Russian President proposed restarting direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul on 15 May "without preconditions".
Speaking to reporters in the Kremlin in the early hours of Sunday, Putin proposed to "restart" peace talks Russia and Ukraine held in 2022.
His remarks came after leaders from four major European countries threatened to ratchet up pressure on Putin if he did not accept an unconditional 30-day ceasefire in Ukraine that they offered on Saturday in a strong show of unity with Kyiv.
The leaders of France, the United Kingdom, Germany and Poland said their proposal for a ceasefire to start on Monday was supported by US President Donald Trump, whom they had briefed over the phone earlier in the day.
Putin did not directly address this latest ceasefire proposal in his remarks Saturday, even as Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov earlier on Saturday told CNN that Moscow would need to consider it.
Russia's own unilateral three-day ceasefire, declared for the 80th anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany expires Saturday, and Ukraine says Russian forces have repeatedly violated it. In March, the United States proposed an immediate, limited 30-day truce, which Ukraine accepted, but the Kremlin has held out for terms more to its liking.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has agreed to the ceasefire proposal put forth by the US. Ukraine had already agreed to the same.
— Vani Mehrotra (@vani_mehrotra) March 13, 2025
"We agree with the proposals for the ceasefire," Putin says, but adds he has questions.#Putin #Ceasefire #Russia #RussiaUkraineConflict pic.twitter.com/mk2HyLQa7L
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, speaking to reporters alongside the European leaders in Kyiv, called their meeting "a very important signal".
In a joint statement, as published on Zelenskyy's official website, the five leaders called for a ceasefire "lasting at least 30 days" from Monday, to make room for a diplomatic push to end the war.
"An unconditional ceasefire by definition cannot be subject to any conditions. If Russia calls for such conditions, this can only be considered as an effort to prolong the war and undermine diplomacy," the statement read.
French president Emmanuel Macron said the US would take the lead in monitoring the proposed ceasefire, with support from European countries, and threatened "massive sanctions ... prepared and coordinated, between Europeans and Americans", should Russia violate the truce.
Macron travelled to Kyiv with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German chancellor Friedrich Merz and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
"This is Europe stepping up, showing our solidarity with Ukraine," Starmer said.
Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump's special envoy to Ukraine, said Saturday that a "comprehensive" 30-day ceasefire, covering attacks from the air, land, sea and on infrastructure, "will start the process for ending the largest and longest war in Europe since World War II".
Europe threatens more sanctions if Russia ignores ceasefire offer
Progress on ending the three-year war has seemed elusive in the months since Trump returned to the White House, and his previous claims of imminent breakthroughs have failed to come to fruition. Trump has previously pushed Ukraine to cede territory to Russia to end the war, threatening to walk away if a deal becomes too difficult.
Since the start of the US-mediated talks, Russia has kept up attacks along the roughly 1,000-kilometre front line, including deadly strikes on residential areas with no obvious military targets.
The ceasefire would include a halt to fighting on land, sea and in the air. The European leaders threatened to ratchet up sanctions, including on Russia's energy and banking sectors, if Putin did not comply.
The priority was to make it too costly for Russia to keep fighting in Ukraine, said Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha.
When asked how the monitoring mechanism would work, Sybiha told The Associated Press the details were still being discussed.
Addressing scepticism over fresh sanctions against Moscow, which has so far managed to keep fighting in the war, Merz said "almost all member states of the European Union and a large coalition of the willing around the world are determined to enforce these sanctions even if our initiative of the weekend should fail".
The leaders also discussed security guarantees for Ukraine.
Building up Kyiv's military capabilities will be a key deterrent against Russia and require supplying Ukraine with robust quantities of arms to deter future attacks and investing in its defence sector. A force comprised of foreign troops could also be deployed as an added "reassurance" measure, Macron said.
He said details about potential European deployments to Ukraine were still being fine-tuned. No mention was made of NATO membership, still Kyiv's top choice for a security guarantee.
Earlier on Saturday, the European leaders joined a ceremony at Kyiv's Independence Square marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. They lit candles alongside Zelenskyy at a makeshift flag memorial for fallen Ukrainian soldiers and civilians slain since Russia's invasion.
Russian attacks continue
Russian shelling in Ukraine's northern Sumy region over the past day killed three residents and wounded four more, local officials said. Another civilian died Saturday as a Russian drone struck the southern city of Kherson, according to regional Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin.
The US Embassy in Kyiv on Friday warned of a "potentially significant" Russian air attack in the coming days, without giving details.
Russia in November gave the US brief advance warning before striking Ukraine for the first time with its Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile, an experimental hypersonic weapon that Putin claimed could travel at 10 times the speed of sound.
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