A day after European leaders said they were willing to send troops to Ukraine to support a future peace deal, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia dismissed the idea on Friday, adding that any Western forces would be “legitimate targets” if they arrived before a peace agreement was signed.
Mr. Putin also said it would be “practically impossible” for him to reach an agreement with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in a face-to-face meeting. He suggested that any such talks be held in Moscow, a proposal that the Ukrainians dismissed as a nonstarter.
“The Ukrainian side wants a meeting,” Mr. Putin said at an economic conference in Vladivostok, in Russia’s Far East. “We are ready,” he said. “And the best place for it would be the capital of our country.”
Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, said on social media that Mr. Putin “continues to mess around with everyone by making knowingly unacceptable proposals.”
Mr. Putin spoke a day after a summit of European leaders in Paris, where President Emmanuel Macron of France said 26 countries had committed to securing any future peace deal in Ukraine, including with troop deployments to deter Russian aggression. But the leaders offered few specifics.
Mr. Putin said on Friday that Western troops would be “legitimate targets” for Russia’s military if they arrived before a peace deal was reached. If they arrived afterward, he added, their presence “wouldn’t make any sense.”
Mr. Zelensky said Mr. Putin’s invitation to Moscow meant that Russia wanted to sabotage the possibility of direct talks, an idea that President Trump has promoted.Mr. Putin arrived in Vladivostok after a four-day trip to China, where he joined Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, Kim Jong-un of North Korea and other autocrats in a show of unity against the U.S.-led West.
In Vladivostok, he spoke at the plenary session of an annual economic conference where, for three days, Russian government and business leaders have discussed the country’s economy, focusing on cooperation with China and the development of remote provinces in the Far East.
Mr. Putin also signaled that Russia was willing to work with American companies on joint economic projects in Alaska and the Arctic, in what appeared to be his latest effort to divert Mr. Trump’s attention from the war to the potential economic benefits of renewed ties with Moscow.
Mr. Putin said the United States was “also a nation that belongs to the Asia-Pacific, and there are many interested parties there that would like to restore or begin new work with us.”
“A political decision needs to be made,” he said.
Since Mr. Trump’s inauguration in January, Mr. Putin has been trying to separate the war in Ukraine from the broader issue of the two countries’ relationship. But the Trump administration has publicly insisted that the fighting must end before economic ties can be renewed.
Ivan Nechepurenko covers Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, the countries of the Caucasus, and Central Asia.
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