Russia wants long-term Ukraine peace deal, not quick US-backed ceasefire, diplomat says

Russia-US talks last week did not offer clarity about Trump’s peace plan for Ukraine, Ryabkov says

Russian deputy minister for foreign affairs Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow was after a Ukraine deal that stood the test of time. Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images
Russian deputy minister for foreign affairs Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow was after a Ukraine deal that stood the test of time. Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images

Russia wants a long-term peace deal over Ukraine that tackles what it regards as the root causes of the conflict and not a quick US-backed ceasefire followed by a swift restart of fighting, a senior Russian diplomat told the RIA news agency.

In an interview released on Monday, the third anniversary of thousands of Russian troops crossing into Ukraine at the orders of president Vladimir Putin, Russian deputy minister for foreign affairs Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow was after a Ukraine deal that stood the test of time.

“We can recognise with sufficient confidence the desire of the American side to move towards a quick ceasefire,” RIA cited Mr Ryabkov as saying.

“But ... a ceasefire without a long-term settlement is the path to a swift resumption of fighting and a resumption of the conflict with even more serious consequences, including consequences for Russian-American relations. We do not want this.

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“We need to find a long-term solution, which, in turn, must necessarily include an element of overcoming the root causes of what has been happening in and around Ukraine.”

Russia-US talks held in Riyadh last week did not offer greater clarity about US president Donald Trump’s peace plan for Ukraine, Mr Ryabkov said.

He repeated Moscow’s stance that it had no choice but to launch what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine – something Ukraine and the West call a brutal colonial-style war of conquest – because of what he said was the Nato alliance’s “unrestrained” eastward expansion.

He also complained about what he called the trampling of the rights of the Russian-speaking population in Ukraine, repeating an allegation which Kyiv denies. – Reuters

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