization and the fate of Kiev regime: Key takeaways from Lavrov’s speeches | Ukraine peace talks, EU militarization and the fate of Kiev regime: Key takeaways from Lavrov’s speeches |
(1 day later) | |
Moscow is finalizing its draft peace proposal, Russia’s top diplomat has said, while accusing the EU of seeking to disrupt the peace process | |
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov covered a broad range of topics related to settling the Ukraine conflict, as well as Moscow’s view on the roles the US and EU play in the process, during several events on Friday. | |
Addressing an international conference in Moscow and talking to journalists during a Q&A session later, Lavrov spoke about the future of Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky’s and the Kiev “regime,” as well as Washington’s role in mediating the conflict and the responsibility the EU bears for protracting the hostilities. | |
Here are the key takeaways from his statements. | Here are the key takeaways from his statements. |
Ukraine peace process | Ukraine peace process |
Lavrov stressed that Russia remains open to renewed negotiations, provided they focus on the root causes of the conflict and acknowledge the current realities on the ground. | |
He said Russia is currently working on a memorandum outlining steps toward a potential peace agreement and plans to deliver it to the Ukrainian side. | |
According to the foreign minister, Moscow will be ready to present its draft peace proposal to the Ukrainian side once the POW exchange is finished. On Friday, the two sides started the swap agreed on in Istanbul last week. The exchange is expected to continue over the weekend. | |
So far, no new meeting date for the Russian and Ukrainian delegations has been set, Lavrov said. The sides agreed to resume contact once each of them prepares a detailed draft peace proposal. He objected to ceasefire suggestions that place no restrictions on Ukraine’s interactions with the West, arguing that this would simply allow Kiev to rearm its forces. | |
Lavrov described as “not very realistic” the possibility of holding the talks in the Vatican, which Pope Leo XIV proposed. It would be “inelegant” for two Orthodox Christian countries to mediate their conflict in the capital of the Catholic faith, Lavrov said. | |
Zelensky’s status | Zelensky’s status |
Vladimir Zelensky’s legitimacy will be of key importance when it comes to signing a peace agreement with Ukraine, Lavrov stressed. If any future deal is signed by someone whose “legitimacy no longer convinces anyone,” successors may question the agreements reached, he said. | |
Zelensky’s presidential term expired last year, but he has remained in power by refusing to hold new elections, citing martial law. | |
The Russian diplomat stated that Russia is not rejecting contact with Zelensky or his administration and is willing to engage in discussions about settlement principles. | The Russian diplomat stated that Russia is not rejecting contact with Zelensky or his administration and is willing to engage in discussions about settlement principles. |
Future of Kiev regime | Future of Kiev regime |
Lavrov described the current Ukrainian government as a “junta” and condemned its policies targeting the Russian-speaking population. Leaving millions in Ukraine under the rule of a regime that has banned their native language would be “a major crime,” he said. | Lavrov described the current Ukrainian government as a “junta” and condemned its policies targeting the Russian-speaking population. Leaving millions in Ukraine under the rule of a regime that has banned their native language would be “a major crime,” he said. |
If Zelensky’s “junta” expects that “somehow an agreement will be reached to end the hostilities, and what remains of Ukraine will live according to the laws that they adopted, this is an illusion,” he added. “This cannot be allowed under any circumstances.” | |
Russia-US relations | Russia-US relations |
Lavrov welcomed US President Donald Trump’s efforts to mediate peace in the Ukraine conflict. | Lavrov welcomed US President Donald Trump’s efforts to mediate peace in the Ukraine conflict. |
He added that Trump is the first Western leader who “publicly said that drawing Ukraine into NATO was a grave mistake” and blamed the administration of his predecessor, Joe Biden, for the escalation of the conflict. | |
Russia is open to cooperation with the US on space, energy, and technology – provided it is based on equality and mutual benefit. However, Lavrov acknowledged that US foreign policy has historically shifted unpredictably, and that Russia takes this into account when planning its actions. | |
Security crisis in Europe | Security crisis in Europe |
The European continent is facing a “deep security crisis” that the EU leaders seek to exploit to facilitate its militarization, the foreign minister warned. According to Lavrov, the “Euro-Atlantic security structures have fallen short” of providing real security for the continent. | The European continent is facing a “deep security crisis” that the EU leaders seek to exploit to facilitate its militarization, the foreign minister warned. According to Lavrov, the “Euro-Atlantic security structures have fallen short” of providing real security for the continent. |
Russia supports the concept of a Eurasian security architecture that would involve all nations of the Eurasian continent instead of a purely Western structure, he said. According to Lavrov, Russia does not want to “fence itself off from NATO,” but seeks instead an inseparable security structure for “all the nations of Eurasia, including its Western part.” | |
It is NATO and not Russia that “harbors plans of subduing... all of the Eurasian continent up to the far east,” he said. | |
EU ‘responsibility’ for continued bloodshed | EU ‘responsibility’ for continued bloodshed |
EU leaders are fueling the Ukraine conflict and encouraging Zelensky and his regime to continue the hostilities against Russia, Lavrov told journalists during the Q&A session. Calls by French President Emmanuel Macron, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Russia to agree to an unconditional ceasefire are a disguise for their plans to continue pumping the Kiev regime with arms, the foreign minister stated. | |
The EU leaders seek to disrupt the peace process, which was renewed during direct talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul last week, Lavrov said. | |
“They’ve bet their reputation on dragging Europe into a war against Russia to facilitate the militarization of Europe,” he stated, adding that the Western governments plan to allocate “huge sums” of money for this goal.“There is certainly Europe’s responsibility” in protracting the Ukraine conflict, Lavrov said, adding that the EU leaders will “find it hard to shed this responsibility.” |