Kremlin rejects Germany's suggestion of peace discussions with Ukraine
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov leaves after a reception on Victory Day, which marks the 79th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, in Moscow, Russia, May 9, 2024. (Sputnik/Alexei Maishev/Kremlin via Reuters)


The Russian government does not see any grounds for holding peace discussions with Ukraine now, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday.

Peskov, spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, flatly dismissed German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's suggestion during an interview on Sunday that a negotiated peace could end the conflict.

"As far as a peaceful settlement of the conflict in Ukraine is concerned, no tangible contours have yet emerged," Peskov said in Moscow.

Russia has heard chatter and statements about negotiations from various European leaders, "but we are not hearing anything from the country that is steering this process, that is directing the collective West," Peskov said, referring to the United States.

All of Moscow's demands for an end to the war have so far boiled down to Ukraine ceding territory - and also granting Russia a great deal of control over the rest of Ukraine as well.

Ukrainian leaders have categorically ruled out those concessions, calling it tantamount to capitulation.

In recent weeks, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called for what he calls a "just peace."

In a long interview with public broadcaster ZDF on Sunday, Scholz said: "I believe that this is the time to discuss how we can get out of this war and achieve peace more quickly than it currently seems."

Previous peace conferences have excluded Russia, and have backed demands from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy which Putin has ruled out as absolutely unacceptable.

Scholz said that there should be further peace talks that bring the Russians to the table.

Zelenskyy's peace plan calls for the complete withdrawal of Russian troops from all areas of Ukraine, including the Crimean peninsula.

Russia is also supposed to agree to reparations payments under the Ukrainian plan, as well as turn over Russian politicians and military personnel to an international criminal court.

Germany's conservative opposition sharply criticized Scholz for his comments as well on Monday, accusing him of trying to pressure Ukraine into accepting a "sham peace."

Roderich Kiesewetter, a foreign policy spokesman for the center-right Christian Democrats (CDU), said Scholz is falling for Russian propaganda and is continuing to cling to old self-serving German delusions about Russian President Vladimir Putin.

He said Scholz's shift has made a "farce" that marks the death of his prominent declaration that Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 would mark a turning point for German security policy.

Scholz is trying to market himself as a "peace chancellor" at a deep cost for Germany and its allies, Kieswetter told the Bild newspaper. The chancellor "is making the situation in Ukraine worse and thus weakening European and German security."

But Kiesewetter contended that overtures to Russia fit into a strategy from parts of Scholz's center-left Social Democrats (SPD) "to very subtly push Ukraine into a sham peace determined by Russia, in which support is gradually reduced and sham negotiations are called for instead."

Scholz's comments come just under two weeks before his fellow party member and premier of the eastern state of Brandenburg, Dietmar Woidke, faces a tough state election with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) on the rise.

The September 22 election follows a pair of state elections three weeks ago in which the AfD made historic gains, coming in as the top party in Thuringia and narrowing tailing the CDU in Saxony - the first time since a far-right party came out on top since the Nazis took power in the 1930s.

The SPD's general secretary, Kevin Kühnert, defended Scholz against criticism from the opposition and accused the CDU of trying to dictate the terms and timing of negotiations to Ukraine's leadership.

"Talks with the Kremlin are certainly no fun, but they are unavoidable in terms of practical politics," he told dpa.