Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has dismissed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s suggestion that the two leaders meet in Moscow for peace talks, saying that he refuses to travel to the capital of a country still bombarding his nation.
“If a meeting in question is well-prepared and may potentially lead to positive results, we can have it, and I never turned this idea down,” Putin said during a press conference in Beijing on Sept. 3. “By the way, Donald [Trump] asked me, if possible, to hold such a meeting. I told him it was possible. After all, if Zelenskyy is ready, he can come to Moscow, and we will have such a meeting.”
The back-and-forth comes as President Donald Trump continues to press for direct talks between the two wartime leaders. “Ultimately, I’m going to put the two of them in a room,” Trump told Fox News last month. He hosted separate meetings with Putin and Zelenskyy in August and said he would give them two weeks to explore the possibility of a bilateral summit.
Zelenskyy has repeatedly accused Putin of not being serious about peace talks while continuing the war in Ukraine. On Sept. 5, he told ABC during a visit to a U.S.-owned factory in Kyiv that Putin is stalling and “playing games with the United States.”
At the Vladivostok forum the same day, Putin cast doubt on the usefulness of direct talks, pointing to what he described as Ukraine’s political and constitutional dysfunction.
Speaking to a forum in Italy on Sept. 5, Zelenskyy highlighted efforts to build a broad “security system on land, in the air, and at sea” to pressure Russia toward peace. He said 35 countries are now part of the coalition of the willing, with 26 ready to provide concrete security support, including the United States. However, Zelenskyy told participants by video link that it’s important that the “security guarantees start working now, during the war, and not only after it ends.”
Trump, meanwhile, has voiced impatience at the lack of progress.
Trump has already imposed new tariffs on India for buying Russian oil and hinted at further sanctions against Moscow.
