The Kremlin has declined to commit to an immediate 30-day ceasefire in the war with Ukraine, stating that Vladimir Putin must first be briefed by the US before deciding whether the proposal would be acceptable to Russia.
The Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said Moscow was awaiting “detailed information” from Washington after talks between senior US and Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia, where Kyiv declared its readiness to implement an immediate ceasefire.
“We assume that secretary of state [Marco] Rubio and adviser [Michael] Waltz through various channels in the coming days will inform us on the negotiations that took place and the understandings reached,” Peskov told reporters in Moscow, adding that the Kremlin could organise a call between Putin and Donald Trump on short notice if needed.
The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, confirmed the US would have contact with Russia on Wednesday about the ceasefire agreement reached with Ukraine.
“We all eagerly await the Russian response and urge them strongly to consider ending all hostilities,” Rubio said during a stop in Ireland. “If they say no, then obviously we’ll have to examine everything and sort of figure out where we stand in the world and what their true intentions are,” he added.
The White House Middle East envoy and close Trump ally Steve Witkoff is expected to travel to Moscow later this week for a meeting with the Russian leader, though the Kremlin has yet to confirm this.
Ukraine, meanwhile, said it plans to hold further discussions with the US next week on the contours of a temporary 30-day ceasefire.
“We have already agreed that next week, at the technical expert level, teams will begin discussing all the details,” said Andriy Yermak, Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, late on Tuesday evening, after high-stakes talks in Jeddah that also prompted the US to lift its restrictions on military aid and intelligence sharing.
Yermak added that the US would now bring to Russia the proposals developed during the talks. “After this meeting, the key is now in Russia’s hands. And the whole world will see who truly wants peace and who only talks about it,” he said.
It remains unclear if Putin is ready to accept the ceasefire in its current form.
Some Russian officials in Moscow indicated scepticism about the prospect of a ceasefire, saying that Moscow was unwilling to stop the fighting as its forces this week made rapid gains in reclaiming territory in Russia’s Kursk region, where Ukraine launched a surprise incursion last year.
“Russia is advancing [on the battlefield] … Any agreements must be on our terms, not American ones … Washington should understand this as well,” the senior Russian senator Konstantin Kosachev wrote on Telegram. “Victory will be ours,” he added.
The lawmaker Mikhail Sheremet told Russian media that Russia was not interested in continuing the war but at the same time Moscow “will not tolerate begin strung along”.
Other insiders said that Russia would probably push for certain guarantees before accepting a ceasefire.
On Wednesday, Fyodor Lukyanov, a prominent Russian foreign policy analyst who heads a council that advises the Kremlin, wrote that a ceasefire agreement “contradicts” Moscow’s repeatedly stated position that no truce will take place until the foundations of lasting peace are determined.
“In other words, we fight until a comprehensive settlement framework is developed,” Lukyanov concluded.
Putin has repeatedly rejected the possibility of a temporary ceasefire, saying that he was focused on addressing what he calls the “root causes” of the conflict.
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Earlier this year, he told Russia’s security council that there “should not be a short truce, not some kind of respite for regrouping forces and rearmament with the aim of subsequently continuing the conflict, but a long-term peace”.
Instead, the Russian leader has set out a list of maximalist demands to end his invasion, including Ukraine forgoing Nato membership, undergoing partial demilitarisation, and ceding full control of the four Ukrainian regions Putin claimed in 2022.
Russia’s longtime foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, in an interview this week with a group of far-right bloggers from the US, also stated that Moscow would not accept western peacekeepers in Ukraine as security guarantees “under any conditions”.
Still, an outright rejection of the ceasefire by Putin would risk angering Trump and undermining their warm relationship, which has led the US administration to adopt a fundamentally different approach to Moscow compared with Europe.
Observers suggest Moscow is likely to push either to reclaim all territory controlled by Ukraine in Russia’s Kursk region or to demand Ukraine’s withdrawal from the area before entering discussions on any ceasefire.
On Wednesday, Russian forces entered the central square of Sudzha, the largest town in Kursk captured by Ukraine last year, Moscow’s most significant breakthrough in its effort to regain control of the region since Kyiv’s surprise incursion last year.
Ruslan Leviev, the founder of the Conflict Intelligence Team, an open-source investigation unit, said Ukrainian forces in the Kursk region appeared to be conducting a controlled withdrawal, ceding their positions without resistance.
“All areas gradually coming under the control of Russian forces [and] have been taken with little to no resistance. It can already be said that the entire city of Sudzha is now under Russian control,” Leviev said.
While Ukraine’s position in the Kursk region appears increasingly dire, it has managed to stabilise the front in eastern Ukraine, where the Russian offensive has largely stalled.