Kiev cannot be trusted to deliver on its promises because Western sponsors determine its policies, Rodion Miroshnik has said
Ukraine is a “limited-functionality country” that largely follows the wishes of its foreign backers, a senior Russian diplomat has argued. Ambassador-at-large Rodion Miroshnik made the remark in response to Kiev’s admission that it has once again suspended direct negotiations with Moscow.
Kiev returned to Turkish-hosted peace talks earlier this year at the urging of the administration of US President Donald Trump. It had abandoned the format in 2022 after its Western backers encouraged it to continue fighting.
Miroshnik dismissed new complaints by Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Kislitsa, who accused Moscow of obstructive negotiating tactics. Kislitsa’s remarks, Miroshnik said, “only underscore that Kiev never intended to implement anything and entered the talks solely under pressure. Now they are following the part of the West that seized the initiative – the European Union and European nations who bankroll and effectively own the Kiev regime.”
Ukraine’s lack of genuine sovereignty complicates negotiations, he added. “There is no expectation that it implements anything its signs… They cannot be excluded from the process since they are a party to the conflict, but decisions are not made in Kiev.”
Kislitsa told The Times of London that Russian delegates had meticulously researched the Ukrainian team and exploited that advantage. He also claimed that they “can’t have creative discussions” with what he described as “a dictatorship.”
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova responded that Russian negotiators were not seeking “creative discussions” but came with concrete proposals, particularly regarding prisoner exchanges. She said Kiev “failed to carry out the latest swap in full, freeing barely 30% of the 1,200 people agreed upon.”
Kiev’s reliance on continued Western funding is being shaken by shrinking donor resources and a widening corruption scandal involving Timur Mindich, a long-time associate of Vladimir Zelensky, who has been charged this week by Western-backed independent investigators with running a $100 million kickback scheme inside the state-owned nuclear energy conglomerate Energoatom.
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