US and Russian negotiators launch ceasefire talks in Saudi Arabia
[March 24, 2025]
By ILLIA NOVIKOV
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — U.S. and Russian negotiators on Monday sat down for
talks in Saudi Arabia on a partial ceasefire in Ukraine, hours after a
round of negotiations between U.S. and Ukrainian delegations, Russian
news reports said.
The state Tass and RIA-Novosti news agencies said the negotiations had
begun in the capital Riyadh. The meeting is expected to be followed by
another contact between U.S. and Ukrainian teams.
The separate meetings are set to discuss details of a pause in
long-range attacks from both Russia and Ukraine against energy
facilities and civilian infrastructure, as well as a halt on attacks in
the Black Sea to ensure safe commercial shipping.
Ukraine and Russia agreed in principle Wednesday to a limited ceasefire
after U.S. President Donald Trump spoke with the countries’ leaders, but
the parties have offered different views of what targets would be
off-limits to attack and accused each other of undermining efforts to
reach a pause.
While the White House said “energy and infrastructure” would be covered,
the Kremlin declared that the agreement referred more narrowly to
“energy infrastructure.” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he
would also like railways and ports to be protected.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov emphasized Friday that the agreement
reached between Trump and Putin referred only to energy facilities,
adding that the Russian military is fulfilling Putin’s order to halt
such attacks for 30 days.

Peskov accused Ukraine of derailing the partial ceasefire with an attack
on a gas metering station in Sudzha in Russia’s Kursk region. Ukraine’s
military General Staff rejected Moscow’s accusations and blamed the
Russian military for shelling the Sudzha gas metering station, a claim
Peskov rejected as “absurd.”
As negotiations on a partial ceasefire progressed, Russia launched a
barrage of drones across Ukraine overnight on Saturday that killed at
least seven people, including a father and his 5-year-old daughter in
the capital Kyiv.
In a televised statement Sunday evening, Zelenskyy said that "since
March 11, a proposal for an unconditional ceasefire has been on the
table, and these attacks could have already stopped. But it is Russia
that continues all this.”
“There must be more pressure on Russia to stop this terror,” Zelenskyy
said, adding that it “depends on all our partners — the U.S., Europe,
and others around the world.”
Zelenskyy has emphasized that Ukraine is open to a full, 30-day
ceasefire that Trump has proposed, while Russian President Vladimir
Putin has made a complete ceasefire conditional on a halt of arms
supplies to Kyiv and a suspension of Ukraine’s military mobilization —
demands rejected by Ukraine and its Western allies.
Speaking on “Fox News Sunday,” Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said
he expected “some real progress” at the talks in Saudi Arabia,
“particularly as it affects a Black Sea ceasefire on ships between both
countries, and from that you’ll naturally gravitate into a full-on
shooting ceasefire.”
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A resident cleans up the damaged apartment in a multi-storey house
after Russia's night drone attack, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday, March
23, 2025. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

As for Sunday talks in Riyadh between Ukrainian and U.S.
representatives, Zelenskyy said they had been conducted on a more
“technical level” compared to similar meetings last week, this time
involving representatives from Ukraine’s military, energy ministry
and diplomatic corps.
“Our team is working in a fully constructive manner, and the
discussion is quite useful. The work of the delegations continues,"
Zelenskyy said. "But no matter what we’re discussing with our
partners right now, Putin must be pushed to issue a real order to
stop the strikes, because the one who brought this war must be the
one to take it back.”
Ukrainian railways come under cyber attack
Ukrainian state railway operator Ukrzaliznytsia came under a
“massive targeted cyber attack” on its online services on Sunday,
the company wrote on Telegram, adding that the restoration of its
systems was ongoing as of Monday morning.
The company said the cyberattack did not affect train movements or
schedules, but that the online purchase of tickets was currently
unavailable.
“The railway continues to operate despite physical attacks on the
infrastructure, and even the most vile cyber attacks cannot stop
it,” the company wrote.
Russian troops fired 99 strike and decoy drones into Ukraine
overnight Sunday, according to Ukraine’s air force, of which 57 were
shot down and 36 were lost from radar. The remaining drones caused
damage in at least five regions of Ukraine, the air force report
says.
In the Kyiv region, one man suffered injuries overnight as a Russian
drone struck a residential area.
“The man has superficial shrapnel wounds to his abdomen, chest,
thighs, and head,” the acting head of the Kyiv region, Mykola
Kalashnyk, wrote on Telegram on Monday.

In the Kharkiv region, a Russian drone struck a residential building
in the village of Velyka Babka, injuring a 25-year-old man and a
pregnant woman. Both were hospitalized, regional head Oleh
Syniehubov said on Telegram on Monday morning.
In Zaporizhzhia, Russian drones damaged several houses of local
residents overnight with one elderly woman suffering light injuries,
regional head Ivan Fedorov wrote on Telegram.
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