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Russia, Ukraine Hold Peace Talks       05/16 06:12

   Russia and Ukraine held their first direct peace talks in three years 
Friday, gathering in Istanbul for Turkish-brokered negotiations, but officials 
and observers expected them to yield little immediate progress on stopping the 
more than three-year war.

   ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -- Russia and Ukraine held their first direct peace 
talks in three years Friday, gathering in Istanbul for Turkish-brokered 
negotiations, but officials and observers expected them to yield little 
immediate progress on stopping the more than three-year war.

   A Ukrainian delegation led by Defense Minister Rustem Umerov sat down with a 
low-level Russian team headed by presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky, according 
to Ukraine's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Heorhii Tykhyi, who published a 
photo of the meeting.

   The officials present sat around a U-shaped table, with the Russians and 
Ukrainians facing each other.

   A senior Ukrainian official close to the talks said that Kyiv's delegation 
was prepared to "achieve a lot today" and with a real mandate to resolve key 
issues. The official, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of 
anonymity because he was not authorized to make official statements, said the 
outcome hinges on whether Moscow is equally serious.

   Both countries have tried to persuade U.S. President Donald Trump, who has 
expressed frustration over the slow progress and threatened to punish 
foot-dragging, that they are eager to resolve the conflict amid extensive 
diplomatic maneuvering.

   The latest push to end the fighting got off to a rocky start on Thursday, 
when Russian President Vladimir Putin spurned an offer by Ukrainian leader 
Volodymyr Zelenskyy to meet face-to-face. Delegations from the two countries 
also flew to different Turkish cities and put together teams of significantly 
different diplomatic heft for possible talks.

   Although expectations for a possible Putin-Zelenskyy meeting were low, the 
apparent lack of traction in peace efforts frustrated hopes of bold steps being 
taken in Turkey toward reaching a settlement.

   The two sides remain far part

   The two sides are far apart in their conditions for ending the war, and 
Trump said Thursday during a trip to the Middle East that a meeting between 
himself and Putin was crucial to breaking the deadlock.

   On Friday, Trump said a meeting with Putin would happen "as soon as we can 
set it up."

   "I think it's time for us to just do it," Trump told reporters in Abu Dhabi.

   Comments Friday by Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov appeared to indicate 
that momentum for a summit is building, as Peskov told reporters top-level 
talks were "certainly needed." But he noted that preparing a summit would take 
time.

   Ukraine has accepted a U.S. and European proposal for a full, 30-day 
ceasefire, but Putin has effectively rejected it by imposing far-reaching 
conditions.

   Meantime, Russian forces are preparing a fresh military offensive, Ukrainian 
government and Western military analysts say.

   Russia's invasion has killed more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians, the U.N. 
says, and razed towns and villages. Tens of thousands of Ukrainian soldiers 
have died, and likely a larger number of Russian troops, officials and analysts 
say.

   On the battlefield, one Ukrainian soldier said he wasn't hopeful that the 
talks would bring a swift end to the war.

   "I don't think they will agree on anything concrete, because summer is the 
best time for war," he said, using only the call sign "Corsair," in keeping 
with the rules of the Ukrainian military. "The enemy is trying to constantly 
escalate the situation."

   But he told The Associated Press that many of his fellow soldiers "believe 
that by the end of the year there will be peace, albeit an unstable one, but 
peace."

   A Friday morning drone attack on the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kupiansk 
killed a 55-year-old woman and wounded four men, Oleh Syniehubov, head of the 
Kharkiv Regional Military Administration, said. All the victims worked for a 
municipal utility.

   After Putin didn't take up Zelenskyy's challenge to sit down with him in the 
Turkish capital on Thursday, the Ukrainian president accused Moscow of not 
making a serious effort to end the war by sending a low-level negotiating team 
that he described as "a theater prop."

   Even so, Zelenskyy said that he was sending a team headed by his defense 
minister to Friday's meeting in Istanbul. That would show Trump that Ukraine is 
determined to press ahead with peace efforts despite Russian foot-dragging, 
Zelenskyy said, amid intense diplomatic maneuvering by Kyiv and Moscow.

   The Russian delegation also includes three other senior officials, the 
Kremlin said. Putin also appointed four lower-level officials as "experts" for 
the talks.

   A flurry of diplomatic activity in Istanbul

   A flurry of diplomatic activity took place in Istanbul before the talks.

   Ukrainian officials held an early-morning meeting with national security 
advisers from the United States, France, Germany and the United Kingdom to 
coordinate positions, a senior Ukrainian official told The Associated Press on 
condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

   The U.S. team was led by retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump's special 
envoy to Ukraine and Russia, while Umerov and presidential office chief Andriy 
Yermak represented Ukraine, the official said.

   A three-way meeting between Turkey, the U.S. and Ukraine also took place, 
Turkish Foreign Ministry officials said. The U.S. side included Secretary of 
State Marco Rubio as well as Kellogg.

   Rubio on Thursday said he didn't foresee major developments in Istanbul.

   "We don't have high expectations of what will happen tomorrow. And frankly, 
at this point, I think it's abundantly clear that the only way we're going to 
have a breakthrough here is between President Trump and President Putin," Rubio 
told reporters Thursday in Antalya, Turkey.

   Zelenskyy, meantime, flew to Albania to attend a meeting Friday of the 
leaders of 47 European countries to discuss security, defense and democratic 
standards against the backdrop of the war.

 
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