Russian President Vladimir Putin has indicated a willingness to resume peace talks with Ukraine after June 22, contingent on the completion of prisoner and body exchanges between the warring sides.
The statement came during a call with US President Donald Trump on Saturday, their fifth since Trump returned to office, marking a significant shift in US-Russia relations compared to the Biden administration’s stance.
While Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged the ongoing exchanges, he did not confirm Kyiv’s readiness to re-enter negotiations. “The exchanges will be completed and the parties will discuss the next step,” Zelensky said cautiously, avoiding a direct commitment.
The Kremlin hailed the Putin-Trump conversation as “businesslike,” noting that both leaders “seek solutions to pressing issues on the bilateral and international agenda.” The warmer tone between Washington and Moscow under Trump has unsettled US allies, raising questions about the future of American military and financial support to Ukraine.
Zelensky voiced concern over the “too warm” tone between Washington and Moscow, warning that any softening of America’s stance could embolden Russia. “Any signals of reduced aid, or of treating Ukraine and Russia as equals, are deeply unfair. Russia is the aggressor,” Zelensky said in a post on X. He also cautioned that escalating tensions in the Middle East — particularly the recent Israel-Iran conflict — could divert critical US resources away from Ukraine.
On Saturday, Russia and Ukraine conducted their fourth prisoner exchange in a week, in line with an Istanbul-brokered agreement to repatriate 1,000 wounded soldiers and return the remains of fallen troops. Ukrainian media shared images of emotional reunions, with returning soldiers in camouflage draped in Ukrainian flags. Moscow’s defense ministry released similar footage of cheering Russian troops waving national flags and chanting patriotic slogans.
As part of the same agreement, Ukraine said it received 1,200 unidentified bodies from Russia, purportedly those of Ukrainian citizens, including military personnel. Ukraine did not specify whether any Russian bodies were returned.
Meanwhile, Russia has intensified military operations in northeastern Ukraine’s Sumy region, aiming to create a buffer zone to protect its adjacent Kursk region. Zelensky claimed that Ukrainian forces had halted Moscow’s advance in Sumy and recaptured a village. He refuted Russian claims of entry into the Dnipropetrovsk region, noting that 53,000 Russian troops were involved in the Sumy offensive.
Russia has maintained its demand that Ukraine cede territory and abandon Western military alliances as a prerequisite for peace — a stance Kyiv continues to reject.
What you should know
President Putin’s conditional offer to resume peace talks signals a potential diplomatic opening, but Ukraine remains cautious. The Trump administration’s warmer ties with Moscow could reshape the geopolitical calculus, while active battlefronts and humanitarian concerns continue to define the reality on the ground.