The Russian Foreign Ministry has expressed hope the international community will see through what it called a ploy by Kiev
The flag of Saudi Arabia on a street in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. © Sputnik
The true purpose of Saudi-hosted peace talks on Ukraine, initiated by the West and Kiev, is to build an anti-Russian coalition, the Foreign Ministry in Moscow said on Wednesday. Media reports have suggested that Russia was not invited to the negotiations.
Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that some 30 nations, including the US and countries from Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America, had been invited to take part in talks in Jeddah on August 5 and 6. The meeting was later confirmed by Ukrainian officials.
In commentary to Russian business daily Kommersant, the ministry took a swipe at what it described as a ploy by “the Kiev regime and its Western sponsors” to promote Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky’s formula for ending the conflict.
The plan, which was floated last autumn, calls for Russia to withdraw all its troops from the territory Kiev claims as its own and submit to prosecution for alleged war crimes. Moscow has rejected those ideas as unacceptable, calling them a sign that Ukraine is not serious about talks.
Read more
The Foreign Ministry added that the negotiations in the proposed format amounted to “an attempt to exploit the sincere intentions of [participating] countries to cobble together an anti-Russian coalition.”
“We assume that our partners are realistic about such events and are well aware of the toxic intentions of Kiev and the Westerners, who are trying to dupe them into taking their side and pulling away from Russia,” the ministry said.
It also stated that Moscow’s partners share its position that talks on peace in Ukraine are impossible without Russia. “We are certain that they will adhere to such an approach if they take part in the consultations in Saudi Arabia,” the ministry told Kommersant.
On Monday, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said that his country would not take part in the talks in Saudi Arabia, explaining that they would make sense only if both Kiev and Moscow were present.
However, Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov said that Russia would keep an eye on the meeting, reiterating that Moscow has always welcomed all attempts to settle the conflict peacefully. Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that the talks “will not be useless” if they “help the West understand that Zelensky’s plan has no prospects.”