Putin urges US to push Ukraine to talks
Russian President says his country stands ready to negotiate a potential prisoner exchange that would free Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who was detained last March on espionage charges he denies
AP
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Russia, Vladimir Putin, Fox News, Tucker Carlson, Washington, Moscow, Ukraine
Washington, 9 Feb
Russian President Vladimir Putin
used an interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson to urge Washington
to recognise Moscow's interests and persuade Ukraine to sit down for talks.
Putin also said that Russia stands
ready to negotiate a potential prisoner exchange that would free Wall Street
Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who was detained last March on espionage
charges he denies, and hinted that Moscow wants the release of its agent
imprisoned in Germany.
Most of the interview, released
Thursday, focused on Ukraine, where the war is nearing the two-year mark. Putin
repeated his claim that his invasion of Ukraine, which Kyiv and its allies
described as an unprovoked act of aggression, was necessary to protect Russian
speakers in Ukraine and prevent the country from posing a threat to Russia by
joining NATO.
Putin pointed at Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's refusal to conduct talks with the Kremlin. He
argued that it's up to Washington to stop supplying Ukraine with weapons and
convince Kyiv, which he called a U.S. “satellite,” to sit down for negotiations.
“We have never refused
negotiations,” Putin said. “You should tell the current Ukrainian leadership to
stop and come to a negotiating table.”
Putin warned that the West will
never succeed in inflicting a “strategic defeat” on Russia in Ukraine and
rejected allegations that Russia was harbouring plans to attack Poland or other
NATO countries.
It was Putin's first interview with
a Western media figure since his full-scale invasion of Ukraine two years ago.
White House national security
spokesman John Kirby tried to minimize the impact of Carlson's interview ahead
of its release: “Remember, you're listening to Vladimir Putin. And you
shouldn't take at face value anything he has to say.”
Putin has heavily limited his
contact with international media since he launched the war in Ukraine in
February 2022. Russian authorities have cracked down on independent media,
forcing some Russian outlets to close, blocking others and ordering a number of
foreign reporters to leave the country. Two journalists working for U.S. news
organizations - The Wall Street Journal's Gershkovich and Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty's Alsu Kurmasheva - are in jail.
Asked by Carlson whether Russia
would release Gershkovich, Putin said Moscow is open to talks but repeated that
the reporter was charged with espionage, an accusation Gershkovich has denied.
“He was caught red-handed when he
was secretly getting classified information,” Putin said of Gershkovich, adding
that he doesn't exclude that the reporter could return home.
“There is no taboo on settling this
issue," Putin said. “We are ready to solve it but there are certain
conditions that are being discussed between special services. I believe an
agreement can be reached."
He pointed to a man imprisoned in a
“U.S.-allied country” for “liquidating a bandit" who killed Russian
soldiers during the fighting in the Caucasus: “He put our soldiers taken
prisoners on a road and then drove a car over their heads. There was a patriot
who liquidated him in one of the European capitals.”
Putin didn't mention names, but he
appeared to refer to Vadim Krasikov, a Russian serving a life sentence in
Germany after being convicted of the 2019 brazen daylight killing of Zelimkhan
“Tornike” Khangoshvili, a 40-year-old Georgian citizen of Chechen ethnicity.
German judges who convicted
Krasikov said he had acted on the orders of Russian federal authorities, who
provided him with a false identity, a fake passport and the resources to carry
out the hit.
The Wall Street Journal reaffirmed
in a statement that Gershkovich “is a journalist, and journalism is not a
crime," adding that “any portrayal to the contrary is total fiction.”
"We're encouraged to see Russia's desire for a deal that brings Evan home,
and we hope this will lead to his rapid release and return to his family and
our newsroom,” it said.
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