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Negotiations with Russia would mean one thing - Russia won... Are you ready for 
that?


5-7 minutes

  _____  

Kyiv rejected peace talks with Moscow under the current circumstances, 
comparing any talks to a "civilizational catastrophe". 

Source: RT Saturday, August 13, 2022 | 20:10 

Foto: shutterstock/evan_huang

The restart of negotiations would not contribute to the goals of the Ukrainian 
government, Mikhail Podolyak, assistant to Ukrainian President Volodymyr 
Zelensky, told the Ukrainian "Babel", reports RT. 

"Today, Ukraine has no motivation to conduct negotiations," said Podolyak, 
adding that "the opportunity to win this war is much more important than any 
situational pause." 

"Starting negotiations in the current circumstances would only formalize the 
defeat of Ukraine and Europe, as well as European values," he added. 

He warned that the defeat of Ukraine will mark the "collapse of the global 
security system and the system of democratic values." Reaching a truce now 
would not stop further conflict, he said, adding that Russia could launch 
another attack on Ukraine at some point in the future. 

"Negotiations with Russia today would mean only one thing - Russia has won... 
Are you ready for that?", he asked. Podolyak also compared the idea of 
​​starting peace talks with Moscow to negotiating with Nazi Germany in 1942, 
when the Nazis occupied large parts of Soviet territory, including all of 
Ukraine. 

"That is unimaginable. Any conversation at that moment and with that [power 
relationship] would mean a civilizational catastrophe," he said. In early 
August, the Kremlin signaled its readiness to conclude a peace deal with Kyiv, 
while warning that it would achieve the goals of its military operation in 
Ukraine regardless of Kyiv's willingness to make concessions. 

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said at the time that the two countries were 
close to resolving their differences in a manner acceptable to Russia, but the 
draft agreement prepared during the meeting in Istanbul was rejected by 
Ukraine. 

Kyiv broke off talks with Moscow after blaming Russia of alleged war crimes, an 
allegation Russia said was based on fabricated evidence. 

Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who visited Moscow in early August, 
also said a negotiated solution was possible and said the recent "initial 
success" of the grain export agreement should be used to achieve a ceasefire.

 

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