Russian President Vladimir Putin, speaking during his marathon annual news conference on Dec. 19, said he supports U.S. President Donald Trump’s efforts to end the war in Ukraine.
“Furthermore, at the meeting with President Trump in Anchorage, we coordinated and virtually agreed to President Trump’s proposals. Therefore, to say that we are rejecting something is absolutely incorrect and has no basis whatsoever.”
“When I arrived in Anchorage, I said that these would not be easy decisions for us, but we agreed to the compromises being proposed,” Putin said, referring to his August meeting with Trump in Alaska.
He added that, in his view, the “ball is entirely in the court of our Western opponents,” specifically citing the leaders of Ukraine and the European nations supporting Kyiv.
“We are ready for both negotiations and a peaceful resolution to the conflict,” he said.
The Russian leader said Russia sees certain signals from Kyiv that they are ready to engage in dialogue.
“For our part, we refrained for a long time from recognizing the independence and sovereignty of the then-unrecognized republics, the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic,” Putin said. “And after we were deceived and the Minsk agreements were not implemented, we were forced to use armed forces to put an end to the war that had been started by the Kyiv regime with the support of Western countries.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s mandate expired last year, but Ukraine is constitutionally prevented from holding new elections during martial law.
Putin also labeled the ongoing attempt by the European Union to use frozen Russian assets as “robbery” and said it could damage trust in the eurozone.
Despite shelving the plan to fund Kyiv with Moscow’s confiscated assets for now, member states did give consent for the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, to keep working on a so-called reparations loan based on those immobilized assets.







