Ukraine-Russia war: Putin sets conditions for ceasefire - but Ukraine says it is 'complete sham' (2024)

Key points
  • Putin promises ceasefire if Kyiv withdraws troops from occupied regions
  • Zelenskyy warns Putin's peace offer cannot be trusted
  • 'Close to the point of no return': Russian president issues ominous warning in wide-ranging attack on West countries
  • Ivor Bennett:Putin has chosen the timing of his remarks carefully
  • Soviet negotiating tactics explained
  • Big picture:Everything you need to know about the war right now
  • Your questions answered:Are there any signs of an underground resistance in Russia?
  • Live reporting by Katie Williams

14:47:48

More than 90 countries at peace summit - but Biden and other key players skip talks

More than 90 countries are taking part in today's peace summit, but the US will not be represented by Joe Biden.

Instead, vice president Kamala Harris is in attendance - riling Kyiv - with Saudi Arabia and India dispatched lower level delegations.

China is staying away after Russia was frozen out of proceedings.

Nonetheless, Volodymyr Zelenskyy hopes to make a series of agreements that could form part of a peace-making process.

The leaders of France, Germany, Italy, the UK, Canada and Japan are among those due to attend.

Broader concerns such as food and nuclear security are expected to be part of the talks.

European officials privately concede that without support from Moscow's main allies, the summit's impact will be limited.

"What can [Mr Zelenskyy] hope for out of it?" said Daniel Woker, a former Swiss ambassador.

"Another small step forward in international solidarity with Ukraine."

German chancellor Olaf Scholz told Welt TV: "Many questions of peace and security will be discussed, but not the very biggest. That was always the plan.

"This is a small plant that needs to be watered, but of course also with the perspective that more can then come out of iit."

Neutral Switzerland, which took on the summit at Mr Zelenskyy's behest, wants to pave the way for a future peace process that includes Russia.

14:35:03

Good afternoon

Welcome back to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine.

World leaders are gathering in Switzerland today for the Ukraine peace summit,which Volodymyr Zelenskyy hopes will lay the groundwork for a peace process in his country.

World leaders including Rishi Sunak, French president Emmanuel Macron and US vice president Kamala Harris are among those taking part.

Russia is not invited and has said the event is meaningless without its inclusion, while some countries, including China, chose not to accept their invitations.

The Ukrainian president said the summit would involve "two days of active work with countries fromall parts of the world, with different nations that arenonetheless united by a common goal".

Before we kick off our live updates, here's a reminder of the main news from the past day:

  • On the eve of the Ukraine peace summit, Vladimir Putin pledged to end the war in Ukraine if Kyivagreed to drop its NATO ambitions and hand over the entirety offour regions Moscow claims to have annexed;
  • In the same briefing, the Russian president said the "selfishness and hypocrisy of Western countries" has led to a "dangerous turn of events", with Moscow "close to a point of no return";
  • Mr Zelenskyy responded to Mr Putin's peace proposal by drawing parallels to Adolf Hitler in the lead up to the Second World War and saying the Russian leader's words couldn't be trusted;
  • Meanwhile, prosecutors at theInternational Criminal Court said they were probing allegedRussian cyberattacks on Ukrainian civilian infrastructure aspossible war crimes.

22:54:01

We're pausing our live coverage

That brings an end to our coverage of the Ukraine war for this evening.

Scroll through the blog below to catch up on the day's developments.

22:53:01

EU ambassadors agree to begin accession talks with Ukraine this month

EU ambassadors have agreed to formally begin accession negotiations with Ukraine and Moldova later this month.

The Belgian EU presidency said talks would start on 25 June.

According to the presidency, the decision should be given the nod by finance and economy ministers at a meeting next Friday.

The European Council decided to open accession negotiations with Ukraine in December last year.

Last week, the EU said both countries had met the criteria needed to start formal discussions, with Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal revealing his hope that talks would start this month.

22:38:01

Zelenskyy arrives in Switzerland for Ukraine peace summit

Hot off the heels of his appearance at the G7 leaders' meeting in Italy, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has arrived in Switzerland for the Ukraine peace summit aimed at exploring ways of ending the war in his country.

World leaders including Rishi Sunak, French President Emmanuel Macron and US vice president Kamala Harris are set to join Mr Zelenskyy at the summit.

But it's expected to fall short of its aim to isolate Moscow, with China among a group of countries choosing not to attend.

22:19:40

G7 leaders renew pledge to support Ukraine for 'as long as it takes'

G7 nations have reaffirmed their commitment to support Ukraine "for as long as it takes".

A final statement from the summit in Italy saw leaders affirm their plan to finance a $50bn loan for Kyiv using "extraordinary revenues" from frozen Russian assets.

They said the move sends an "unmistakable signal" to Vladimir Putin as the war rages on.

Volodydmyr Zelenskyy called the decision a" vital step forward in providing sustainable support for Ukraine in winning this war".

