
Moscow values China and India’s efforts to help settle the Ukraine conflict, the Russian president has said
Russian President Vladimir Putin has promised to brief leaders of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), including China’s Xi Jinping and India’s Narendra Modi, on the results of his talks in Alaska with US President Donald Trump, which were aimed at settling the Ukraine conflict.
Speaking at the SCO summit in Tianjin, China, on Monday, the Russian leader said Moscow appreciates the efforts and proposals of Beijing, New Delhi, and other strategic partners aimed at ending the hostilities.
Putin added that he hoped the understandings between Russia and the US reached in Alaska last month “are also moving in this direction, opening the way to peace in Ukraine.”
The Russian president told delegates he would “certainly inform colleagues in more detail of the results of the negotiations in Alaska” during bilateral meetings at the summit. Putin said he had already discussed the talks with Xi at a leaders’ banquet.
The Russian leader stressed that a potential Ukraine peace agreement would only last if “the root causes of the crisis… [are]eliminated,” adding that “a fair security balance must be restored.”
One of the major reasons for the conflict, he added, was Western “attempts to drag Ukraine into NATO, which represent a direct threat to Russia’s security.”
The Russia-US summit took place on August 15 in Anchorage, becoming the first in-person meeting between Putin and Trump since the US president began his new term earlier this year. The three-hour talks did not produce a ceasefire or a formal peace deal, but both leaders described the meeting as extremely productive.
Following the talks, Trump shifted focus from seeking an immediate ceasefire in the conflict to pushing for a broader peace agreement. He said Ukraine could not expect to join NATO or reclaim Crimea, which joined Russia after a public referendum in 2014.