Putin says he thinks Russia-Ukraine war is coming to an end

Reuters

Putin says he thinks Russia-Ukraine war is coming to an end

By Vladimir Soldatkin and Guy Faulconbridge
4 min read

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with members of the Security Council via a video link at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia May 8, 2026. Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool via REUTERS

By Vladimir Soldatkin and Guy Faulconbridge

MOSCOW, May 9 (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday that he thought the Ukraine war was coming to an end, remarks that came just hours after he had vowed victory in Ukraine at Moscow’s most scaled-back Victory Day parade in years.

“I think that ‌the matter is coming to an end,” Putin told reporters of the Russia-Ukraine war, Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War Two. He also said he would ‌be willing to negotiate new security arrangements for Europe, and that his preferred negotiating partner would be Germany’s former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.

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Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine triggered the most serious crisis in relations between Russia and the ​West since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, when many people feared the world was on the brink of nuclear war.

The Kremlin has said peace talks brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration were on pause. Putin has repeatedly vowed to fight on until all of Russia’s various war aims are achieved in what Moscow calls the “special military operation”.

Putin was speaking in the Kremlin after setting out his view of the causes of the war. He blamed “globalist” Western leaders, saying they promised NATO would not expand eastward after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, but ‌then tried to draw Ukraine into the European Union’s orbit.

His statement ⁠came just hours after the parade on the May 9 national holiday celebrating the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two. The annual event pays homage to the 27 million Soviet citizens who perished in that war.

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Instead of the usual intercontinental ballistic missiles, tanks ⁠and missile systems rolling across the cobbles of Red Square, Russia played a video of its military hardware in action on giant screens opposite the Kremlin walls.

Russian troops have been fighting in Ukraine for well over four years. That is longer than Soviet forces fought in World War Two, known in Russia as the Great Patriotic War of 1941-45.

WAR IN EUROPE

Putin, who has ruled Russia as president ​or ​prime minister since the last day of 1999, faces a wave of anxiety in Moscow about the ​war in Ukraine, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people, ‌left swathes of Ukraine in ruins, and drained Russia’s $3 trillion economy. Russia’s relations with Europe are worse than at any time since the depths of the Cold War.

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Russian forces have so far been unable to take the whole of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine where Kyiv’s forces have been pushed back to a line of fortress cities. Russian advances have slowed this year, though Moscow controls just under one fifth of Ukrainian territory.

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