Putin
Meets With Witkoff and Kushner for Nearly Five Hours
The two
sides did not reach any specific compromises, an aide to President Vladimir V.
Putin said, as the United States pushes a plan to end the war in Ukraine.
Paul
SonneValerie Hopkins
By Paul
Sonne and Valerie Hopkins
Reporting
from Berlin
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/02/world/europe/putin-witkoff-trump-ukraine-meeting.html
Dec. 2,
2025
President
Vladimir V. Putin of Russia held talks for nearly five hours late Tuesday with
Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s special envoy, and Jared Kushner, the
president’s son-in-law, negotiating with the two U.S. emissaries as Washington
pushed for an end to Russia’s war against Ukraine.
The
negotiators discussed the substance of U.S. peace proposals but did not delve
into the wording of any provisions, reach any specific compromises or agree to
a new summit between Mr. Putin and Mr. Trump, the Kremlin’s top foreign policy
aide, Yuri Ushakov, told journalists after the marathon talks concluded.
“The
discussion was very useful, constructive and very substantive and lasted for
not five minutes but five hours,” Mr. Ushakov said.
During
the talks, Mr. Putin went through the U.S. proposals that the Kremlin had
received in four documents ahead of the meeting, Mr. Ushakov said.
“We could
agree on some things, and the president confirmed this to his interlocutors,”
Mr. Ushakov said. “Other things provoked criticism, and the president also made
no secret of our critical and even negative attitude toward a number of
proposals. But the main thing is that a very useful discussion took place.”
A
28-point U.S. peace plan revealed last month drew pushback from Ukraine and
Europe for being weighted toward the Kremlin. Some provisions have been
softened, American officials said, after Ukrainian and European officials
weighed in on the plan.
In
addition to Mr. Ushakov, Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Russian Direct
Investment Fund, joined Mr. Putin during the talks on Tuesday, which stretched
past midnight local time at the Kremlin.
Part of
the discussion revolved around the question of territory, and Mr. Ushakov said
some of the American formulations “look more or less acceptable but need to be
discussed.” Others that were proposed “don’t work for us,” he said, declining
to go into details. Ukraine has rejected Russia’s demands that Kyiv hand over
land in eastern Ukraine that it still controls.
“There is
still a lot of work to be done, both by Washington and by Moscow,” Mr. Ushakov
said, noting that the two sides had agreed to stay in contact to move the talks
forward.
Mr.
Witkoff and Mr. Kushner decamped to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow after the
meeting to report the results of the talks to Mr. Trump, the Kremlin aide said.
Mr. Kushner does not have a formal role in the Trump administration, but played
a role in brokering the cease-fire in Gaza.
Mr.
Witkoff’s visit to Moscow, his sixth since January, took place two days after
American and Ukrainian delegations met in Miami to continue negotiations over
the potential peace plan. Both sides called those talks constructive but said
more work was needed, without detailing the unresolved issues.
Ahead of
the talks, Mr. Putin made a series of public appearances promoting Russia’s
battlefield progress and economic resilience.
The
Russian leader has been underscoring Russia’s upper hand in the war and
willingness to continue fighting, in part to convince his interlocutors that
Kyiv is faltering on the front line and must settle for a deal on his terms.
Ahead of
the meeting on Tuesday, Mr. Putin said that Russia would continue to advance
against Ukraine on the battlefield and portrayed the Kyiv leadership as
weakened.
He said
that Russian forces would expand strikes on Ukrainian ports and ships in
response to attacks on Russia’s “shadow fleet” — the decrepit ships the country
uses to transport oil and evade sanctions. Mr. Putin also portrayed Ukraine’s
leadership as out of touch with the reality on the front.
“Ukraine’s
leadership is currently preoccupied with other matters than the situation in
the war zone. It’s as if they live on another planet,” Mr. Putin said on
Tuesday, referring to a corruption scandal that has been roiling the government
of President Volodymyr Zelensky. “And then, constantly on the move begging for
money, they have no time for current affairs, either in the economy or at the
front.”
