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Ukraine says Abu Dhabi talks with Russia “substantive and productive”

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Published :  
5 hours ago|
  • Diplomatic Progress Amid High Stakes: The first day of US-mediated talks in Abu Dhabi was described by Kyiv as "substantive and productive," focusing on concrete steps toward a prisoner exchange and resolving "military-political issues" despite Russia's ongoing hardline territorial demands.
  • Heavy Human Toll Disclosed: In a rare and somber admission, President Zelensky revealed that 55,000 Ukrainian troops have been killed since the 2022 war, a disclosure made as hundreds of thousands in Kyiv remain without heat during record-breaking cold and Russian strikes on energy infrastructure.

A first day of talks between Ukraine, Russia and the United States aimed at brokering an end to the war in Ukraine concluded Wednesday in Abu Dhabi, with Kyiv describing negotiations as "substantive and productive".

While there was no apparent breakthrough in the most recent round of discussions, meetings were set to carry on into a second day, Kyiv said.

The US-mediated talks are the latest in a flurry of diplomacy that has so far failed to strike a deal to halt the war, unleashed by Russia's February 2022 attack.

Underscoring the human toll from the conflict, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday that 55,000 of his country's troops had been killed, a rare assessment of battlefield losses that both Moscow and Kyiv have not typically provided.

"And there are a great number Ukraine lists as missing," he told French TV network France 2, which translated his comments.

The war has spiralled into Europe's deadliest conflict since World War II, with hundreds of thousands killed, millions forced to flee their homes in Ukraine and much of the eastern and southern part of the country decimated.

Wednesday's talks came following weeks of Russian attacks on Ukraine's power infrastructure, which have left Kyiv residents in darkness and cold, with temperatures dropping as low as -20C.

Despite the Kremlin repeating its hardline demands ahead of the talks, Ukraine's top negotiator Rustem Umerov said the first day had been "substantive and productive, focused on concrete steps and practical solutions".

Zelensky said on Wednesday he expected a new prisoner exchange with Russia "in the near future".

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In Ukraine, foreign ministry spokesman Georgiy Tykhy said Kyiv was "interested in finding out what the Russians and Americans really want."

The content of the talks was on "military and military-political issues," he added, without elaborating.

The main sticking point in settling the conflict is the long-term fate of territory in eastern Ukraine.

Moscow is demanding that Kyiv pull its troops out of swathes of the Donbas, including heavily fortified cities atop vast natural resources, as a precondition of any deal.

It also wants international recognition that land seized in the war belongs to Russia.

Kyiv has said the conflict should be frozen along the current front line and has rejected a unilateral pull-back of forces.

Trump dispatched his ubiquitous envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner to try to corral the sides to an agreement.

Russia's top negotiator is military intelligence director Igor Kostyukov, a career naval officer sanctioned in the West over his role in the Ukraine war.

Europe fears it has been sidelined in the process, even as France and Britain lead efforts to put together a peacekeeping force that could be deployed to Ukraine after any deal.

It was "strategically important for Europe to at some point be part of the negotiations," the EU's ambassador to Ukraine Katarina Mathernova told AFP on Wednesday in Kyiv.

Russia occupies around 20 percent of Ukraine, but Kyiv still controls around one-fifth of the Donetsk region.

Ukraine has warned that ceding ground will embolden Moscow and that it will not sign a deal that fails to deter Russia from invading again.

Russia also claims the Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions as its own, and holds pockets of territory in at least three other Ukrainian regions in the east.