Russia 'open' to talks on Ukraine but presses demands after Biden
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[December 02, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin is "open to
negotiations" on Ukraine but the West must accept Moscow's demands, the
Kremlin said on Friday, a day after U.S. President Joe Biden said he was
willing to talk if Putin were looking for a way to end the war.
Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron said after talks at the White
House on Thursday that they would hold Russia to account for its actions
in Ukraine but the U.S. president also appeared to hold out an olive
branch to Moscow while stressing he saw no sign of any change in Putin's
stance.
Biden has not spoken directly with Putin since Russia invaded Ukraine on
Feb. 24. In March, Biden branded Putin a "butcher" who "cannot stay in
power".
Now, after more than nine months of fighting and with winter tightening
its grip, Western countries are trying to boost aid for Ukraine as it
reels from Russian missile and drone attacks targeting key energy
infrastructure that have left millions without heating, electricity and
water.
Fighting is raging in eastern Ukraine, with the town of Bakhmut the main
target of Moscow's artillery attacks, while Russian forces in the
southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions remain on the defensive,
Ukraine's General Staff said in its latest battlefield update.
In a bid to reduce the money available for Moscow's war effort, the
European Union has tentatively agreed to a $60 a barrel price cap on
Russian seaborne oil, diplomats said. The measure will need to be
approved by all EU governments in a written procedure by Friday.
In Moscow's first public response to Biden's overture, Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov told reporters: "The president of the Russian Federation
has always been, is and remains open to negotiations in order to ensure
our interests."
Peskov said the U.S. refusal to recognise annexed territory in Ukraine
as Russian was hindering a search for ways to end the war. Moscow has
previously sought sweeping security guarantees including a reversal of
NATO's eastern enlargement.
'DESTRUCTIVE'
Putin told German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in a phone call on Friday that
the Western line on Ukraine was "destructive" and urged Berlin to
rethink its approach, the Kremlin said.
In Berlin's readout on the call, Scholz's spokesperson said the
chancellor had condemned Russian air strikes against civilian
infrastructure and called for a diplomatic solution to the war
"including a withdrawal of Russian troops".
Putin has said he has no regrets about launching what he calls a
"special military operation" to disarm and "denazify" Ukraine. He casts
the war as a watershed moment when Russia finally stood up to an
arrogant West after decades of humiliation following the 1991 fall of
the Soviet Union.
Ukraine and the West say Putin has no justification for what they cast
as an imperial-style war of occupation in which thousands of civilians
have been killed. Kyiv says it will fight until the last Russian soldier
is ejected from its territory.
After their talks on Thursday, Biden and Macron said in a joint
statement they were committed to holding Russia to account "for widely
documented atrocities and war crimes, committed both by its regular
armed forces and by its proxies" in Ukraine.
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Ukrainian servicemen fire a
self-propelled howitzer toward Russian positions, amid Russia's
attack on Ukraine, on a frontline in Donetsk region, Ukraine
November 30, 2022. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty/Serhii Nuzhnenko
via REUTERS
Biden said he was ready to speak with Putin "if in fact there is an
interest in him deciding he's looking for a way to end the war",
adding the Russian leader "hasn't done that yet".
Macron said he would continue to talk to Putin to "try to prevent
escalation and to get some very concrete results" such as the safety
of nuclear plants.
The International Atomic Energy Agency hopes to reach an agreement
with Russia and Ukraine to create a protection zone at the
Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe's largest, by the end of
the year, the head of the U.N. atomic watchdog, Rafael Grossi, told
Italian newspaper La Repubblica in an interview.
The head of Russia's state-run nuclear energy agency Rosatom was
later quoted by RIA news agency as saying Moscow had outlined its
position on creating a safety zone and was now awaiting a response.
Repeated shelling around the Russian-held plant has raised concern
about the potential for a grave accident just 500 km (300 miles)
from the site of the world's worst nuclear accident, the 1986
Chornobyl disaster.
ATTACKS
Three people were killed and seven wounded in Russian shelling of
the southern Ukrainian region of Kherson over the past 24 hours, the
regional governor said on Friday.
The regional capital of Kherson - liberated by Ukrainian forces in
mid-November - and other parts of the region have been bombarded 42
times in the same period, Governor Yaroslav Yanushevych wrote on the
Telegram messaging app.
Russian forces also shelled a building in the Ukrainian-held city of
Zaporizhzhia, setting it ablaze, city official Anatoly Krutyev said.
Reuters could not independently confirm battlefield reports.
In a grisly development, several Ukrainian embassies abroad received
"bloody packages" containing animal eyes, Ukraine's foreign ministry
said on Friday, after a series of letter bombs were sent to sites in
Spain including Kyiv's embassy in Madrid.
Russia has recently intensified a campaign to knock out power, water
and heat supplies in Ukrainian cities. Ukraine and the West say the
strategy deliberately intends to harm civilians, a war crime,
something Moscow denies.
The attacks on infrastructure are likely to increase the cost to
keep Ukraine's economy going next year by up to $1 billion a month,
and aid to the country would need to be "front-loaded", IMF head
Kristalina Georgieva told the Reuters NEXT conference on Thursday.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Washington and by other
Reuters bureauxWriting by Gareth JonesEditing by Nick Macfie)
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