Russia Launches Smallest Nighttime Attack On Ukraine In Months In Run-Up To Possible Peace Talks
Kyiv: Russia launched 10 Shahed and decoy drones at Ukraine in nighttime attacks, the Ukrainian air force said Tuesday, in its smallest drone bombardment this year as the warring countries prepare for possible peace talks in Turkiye.
The Kremlin hasn't directly responded to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's challenge for Russian leader Vladimir Putin to meet him in person at the negotiating table in Istanbul on Thursday.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov refused for the second straight day Tuesday to tell reporters whether Putin will travel to Istanbul and who else will represent Russia at the potential talks. "As soon as the president considers it necessary, we will make an announcement," Peskov said.
Russia has said it will send a delegation to Istanbul without preconditions.
The US has been applying stiff pressure on both sides to come to the table since President Donald Trump came to power in January with a promise to end the war.
Military analysts say both sides are preparing a spring-summer campaign on the battlefield, where a war of attrition has killed tens of thousands of soldiers on both sides along the roughly 1,000-kilometre front line.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think tank, said Monday that Russia is "quickly replenishing front-line units with new recruits to maintain the battlefield initiative." Zelenskyy will not be meeting with any Russian officials in Istanbul other than Putin, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Zelenskyy, said Tuesday on a YouTube show run by prominent Russian journalists in exile.
Lower-level talks would amount to simply "dragging out" any peace process, Podolyak said.
European leaders have recently accused Putin of dragging his feet in peace efforts while he attempts to press his bigger army's battlefield initiative and capture more Ukrainian land.
Russia effectively rejected an unconditional 30-day ceasefire demanded by Ukraine and Western European leaders from Monday, when it fired more than 100 drones at Ukraine. Putin instead offered direct peace talks.
But the wrangling over whether a ceasefire should come before the talks begin has continued.
"Ukraine is ready for any format of negotiations with Russia, but a ceasefire must come first," Andrii Yermak, the head of Ukraine's presidential office, said Tuesday.
Negotiations are impossible while "the Ukrainian people are under attack by Russian missiles and drones around the clock," Yermak said in a video address to the Copenhagen Democracy Summit 2025.
Putin has repeatedly questioned the legitimacy of the Ukrainian government, especially Zelenskyy himself, saying his term expired last year. Under Ukraine's constitution, it is illegal for the country to hold national elections while it's under martial law, as it now is.
In a further complication, a Ukrainian decree from 2022 rules out negotiations with Putin.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke Monday with the senior diplomats from the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Poland, who were meeting in London, to assess "the way forward for a ceasefire and path to peace in Ukraine," spokesperson Tammy Bruce said.
Those European countries had pledged further sanctions on Russia if it didn't comply with a full ceasefire that Ukraine had accepted from Monday, but they made no announcement of additional punitive measures.
(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
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