After talks with Xi and Modi, Putin says NATO enlargement has to be addressed for Ukraine peace
Russian President Vladimir Putin, after talking with China's Xi Jinping and India's Narendra Modi, said on Monday the issue of NATO's eastward enlargement would have to be addressed for there to be sustainable peace in Ukraine.
Putin
ordered tens of thousands of troops to invade Ukraine in February 2022
after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed
separatists and Ukrainian troops. Russia currently controls a little
under one fifth of Ukraine.
Ukraine
and Western European powers describe the invasion as a brutal
imperial-style land grab. Putin casts the war as a battle with a
declining West, which he says humiliated Russia after the Berlin Wall
fell in 1989 by enlarging NATO eastwards.
On
the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) meeting in
Tianjin, Modi held Putin's hand as they walked towards Chinese
President Xi. All three smiled as they spoke, surrounded by translators.
Speaking
at the summit, Putin said the West had tried to bring Ukraine into the
West's orbit and then sought to entice the former Soviet republic into
the U.S.-led NATO military alliance.
"In
order for a Ukrainian settlement to be sustainable and long-term, the
root causes of the crisis, which I have just mentioned and which I have
repeatedly mentioned before, must be eliminated," Putin said.
"A
fair balance in the security sphere" must be also restored, Putin said,
shorthand for a series of Russian demands about NATO and European
security.
At
the 2008 Bucharest summit, NATO leaders agreed that Ukraine and Georgia
would one day become members. Ukraine in 2019 amended its constitution
committing to the path of full membership of NATO and the European
Union.
Reuters reported in May that Putin's conditions
for ending the war include a demand that Western leaders pledge in
writing to stop enlarging NATO eastwards and lift a chunk of sanctions
on Russia.
Putin
said that "understandings" he reached with U.S. President Donald Trump
at a summit in Alaska in August opened a way to peace in Ukraine, which
he would discuss with leaders attending the regional summit in China.
"We
highly appreciate the efforts and proposals from China and India aimed
at facilitating the resolution of the Ukrainian crisis," Putin told the
forum.
"The understandings reached at the recent Russia–U.S. meeting in Alaska, I hope, also contribute toward this goal."
He
said he had detailed to Xi on Sunday the achievements of his talks with
Trump and the work "already underway" to resolve the conflict and would
provide more detail in two-way meetings with the Chinese leader and
others.
China
and India are by far the biggest purchasers of crude from Russia, the
world's second largest exporter. Trump has imposed additional tariffs on
India over the purchases but there is no sign yet that either India or
China are going to stop purchasing Russian oil, a key export of Russia's
war economy.
Ukraine's drone attack sparks brief fire at Krasnodar power substation, Russia says
Falling debris from a destroyed Ukrainian drone sparked a fire at a power substation in the town of Kropotkin that was promptly extinguished, the administration of the southern Russian region of Krasnodar said on Monday."Preliminary reports indicate no injuries," the administration said on the Telegram messaging app.
The full scale of the attack and potential damage was not immediately known. Reuters could not independently verify the report.
Several
southern and southwestern Russian regions were under air raid alerts
for hours at a time overnight, according to information published on
official regional Telegram channels.
Flight
operations at several airports, including in Saratov and Volgograd,
were halted for several hours to ensure air safety, Russia's civil
aviation body Rosaviatsia said on Telegram.
There
was no immediate comment from Ukraine. Kyiv says its strikes inside
Russia target infrastructure that is critical for Moscow's overall war
efforts. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched in February 2022.
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