Putin rejects 30-day ceasefire, proposes direct talks on Ukraine capitulation

Putin proposes restarting direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul without preconditions, revisiting a format that collapsed in 2022 over Russian demands for capitulation.
Vladimir Putin after reading a statement to journalists in the Kremlin overnight into 11 May 2025. Screenshot: Youtube/kremlin
Vladimir Putin after reading a statement to journalists in the Kremlin overnight into 11 May 2025. Screenshot: Youtube/kremlin
Putin rejects 30-day ceasefire, proposes direct talks on Ukraine capitulation

Overnight on 11 May, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that he is ready to resume direct negotiations with Ukraine from 15 May in Istanbul. Previously, leaked documents had revealed that Moscow’s initial peace offer at the 2022 Istanbul talks amounted to Ukraine’s effective surrender. At the same time, the Russian dictator made no mention of the 30-day ceasefire proposal earlier advanced by Ukraine and the EU.

With his announcement, Putin effectively dismissed both Trump’s push for a truce and Ukraine-EU ceasefire proposal. On 10 May, Zelenskyy met in Kyiv with French President Macron, UK PM Starmer, Polish PM Tusk, and German Chancellor Merz, then joined them in a call with US President Trump to demand a full ceasefire from Russia starting 12 May.

Speaking during a night-time press conference at the Kremlin, held without questions from the press, Putin declared:

“We propose to the Kyiv authorities to resume negotiations, which were interrupted by them at the end of 2022. Resume direct negotiations—without any preconditions. We propose to start without delay already next Thursday, 15 May, in Istanbul—where they were held previously and where they were interrupted.”

Putin emphasized that Russia is “ready for serious negotiations” aimed at eliminating the so-called “root causes of the conflict.”

Russian officials have previously defined the so-called “root causes” of the full-scale invasion as NATO’s alleged breach of promises not to expand eastward and Ukraine’s alleged discrimination against ethnic Russians, as well as Russian language, media, and culture. Moscow’s conditions for ending the war include Ukraine’s “denazification” — effectively regime change — and demilitarization, amounting to Ukraine’s capitulation and subjugation as a Russian client state.

The Russian President claimed that a new ceasefire could emerge from such discussions, saying:

“We do not exclude that in the course of these negotiations it will be possible to agree on some new ceasefire—this would be a first step towards a long-term sustainable peace.”

Putin also announced plans to meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 11 May to request his support in facilitating the Istanbul talks.

Zelenskyy’s response

Zelenskyy responded to Putin’s proposal by stressing the need for an immediate halt to violence:

“There is no point in continuing the killing even for a single day. We expect Russia to confirm a ceasefire—full, lasting and reliable—starting tomorrow, 12 May, and Ukraine is ready to meet.”

He welcomed the possibility of Russia finally considering an end to the war:

“It is a positive sign that the Russians have finally begun to consider ending the war. The entire world has been waiting for this for a very long time. And the very first step in truly ending any war is a ceasefire.”

 

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