MOSCOW, April 25, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - US envoy Steve Witkoff met Vladimir
Putin in the Kremlin on Friday to tout Washington's plan to settle the
Ukraine conflict, a day after Donald Trump issued a direct appeal to the
Russian president to halt his offensive.
Trump has been trying to broker a truce between Moscow and Kyiv to end three
years of fighting, but has failed to extract any major concessions from the
Kremlin despite several rounds of negotiation.
Russia launched its full-scale offensive on Ukraine in 2022, hoping to take
the country in days, but has since become embroiled in a huge, bloody
conflict that has killed tens of thousands.
Video published by Russian state media showed Witkoff meeting Putin at the
Kremlin, with the two smiling, shaking hands and exchanging a few words in
English before beginning talks.
The billionaire real estate investor is playing a key role in Washington's
peace efforts and had already met Putin on three previous occasions since
Trump returned to the White House in January.
Trump has threatened to walk away from talks if he does not see progress
towards a ceasefire.
On Thursday, after Russian attacks on Kyiv killed 12 people, Trump wrote on
social media: "Vladimir, STOP!", adding "Lets get the Peace Deal DONE!"
When asked how he would respond if Russia did not accept a deal, Trump said
Thursday: "I won't be happy, let me put it that way. Things will happen."
Russia, which has warned against rushing into a peace settlement, said
Thursday it was "ready to reach a deal" but needed certain issues addressed
first.
"There are still some specific points... which need to be fine-tuned, and we
are busy with this," its foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told CBS News.
- 'Pressure' -
The United States has not revealed the details of its peace plan, but has
suggested freezing the front line and accepting Russian control of Crimea --
a peninsula annexed by the Kremlin in 2014 -- in exchange for peace.
Trump was quoted as saying in a TIME magazine interview published on Friday:
"Crimea will stay with Russia. And Zelensky understands that."
Ukraine has rejected ceding ground to Moscow, and says it will not accept
Russian control of Crimea.
But Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has in recent months accepted that
he might have to try to secure the return of some land captured by Russia
through diplomacy once a ceasefire is in place.
Zelensky has expressed frustration at a lack of "pressure" on Putin from the
West, despite the United States warning of repercussions if Moscow refused a
deal.
On Friday, he said that a North Korean-supplied missile fired by Russia on
Kyiv the day before contained dozens of components from US firms.
"Any country that becomes a victim of aggression is never defending itself
against a single entity, but against a group of accomplices," he said.
- 'Five territories' -
Putin last month rejected a US proposal of a full and unconditional ceasefire
that Zelensky has accepted and repeatedly called for since.
Trump, who has been accused of favouring Russia and has repeatedly vilified
Zelensky, said Thursday that the main concession Russia would make in any
peace deal was "stopping taking the whole country".
Moscow currently occupies around 20 percent of Ukraine and in addition to
Crimea has attempted to annex four other Ukrainian regions.
Witkoff told Fox News earlier this month that a peace settlement hinged on
the status of the "so-called five territories" -- a comment that drew a sharp
rebuke from Zelensky, who accused the US envoy of "spreading Russian
narratives".
As Witkoff arrived in Russia on Friday, authorities there reported a senior
general had been killed in a car bombing outside Moscow.
Kyiv did not claim responsibility for the attack, though it bore the
hallmarks of previous assassinations on Russian soil that Ukraine said it was
behind.
Russia also fired more than 100 drones at Ukraine between late Thursday and
early Friday, the Ukrainian army said.
A Russian drone strike killed at least three people including a child in the
central Ukrainian city of Pavlograd, rescuers said.