Zelenskyy warns Putin will manipulate Ukraine ceasefire plan to make ‘reasonable solutions impossible’ – Europe live | Europe


Morning opening: Decoding Vladimir Putin

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russian president Vladimir Putin of “manipulative” response to the US proposal for a ceasefire, saying Putin pretended to accept it “at the moment he is, in fact, preparing to reject it.”

“That’s why, in Moscow, they are surrounding the ceasefire idea with such preconditions that it either fails or gets dragged out for as long as possible. Putin does this often — he doesn’t say ‘no’ outright, but he drags things out and makes reasonable solutions impossible,” he said.

Zelenskyy says ‘manipulative’ Putin does not want ceasefire – video

US president Donald Trump also acknowledged that while Putin’s response was “promising,” it was also “incomplete.”

Getting to the bottom of what Putin actually wants and planning what to do next in response will be the focus of the next few days.

US special envoy Steve Witkoff was in Moscow last night where he was meant to meet with Vladimir Putin or senior Russian officials to discuss the proposals. As of this morning, neither the Kremlin nor the White House issued any readouts from their discussion.

Speaking on Fox News overnight, the US national security adviser Mike Waltz praised Ukrainians for “a very different approach than you saw … in the Oval Office,” and urged all sides to move to ceasefire.

He declined to go into the details of discussions Witkoff had in Moscow, but insisted there was “some cautious optimism,” as the US administration expects to hear back from Witkoff “to evaluate and for the president to make decisions on next steps.”

When it was put to him that Ukraine not be allowed to enter Nato and would probably have to give up some Russian-occupied territories in Donbas, Waltz said “you are not wrong in any of that.”

“What’s important is that we are discussing all of those things with both sides,” he said.

Given public comments from Ukrainian officials on the integrity of the Ukrainian territory, it’s difficult to imagine their enthusiasm for such proposal.

On Saturday, UK prime minister Keir Starmer will host a virtual meeting of leaders involved in his planning for “the coalition of the willing,” a follow up on his Lancaster House summit earlier this month.

It’s Friday, 14 March 2025, and this is Europe live. It’s Jakub Krupa here.

Good morning.

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Key events

Kremlin repeats Waltz’s line on ‘cautious optimism’ on ceasefire

The Kremlin said there were “reasons to be cautiously optimistic” in discussion on ceasefire, but “there is still much to be done,” in further discussions between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump.

People gesture as they look at the city’s skyline and the Kremlin, in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Yuri Kochetkov/EPA

Speaking after last night’s visit of US special envoy Steve Witkoff, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that “when Mr Witkoff brings all the information to President Trump, we will determine the timing of a conversation (between Trump and Putin).”

“There is an understanding on all sides that such a conversation is needed. There are reasons to be cautiously optimistic,” Peskov added.

Peskov’s line repeats the same language used by US national security adviser Mike Waltz in an overnight interview with Fox.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy previously accused Russian president Vladimir Putin of “manipulative” response to the US proposal for a ceasefire, saying Putin pretended to accept it “at the moment he is, in fact, preparing to reject it.”

“Putin does this often – he doesn’t say ‘no’ outright, but he drags things out and makes reasonable solutions impossible,” he said.

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