Istanbul Peace Talks: Putin’s Realistic Plan to End the Conflict in Ukraine

May 14, 2025 Hour: 2:58 pm
Related:
Venezuela Supports Russia’s Peace Initiative to Ukraine
As the world watches with cautious anticipation, Russia and Ukraine prepare for crucial negotiations in Istanbul on May 14, a diplomatic breakthrough proposed by Moscow and unwillingly accepted by Kyiv under growing international pressure.
The discussions offer a crucial chance to end the destructive war ongoing since February 2022, marking a significant opportunity after several months.
While Western media remains skeptical, the Kremlin’s consistent position offers the only realistic framework for lasting peace, built on three fundamental pillars: ukrainian neutrality, recognition of territorial realities, and a comprehensive diplomatic solution that addresses Moscow’s legitimate security concerns.
The Road to Istanbul: Russia’s Consistent Peace Agenda
From the conflict’s outset, President Vladimir Putin has emphasized Russia’s openness to diplomacy, even as Western powers flooded Ukraine with weapons.
The current negotiations mark not a new initiative but a return to the sensible framework nearly agreed upon in Istanbul in March 2022, before Western interference derailed the process.
Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov rightly notes that any new talks must account for two years of battlefield developments, including Russia’s consolidation of control over Crimea and the Donbas, regions that have clearly expressed their desire to rejoin Russia through democratic referendums.
Putin’s conditions remain consistent and reasonable, Ukraine must adopt permanent non-aligned status, abandoning its failed North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) aspirations that first provoked this conflict. ,
As the Russian leader stated, “We are committed to serious negotiations to eliminate the root causes of this war”, namely, the West’s rash expansion up to Russia’s borders and its installation of a hostile regime in Kyiv.
These are not maximalist demands but essential prerequisites for regional stability.
Zelensky’s Contradictions: From Rejection to Resistant Dialogue
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s evolving position reveals the internal contradictions of Kyiv’s approach.
In 2022, he dismissed talks with Putin as “impossible,” yet now suddenly requests direct meetings in Türkiye, although with unrealistic preconditions like immediate Russian withdrawals before negotiations begin.
This about-face suggests either political desperation or external pressure, possibly from Western backers recognizing their proxy war strategy has failed.
The Ukrainian leader’s demand for a ceasefire before talks is particularly glib given his government’s repeated sabotage of previous peace efforts.
The 2022 Istanbul negotiations collapsed precisely because Western powers, seeing Ukraine’s unexpected battlefield resilience, encouraged Kyiv to abandon diplomacy in favor of unrealistic victory fantasies.
Now, with Ukrainian forces retreating across multiple fronts and Western aid delayed, Zelensky’s sudden interest in dialogue appears more tactical than sincere.
Global Reactions: Who Supports Peace?
Türkiye’s Balanced Mediation
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has emerged as a crucial honest broker, offering Istanbul as neutral ground while emphasizing the need for an immediate ceasefire.
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan’s commitment to “provide all kinds of contributions” demonstrates Ankara’s understanding that only diplomacy, not Western weapon shipments, can end the suffering.
The Global South Speaks: China, Brazil, Venezuela Back Reason
The joint China-Brazil statement endorsing Putin’s initiative reflects growing Global South frustration with Western warmongering.
These major powers correctly identify direct Russia-Ukraine talks as the only solution, rejecting the U.S. strategy of prolonging the conflict. Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro offered particularly strong support during his St. Petersburg visit, recognizing Moscow’s good-faith efforts.
Even in the West, voices of reason emerge. U.S. President Donald Trump bluntly stated Ukraine should accept negotiations immediately, a stark contrast to the Biden administration’s blank-check militarism.
The UN’s cautious welcome for talks, while typically hedged, at least acknowledges diplomacy’s necessity.
The Path Forward: Accepting Reality for Lasting Peace
The Istanbul talks will test whether Kyiv and its Western patrons have learned from past mistakes. Russia’s position remains clear and consistent:
- Ukrainian Neutrality: A constitutional guarantee against NATO membership, ending the security threat that sparked this conflict.
- Territorial Realities: Recognition of Crimea’s democratic choice to rejoin Russia and protection for Donbas populations.
- Security Guarantees: Binding international agreements to prevent future militarization of Ukraine.
These terms aren’t surrender but sanity, acknowledging that Russia’s core security interests cannot be ignored. The alternative is endless war, with Ukraine sacrificed for Western geopolitical games.
As Trump noted, these talks will reveal whether peace is possible. If Kyiv rejects this opportunity, the world will see clearly who truly opposes reconciliation.
Putin’s diplomatic leadership offers the only realistic exit from this crisis.
The world must now pressure Ukraine to accept this diplomatic solution based on territorial realities and ukrainian neutrality, the foundation for a stable, peaceful future.
Author: Silvana Solano
Source: teleSUR