The Kremlin, asked about an assertion by US President Donald Trump that Russia was open to European peacekeepers being deployed in Ukraine, referred reporters to an earlier statement that such a move would be unacceptable to Moscow.
Trump said on February 24 that both he and Putin had accepted the idea of European peacekeeping troops in Ukraine if a settlement was reached to end the war.
“Yeah, he will accept that,” Trump said. “I specifically asked him that question. He has no problem with it.”
Russia has repeatedly said it opposed having NATO troops on the ground in Ukraine, with foreign minister Sergei Lavrov saying recently that Moscow would view that as a “direct threat” to Russia’s sovereignty, even if the troops operated there under a different flag.
Asked about Trump’s comment, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov refrained from publicly contradicting him but effectively reaffirmed Russia’s opposition to the idea.
“There is a position on this matter that was expressed by the Russian foreign minister, Lavrov. I have nothing to add to this and nothing to comment on. I leave this without comment,” said Peskov.
Brian Hughes, spokesman for the White House National Security Council, did not respond directly to the Kremlin’s latest comment, saying the Trump administration would continue to work with Moscow and Kyiv to end the war.
“President Trump’s commitment to achieving an end to this brutal, bloody war and then establishing the framework for a lasting peace will not be negotiated through the media,” Hughes said.
“The Trump administration knows that sustaining peace requires Europe to do more, and we have heard leaders like [French] President [Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister [Keir] Starmer – as well as others – offer to do just that.
“We continue to work with Russia and Ukraine for peace because you can’t end a war without talking to both sides.“