Mr.
Zelensky, seeking support from European allies, met in Paris on Monday with
President Emmanuel Macron of France. The Ukrainian leader then traveled to
Ireland for meetings on Tuesday.
Mr.
Zelensky said he would wait for an update from the American negotiators after
the talks at the Kremlin and would possibly meet with them on Wednesday for an
update.
The
Ukrainian leader warned in a statement on X that any deal needed to ensure that
Russia would not attack Ukraine again after Moscow’s invasions in 2014 and
2022. Mr. Putin has demanded limits on Ukraine’s military, meaning that Russia
would be free to build up its force after the signing of a peace deal, while
Ukraine would face restrictions.
“We must
end this war in a way that prevents Russia from coming back a year later with a
third invasion,” Mr. Zelensky wrote. “They did not achieve their goal of
occupying our country. But I am not sure their objectives have changed.”
The
Ukrainian leader has identified Western security guarantees as among the three
biggest issues yet to be resolved in negotiations with the United States.
In a
visit to the battlefield on Sunday and in remarks ahead of the meeting on
Tuesday, Mr. Putin highlighted Russia’s claims to have captured Pokrovsk, a
strategic city in eastern Ukraine. Kyiv has denied that Moscow has full control
of the territory.
The
battlefield map maintained by DeepState, a Ukrainian group with ties to the
military, showed that the Russians had taken most of the center of Pokrovsk.
But Ukrainian military units said in public posts on Tuesday that the fight was
still continuing.
Andriy
Kovalenko, a senior Ukrainian government official focused on Russian
disinformation operations, said on Monday in a post on Telegram that the
Russian military was lying about fully capturing certain cities where fighting
remained fierce in an attempt to shape the opinions of Western negotiators.
“The
Russians will make many attempts to exert pressure on the front in the coming
weeks and will accompany this with loud statements,” Mr. Kovalenko said. “All
this is done exclusively for the Western audience and to raise the stakes in
diplomacy.”
He added,
“The fighting for Pokrovsk continues.”
Amid the
peace talks, the Kremlin has sought to sideline Europe, regularly describing
European nations backing Ukraine as pro-war.
Mr. Putin
said on Tuesday ahead of the meeting that he was engaging with U.S. envoys
because Europe’s actions “are aimed at only one thing: to completely block this
peace process.”
The
Russian leader also threatened Ukraine’s European allies, which have been
scrambling to shore up their defenses against Moscow.
“We are
not planning to fight with Europe, but if Europe suddenly starts a war with us,
we are ready right now,” Mr. Putin said.
He
suggested that Russia would be willing to use even greater violence in such a
conflict than it has in Ukraine, a likely reference to Moscow’s nuclear
arsenal, the largest in the world.
The White
House has strongly pressured Ukraine to agree to a peace plan, with Mr. Trump
initially giving Kyiv until Thanksgiving to make a decision. That deadline
lapsed as negotiations continued, with Kyiv and its European allies trying to
soften the U.S. plan.
Russia
has set a series of conditions for halting the war. It has said, among other
things, that Ukraine must cede its remaining territory in the Donbas region,
drop its aspirations to join NATO and secure the status of the Russian language
and the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine. Ukraine has refused to accept
Russia’s demands.
In
November, Russian forces almost doubled the battlefield gains they made in
September, according to DeepState, which uses geolocated combat footage and
tips from Ukrainian Army sources to monitor battlefield developments. While
still relatively small, the Russian advances highlighted the increasing strain
on Ukraine’s military.
Ivan
Nechepurenko contributed reporting from St. Petersburg, Russia, Alina Lobzina
from London and Cassandra Vinograd from Kyiv, Ukraine.
Paul
Sonne is an international correspondent, focusing on Russia and the varied
impacts of President Vladimir V. Putin’s domestic and foreign policies, with a
focus on the war against Ukraine.
Valerie
Hopkins covers the war in Ukraine and how the conflict is changing Russia,
Ukraine, Europe and the United States. She is based in Moscow.


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