Donald Trump’s fixer, who was in Moscow for talks, has left Russia – after agreeing Trump would speak to Vladimir Putin. Follow the latest here.
false,Friday 14 March 2025 13:13, UK
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By Ivor Bennett, Moscow correspondent
Steve Witkoff didn’t stay long in the Russian capital.
According to footage posted of his motorcade leaving and returning to Moscow’s Vnukovo airport, he was here for little more than 12 hours.
And for most of that, it seems, he was left waiting.
Witkoff, a former property mogul who has become Donald Trump’s chief negotiator, had been dispatched to Moscow to deliver the US proposal for a 30-day ceasefire to Vladimir Putin.
His visit had been scheduled near the start of the week, following the US-Ukraine talks in Saudi Arabia.
But after arriving around lunchtime on Thursday, he was left twiddling his thumbs for at least eight hours before being called into the Kremlin.
Vladimir Putin was apparently too busy meeting someone else – Belarusian leader Aleksander Lukashenko – for a hastily arranged state visit that had been announced the day before.
Was ally’s visit a classic Putin power play?
We don’t know for sure if the timing of Lukashenko’s visit was deliberate, but it certainly didn’t feel like a coincidence.
Instead it felt like a classic Putin power play.
The Kremlin leader doesn’t like to be backed into a corner and told what to do, especially on his own turf.
This felt like a message to the Americans – I’m the boss, I set the schedule and I’m not beholden to anyone.
He did eventually grant Witkoff that all-important face time, once night had fallen and behind closed-doors.
We don’t know how long they spoke for, nor the exact details of their discussion, but I think we can make a pretty good guess given Vladimir Putin’s comments earlier in the evening.
At a press conference alongside Lukashenko, he made it abundantly clear that he’ll only sign up to a ceasefire if he gets something in return.
And it’s not just one thing he wants.
All Russia’s red lines remain
By the sounds of things, he still wants everything.
His comment regarding the “root causes” of the conflict suggests all of Russia’s red lines remain – no NATO membership for Ukraine, no NATO troops as peacekeepers, and for Russia to keep all the territory it has seized.
According to Russian media outlet Radio Mayak, Putin’s meetings in the Kremlin finished at 1.30am.
Around half an hour later, Witkoff was back at the airport – leaving Russia, it seems – not with Putin’s agreement but with a list of demands.
It’s now up to Donald Trump to decide what to do next.
Posting on his Truth Social site, Donald Trump has again insisted he will secure peace.
“Crooked Joe Biden got us into a real ‘mess’ with Russia (and EVERYTHING ELSE!), but I’m going to get us out,” he wrote.
“Millions of people are needlessly dead, never to be seen again…and there will be many more to follow if we don’t get the Cease Fire and Final Agreement with Russia completed and signed.
“There would have been NO WAR if I were President. It just, 100%, would not have happened.”
Trump goes on to add, in block capital letters, that a “rigged and crooked” election made a huge difference to the US, referring to the 2020 election he lost.
There is no evidence that election was rigged.
Some more now from the G7 summit in Canada, where diplomats have said they’ve agreed on a joint statement designed to show unity.
The statement still needs approval from the foreign ministers at the gathering before talks wrap up.
“G7 members called for Russia to reciprocate by agreeing to a ceasefire on equal terms and implementing it fully,” it said.
“They emphasised that any ceasefire must be respected and underscored the need for robust and credible security arrangements to ensure that Ukraine can deter and defend against any renewed acts of aggression.”
After weeks of tensions between Washington and its traditional Western allies over Ukraine, there had been concerns a united front would be a struggle at the summit.
The crafting of this statement has been difficult, with differences over the language that should be used regarding Ukraine, the Middle East and China.
Ukrainian soldiers tested an unmanned ground vehicle at a training ground in Zaporizhzhia.
In some of the other latest images from the battlefield, servicemen could be seen putting a machine gun together in Kharkiv.
Sanctions have been renewed on Russian individuals and entities, but Hungary has managed to remove three off the list.
Hungary, which has maintained friendly ties with Moscow, had threatened to block the renewal unless certain individuals were delisted.
Two diplomats said Budapest initially asked for nine names to be taken off – including Russian tycoon Mikhail Fridman – but other envoys managed to reduce that number to three.
They are:
A fourth, businessman Vladimir Rashevsky, was excluded because of a weak legal case rather than pressure from Budapest.
Three others were left off because they have died.
For context: EU sanctions must be renewed every six months in a unanimous vote by the 27 member states’ ambassadors.
The deadline was tomorrow, so the list has now been renewed until 15 September.
There are more than 2,400 individuals and entities on the EU’s Russia sanctions list.
There’s no imminent sign of a ceasefire being agreed, but Kyiv has started work to prepare for that eventuality.
Ukraine’s foreign minister said a team is being formed to monitor a pause in fighting, if one comes into force.
Andrii Sybiha told journalists: “We have already begun to form a national team that will develop appropriate procedures to properly monitor a possible ceasefire.”
Russia continues to claw back territory in its border region of Kursk, where Ukrainians launched a surprise invasion last summer.
While Ukraine has kept a foothold in the territory since August, Russian forces have pushed back in recent days, with Vladimir Putin visiting this week and describing the battlefield as “under control”.
Today, Moscow said it has recaptured the village of Goncharovka, one of a few settlements in Ukrainian hands.
There has been no comment from Kyiv yet.
Ukraine said it controlled about 100 settlements at the peak of its shock incursion.
Today, Russia says it has retaken 28 settlements in Kursk over the past week – and one across the border in the Ukrainian Sumy region.
Putin said he has instructed his commanders to complete the task of ejecting the last Ukrainian troops as soon as possible.
Earlier, we reported Russia does not want Keith Kellogg – Donald Trump’s initial envoy for the war – involved in top-level talks (see our 7.24 post).
But now the Kremlin has denied the report – first made by our US partner network NBC News – saying it has nothing to do with Kellogg’s absence.
Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “It would be probably absurd to think that the Russian side would meddle into internal matters of the US.
“We don’t have even a slightest intention [to do so]. And we actually say that all contacts should be based on mutual respect.
“And proceeding from a mutual respect, we of course won’t meddle in the internal matters of the US.
“It’s up to them who to appoint and who not. So no, I can’t confirm it all.”
The Kremlin has confirmed Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff met Vladimir Putin late yesterday during his visit to Moscow yesterday.
What’s more – spokesman Dmitry Peskov said they agreed Putin will speak with Trump, though the timing has not yet been confirmed.
“The exact time of the conversation between the two presidents has not yet been agreed upon,” he told reporters.
“But at the same time, after Mr Witkoff conveys all the information received in Moscow to the attention of his head of state, then we will determine the timing of the conversation.”
He also told TASS news agency there is an “understanding” in both countries that a “conversation between the presidents is necessary”.
‘Cautious optimism’
Peskov also said Putin has sent a message via Witkoff to Trump about his proposed 30-day ceasefire – and that there are grounds for “cautious optimism”.
He added Putin was “in overall solidarity” with Trump on Ukraine, but there is a lot of work to do.
As we reported a little while ago (see 9.19 post), Witkoff has now left Moscow.
Nestled in the Quebec hills, foreign ministers from the G7 nations have convened in the remote tourist town of La Malbaie.
There may be some tension, given differences with the US approach to Ukraine, but there’s still another day of talks to go.
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