Mr Putin, meanwhile, has condemned the freezing of Russian assets as "theft" and has vowed it "will not go unpunished".

According to US and French officials, the money could be in Kyiv's hands before the end of the year.

21:47:01

Russia claims Ukrainian attacks kill five people in border region - reports

Ukraine has attacked Russia's border region of Belogorod, killing five people, according to Russian officials.

Regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said two bodies were pulled from the rubble of an apartment block in Shebekino.

News agencies cited emergency services as saying a third body was later found, after the alleged shelling caused a stairwell to collapse.

Reports also said a driver was killed when a drone hit their car in a nearby village, while a woman was reportedly killed in her home as it was hit by rocket fire in the village of Oktyabrsky.

Sky News cannot independently verify the reports.

21:30:01

Ukrainian forces strike military airfield in Russia amid 'sustained campaign' on Putin's RAF

By Artem Lysak, Ukraine producer, and Deborah Haynes, security and defence editor

Ukrainian forces have struck a military airfield in Russia, targeting warplanes and glide-bomb facilities used to launch deadly attacks against Ukraine, a security source has revealed.

The source said the operation last night was part of a "sustained campaign to degrade the Russian Air Force" just as Ukraine has done with Russia's Black Sea Fleet.

Satellite imagery shared by the source purported to show two SU-34 fighter-bombers at the Morozovsk airbase in southern Russia as well as a white structure before the attack.

A second image is purported to show the aftermath, with both aircraft and the structure destroyed.

There has been no official confirmation about the strikes from Ukraine.

Read the full story here...

21:06:01

Analysis: G7 leaders have made surprisingly robust progress - but where will coalition be a year from now?

By Dominic Waghorn, international affairs editor

They came battered and worn by battles back home for a few days by the sea seeking sanctuary and solace in a wellness resort turned summit venue.

The G7 leaders will leave fortified by some surprisingly robust diplomatic progress but potentially terminal doubts remain for the alliance.

They have sent Russia a clear message. They may individually be on borrowed time as leaders but the West has Ukraine's back for as long as it takes.

And China's been on the sharp end of some particularly proactive diplomacy too.

Two signature deals send billions more aid to Ukraine. The allies overcame stark differences between themselves to forge a creative deal that uses interest from frozen Russia banking assets to send fifty billion more dollars to Kyiv by the year's end.

In Moscow the Russians did not conceal their fury at the prospect of their money being used against them.

And a ten year bilateral security pact between America and Ukraine is another blow to Vladimir Putin. He started this war to deter the expansion of the western military alliance. Yet again it is having the opposite effect. The pact is a bridge to Ukraine joining NATO, even if that is many many years still away.

The G7 warned China in a number of ways. The final communique criticised its belligerence in the South China Sea and admonished Beijing for quietly helping Putin's war effort by trading dual use products that could help bolster his war effort.

But the composition of this summit was also a message for Beijing. The G7 invited pretty much the entire G20 here except for China. If you want to be in the club they were saying, not very subtly, then stop conniving with Putin and play by our rules.

In Beijing that will be infuriating.

The leaders have seemed all the better for their spell in the sunshine, spirits lifted before going home to face the music.

But what they cant do is dispel doubts about their future and that of the alliance.

Security pacts tend to survive changes of administration, Ukraine will have its $50bn by year's end.

But what will the G7 look like when they next meet a year from now?

Donald Trump looks increasingly likely to win the US election and Joe Biden's performance here will have nothing to reassure the allies. He has seemed vacant and distracted at times, older than ever.

Trump has no time for multilateral organisations. That was made abundantly clear in his first term in office. In his transactional zero sum game world view they make no sense.

A year from now he could be six months into destroying NATO, deserting Ukraine and dismantling the G7.

First time round for all his puerile antics, he could do limited damage at these summits contained by the likes of Merkel and Macron both at the height of their powers.

Olaf Scholz is no Merkel and may be gone by then, joining Sunak, Kishida and Trudeau perhaps too heading for the history books. Macron is on the way to being a lame duck president hamstrung by a far right national assembly if current polling is correct.

The alliance is in peril like never before, however successful they've been holding it together for now.

20:40:01

Watch: Zelenskyy compares Putin to Hitler

Earlier we reported comments by Volodymyr Zelenskyy that a ceasefire offer put forward by Vladimir Putin cannot be trusted.

In an interview with our Italian partner network Sky TG24, Mr Zelenskyy warned the Russian president would not stop his offensive, even if Ukraine agreed to hand over the regions Russia claims to have annexed.

He also drew a comparison between Mr Putin and Adolf Hitler's Nazi policies of expansion before the Second World War, saying: "It is the same thing that Hitler used to do... thisis why we should not trust these messages."

Watch the clip here...

Ukraine-Russia war: Putin sets conditions for ceasefire - but Ukraine says it is 'complete sham' (2024)

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