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Zelensky insists he will only join Ukraine-Russia talks in Turkey this week if Putin is present

<i>Alex Brandon/AP via CNN Newsource</i><br/>President Donald Trump prepares to board Air Force One on May 12
Alex Brandon/AP via CNN Newsource
President Donald Trump prepares to board Air Force One on May 12

By Jessie Yeung, Ivana Kottasová and Svitlana Vlasova, CNN Jessie Yeung, Ivana Kottasová, Nick Paton Walsh and Andrew Carey, CNN

(CNN) — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky raised the stakes ahead of a potential meeting with Vladimir Putin in Turkey on Thursday by saying he wouldn’t hold talks with any Russian representative other than the president himself.

Zelensky said he would travel to Turkey after US President Donald Trump urged him to meet Putin. The Russian leader suggested direct talks between Moscow and Kyiv in the country on Thursday in response to the ceasefire-or-sanctions ultimatum given to Moscow by Kyiv’s European allies on Saturday.

Asked by CNN about the goals of the possible meeting – a summit Putin has not yet agreed to attend despite proposing it himself – Zelensky said anything other than a ceasefire agreement would be a failure.

Trump said he was open to going to Turkey, but the Kremlin has so far refused to say whether Putin – or anyone else – would go. Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Putin would announce his decision in due course. “As soon as the president considers it necessary, we will announce it,” Peskov said.

Zelensky said he would not consider meeting any other Russian representatives because “everything in Russia depends” on Putin.

“So I said that on (Thursday) I will go to Turkey and I’m ready to meet Putin and an end to the war was through direct talks with him,” Zelensky told reporters at a news conference.

Zelensky also said he offered Trump the option of joining the meeting, saying the presence of the US president would “give additional impulse for Putin to fly in.”

He said earlier that his country “would appreciate” Trump’s attendance, and said he supported the US president’s call for direct talks between himself and Putin.

Whether Trump will attend remains unclear, and Zelensky said he didn’t know either.

Top Trump administration officials plan to be in Turkey this week, but the president’s possible attendance remains an open question that will largely be dictated by whether his Russian counterpart attends, according to a senior administration official.

He is visiting the Gulf this week, making stops in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, for his first major overseas trip since the start of his second term. He said he could detour to Turkey “if I thought it would be helpful.”

“I think you may have a good result out of the Thursday meeting in Turkey between Russia and Ukraine,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday. “I don’t know where I’m going to be on Thursday, I’ve got so many meetings, but I was thinking about actually flying over there. There’s a possibility of it, I guess, if I think things can happen.”

Frontline largely static

For months, Ukraine and its allies tried to convince the Trump administration that Putin acts in bad faith, and have said Russia’s agreeing to a ceasefire could function as a test of whether it is serious about achieving the peace the US president has long demanded.

Ukraine’s major European allies had given Russia an ultimatum on Saturday: agree to an unconditional 30-day ceasefire in Ukraine or face “massive” new sanctions.

Putin ignored the ultimatum, proposing the talks instead. Direct talks between the leaders of Russia and Ukraine have not happened since the early weeks of Moscow’s unprovoked full-scale invasion in 2022.

Speaking on Tuesday, Zelensky said he expects the US and Europe to impose new “strong” sanctions on Russia if Moscow doesn’t sign up to the ceasefire on Thursday.

Meanwhile, the situation on the ground in eastern Ukraine doesn’t seem to suggest Russia is preparing for a ceasefire. Russian troops have been inching forward in several key areas along the frontline and launching near daily drones and missile attacks against Ukrainian cities. Still, the frontline in eastern Ukraine has not moved dramatically in recent months, with neither side able to break through.

The Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a US-based conflict monitor, said on Monday that Russia has reportedly deployed a largely ceremonial regiment of the Federal Security Service (FSB) to the frontline, which the ISW said was “likely in an effort to generate fear of more rapid future Russian advances.”

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CNN’s Kylie Atwood, Alayna TreeneMariya Knight and Gul Tuysyz contributed to this report.

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