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Putin rebuffs Zelensky's summit call: 'no point', and Europe is not a mediator

Putin rebuffs Zelensky's summit call: 'no point', and Europe is not a mediator

Moscow leans wholly on the Trump–Anchorage framework, demands Ukraine stop its advance, and tells Kyiv to sign before any meeting

Summary

Vladimir Putin rejected Volodymyr Zelensky's call for a face-to-face summit, telling the St Petersburg forum there is "no point" in meeting now and calling Zelensky's open letter "rude". His stated condition: the meeting's only purpose would be for Ukraine to halt the advance of Russian forces — capitulation framed as precondition. Putin said US President Donald Trump's proposals from the Anchorage summit "could be the basis" for a settlement but require "compromise" from Kyiv, and he pointedly refused Europe any role as mediator. Zelensky had proposed a meeting in a third country with a fixed date; he accused Moscow of choosing war over peace. The position leaves Trump as the sole channel — and the lever Moscow expects to be used against Kyiv.

By the numbers

  • 4 — years (going on five) of full-scale war as of mid-2026.
  • 0 — Putin–Zelensky in-person meetings since the invasion.
  • 1 — framework Moscow will entertain: the Trump–Anchorage understandings.

Why it matters

By accepting only a Trump-brokered deal and barring Europe, Moscow structures any endgame so that pressure falls on Kyiv to cede territory, not on Russia to compromise. It splits Ukraine's Western backing — Washington as broker, Europe shut out — and buys time for the summer fighting to set facts on the ground.

What to watch

  • Whether Trump leans on Kyiv to accept the Anchorage terms, and how Europe responds.
  • Any signed document Moscow demands before a leaders' meeting.
  • Battlefield shifts that change either side's leverage before talks.