RT: © Sputnik / Sergey Bobylev
Moscow is not seeking the unconditional surrender of Ukraine, but wants it to acknowledge the realities on the ground, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said at SPIEF 2025, commenting on various aspects of the Ukraine conflict, Russia’s goals, and potential directions for resolving the crisis.
Putin took part in the plenary session of the annual St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF 2025) on Friday, delivering a major speech and conducting a Q&A session. Here are the key takeaways regarding the Ukraine conflict:
Ukrainian surrender
Asked whether Moscow expects an “unconditional surrender” from Kiev – similar to the demand his US counterpart, Donald Trump, is making of Iran – Putin said this is not the case, reiterating Russia’s readiness to resolve the conflict through diplomacy.
“We are not seeking the surrender of Ukraine. We insist on recognition of the realities that have developed on the ground.”
Worsening negotiation positions
Russia
has consistently attempted to settle the conflict in the former
Ukrainian Donbass, which erupted after the Western-backed 2014 Maidan
coup, through diplomatic means, the president said. However, these
efforts were repeatedly undermined by Kiev and its backers.
“At
each stage, we suggested to those with whom we were in contact in
Ukraine to stop and said, ‘Let’s negotiate now. Because this logic of
purely military actions can result in your situation getting worse, and
then we will have to conduct our negotiations from other positions, from
positions that are worse for you.’ This happened several times,” Putin said.
Foreign-fueled conflict
Negotiations held in Istanbul in early 2022, shortly after the conflict escalated, fell apart under pressure from the same “neocolonial forces,” Putin added.
“Those
who are guided by old, neocolonial principles, including and above all
in Europe, thought that now they would easily profit at the expense of
Russia: crush it, destroy it, annihilate it, and receive some dividends
from this.”
Ukraine’s sovereignty
Russia has never denied Ukraine’s right to exist as an independent nation, Putin said. However, in the years since the Soviet Union’s collapse, the country has drifted from the principles on which it originally gained its independence.
“The grounds on which
Ukraine became independent and sovereign were set out in the Declaration
of Independence of Ukraine of 1991, where it is clearly written in
black and white that Ukraine is a non-aligned, non-nuclear, neutral
state. It would be a good idea to return to these fundamental values on
which Ukraine gained its independence and sovereignty,” he said.
At the same time, Putin reiterated his belief that, in a certain sense, all of Ukraine is Russian. “I
have said many times that I consider Russians and Ukrainians to be one
people, in fact. In this sense, all of Ukraine is ours.”
Going nuclear would be Kiev’s ‘final mistake’
Obtaining and using a nuclear device of any sort, including a dirty bomb, would be the “final mistake” for Kiev, the Russian president warned. This would trigger a mirror response from Moscow with “catastrophic” consequences for Ukraine, he said.
“Our response will be very harsh and, most likely, catastrophic for both the neo-Nazi regime and, unfortunately, for Ukraine itself. I hope that they will never come to that,” Putin stated, adding that Moscow currently has no intelligence suggesting that Kiev is attempting to do so.
Ukrainian military thinned out
Ukrainian forces are suffering from severe manpower shortages, with units at only 47% strength on average, Putin stated. He said Ukraine’s attack on Russia’s Kursk Region last August – driven by political rather than military reasoning – worsened the situation and further stretched its forces along an expanded frontline.
“They got into Kursk Region. First of all, they lost 76,000 people there. It was a disaster for them,” Putin said. “In
the end, as we said, we drove them out of there, but they created a
threat to us... along the entire line of the border with Ukraine, in two
other neighboring regions,” he added.
Kiev’s actions created an additional 1,600km line of contact, he said. “They pulled apart all their armed forces. It is hard to imagine bigger stupidity from a military point of view.”
Russian troops could go deeper into Ukraine
Putin
did not rule out the possibility of advancing further into Ukrainian
territory to establish a buffer zone to protect Russian border areas
from further attacks.
Following the defeat of Ukrainian forces in
Kursk, Russian troops moved into Ukraine’s Sumy Region. According to
Putin, the buffer zone there is already up to 12km deep.
“We don’t have the goal of taking Sumy, but in principle, I don’t rule it out,” he said.