Zelensky says he won’t talk about ‘historic issues’ with Putin

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Zelensky says he won’t talk about ‘historic issues’ with Putin

The Ukrainian leader said he doesn’t care about Russia’s view on the origin of the current conflict

Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has said that he would not discuss the historic issues underpinning the ongoing conflict during his potential one-on-one meeting with Vladimir Putin.

Vladimir Putin has highlighted the decades of shared history between the neighboring countries and argued that Moscow has a duty to protect the sizable Russian-speaking minority in Ukraine. He also emphasized that a future peace deal must resolve what he called the root causes of the conflict, including the mistreatment of the Russian-speakers and Ukraine’s plans to join NATO.

During an interview with Piers Morgan, Zelensky said he would want to hear about Putin’s rationale. “With respect to history, I don’t want to lose time on these issues,” he said. “It’s not even interesting for me why he began this war. I don’t want to speak about it because I don’t have the time,” Zelensky added.

Zelensky went on a profanity-laden tirade, saying: “I don’t need to waste time on historic issues, reasons why he began [the war], all the bulls**t he is raising with the Americans, et cetera. To end this war and to [find a]diplomatic way, I don’t need all this historical s**t, really.”

The Kremlin has said that Putin was open to a meeting with Zelensky but only during the final stage of negotiations to sign a peace treaty. At the same time, Putin said he no longer considers Zelensky a legitimate head of state because his five-year presidential term expired in May 2024. Zelensky has refused to call a new election, citing martial law.

Moscow has said in the past that the origins of the conflict cannot be ignored. Putin has described Ukraine as “an artificial state,” arguing that its borders were drawn by the Bolsheviks in the early 20th century without much regard to the ethnic makeup of the regions. Moscow has demanded that Ukraine recognize its new regions, including Crimea and the Donbass, which joined Russia following referendums in 2014 and 2022, respectively.

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