Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he is “ready” to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin face-to-face to negotiate an end to the war between their countries.
“Sometimes we need it. Even if we don’t love faces,” Zelensky told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria to laughter at the Yalta European Strategy Conference on Friday in Kyiv, Ukraine. The interview aired Sunday.
Zelensky said finding peace first must involve a ceasefire.
“So there is an order of the points of discussions. The first, we need meeting with outcome of ceasefire. And he is not ready for the meeting for today. It’s true. Yes. Then if he wants to speak about territories and about some historical crazy things and et cetera, I’m ready to speak with him. But not through Americans, not through Europeans. With their support, yes, but not through,” he told Zakaria.
Last month, President Trump said that he began arrangements for a meeting between the two leaders during a phone call with Putin. The call came days after Trump and Putin met at a summit in Alaska and the same day the former met with Zelensky and European leaders at the White House.
Zelensky and Putin have not met in person since Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Last month, Zelensky said in a Telegram post that Putin’s rejection of a ceasefire agreement “complicates the situation” regarding a peace agreement. Meeting with Zelensky and European leaders in Washington, Trump said that a ceasefire deal is not a prerequisite for a meeting between the Ukrainian leader and his Russian counterpart.
Zelensky’s Friday comments come after multiple Russian drones were shot down by NATO jets in Polish airspace Tuesday night, according to Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk. On Sunday, Russian officials and the Ukrainian military said Ukrainian drones struck an oil refinery in Russia’s Leningrad region, according to The Associated Press.
Russia’s military fully occupies the Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions of Ukraine. Russia also gained control of the Crimean Peninsula in 2014. When asked by Zakaria about whether he would accept territorial concessions, Zelensky said that is not at the top of his agenda currently.