Russia, Ukraine agree prisoner swap, fail to reach truce in first talks since 2022
Ukrainian and Russian negotiators meet in Istanbul on May 16, 2025.Ukrainian Foreign Ministry via AFP
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Russia and Ukraine agreed on a large-scale prisoner exchange,
said they would trade ideas on a possible ceasefire and discussed a potential
meeting between Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin in their first direct talks
in over three years on Friday.
But coming out of the highly anticipated talks in Istanbul,
which lasted just over 90 minutes, there were few signs of more significant
progress toward ending the three-year war.
Kyiv was seeking an "unconditional ceasefire" to
pause a conflict that has destroyed large swathes of Ukraine and displaced
millions of people.
Moscow has consistently rebuffed those calls, and the only
concrete agreement appeared to be a deal to exchange 1,000 prisoners each.
The two sides also said they would "present their
vision of a possible future ceasefire", said Russia's top negotiator,
Vladimir Medinsky.
Russia also took note of Ukraine's request for a meeting of
Presidents Putin and Zelensky, he said.
"Overall, we are satisfied with the results and ready
to continue contacts," Medinsky added.
Ukraine's top negotiator, Defence Minister Rustem Umerov,
confirmed the prisoner swap in a separate statement and also said a ceasefire
and a possible presidential meeting had been discussed.
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, who presided over the
talks, said the sides had "agreed in principle to meet again" and
would present ceasefire ideas "in writing".
Fidan sat at the head of a table in front of Turkish,
Russian and Ukrainian flags at Istanbul's Dolmabahce Palace for the talks --
with Russian and Ukrainian delegations facing each other, footage from the room
showed.
During the talks, a Ukrainian source told AFP that Russia
was making "unacceptable" territorial demands in a bid to derail
negotiations.
Nevertheless, the fact the meeting took place at all was a
sign of movement, with both sides having come under steady pressure from
Washington to open talks.
Putin declined to travel to Turkey for the meeting, which he
had proposed, sending a second-level delegation instead.
Zelensky said Putin was "afraid" of meeting, and
criticised Russia for not taking the talks "seriously".
Speaking at a European summit in Albania, the Ukrainian
leader urged a "strong reaction" from the world if the talks failed,
including new sanctions.
Ahead of the talks, the two sides spent 24 hours slinging
insults at each other, with Zelensky accusing Moscow of sending "empty
heads" to the negotiating table.
Both Moscow and Washington have talked up the need for a
meeting between Putin and US President Donald Trump on the conflict.
The leaders of Ukraine, France, Germany, Britain and Poland
held a phone call with Trump on Friday, Zelensky's spokesperson said, without
elaborating.
Trump has said "nothing's going to happen" on the
conflict until he meets Putin face-to-face.
Zelensky had warned that if a ceasefire was not
agreed, "it will be 100-percent clear that Putin continues to
undermine diplomacy."
And in that case, "the world must respond. There needs
to be a strong reaction, including sanctions on Russia's energy sector and
banks."
Ahead of the talks, Ukrainian officials in Istanbul held
meetings with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Trump's special envoy Keith
Kellogg and the national security advisors of Britain, France and Germany.
Rubio urged a "peaceful" end to the war and said
"the killing needs to stop", according to State Department
spokeswoman Tammy Bruce.
While the talks were ongoing, a Ukrainian source told AFP
that Russia was advancing hardline territorial demands.
Moscow claims to have annexed five Ukrainian regions as its
own -- four since its 2022 invasion, and Crimea, which it annexed in 2014.
"Russian representatives are putting forward
unacceptable demands... such as for Ukraine to withdraw forces from large parts
of Ukrainian territory it controls in order for a ceasefire to begin," the
source said.
They accused Moscow of seeking to "throw
non-starters" so the talks end "without any results".
Another source familiar with the talks said Russia had
threatened to capture Ukraine's Sumy and Kharkiv regions.
Both border Russia and were invaded by Moscow's army at the
start of the conflict, though Russia has not previously made formal territorial
claims over them.
Russia has repeatedly said it will not discuss giving up any
territory that its forces occupy, and Putin last year called for Kyiv to
withdraw from parts of the Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions
that it still controls.


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