Friday, December 19, 2025
12.1 C
New Delhi

Putin vows no more wars if West treats Russia with respect

Paul Kirbyand

Laura Gozzi

Alexander NEMENOV/AFP Vladimir Putin holds his annual end-of-year press conference in Moscow on December 19, 2025Alexander NEMENOV/AFP

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has said there will be no more wars after Ukraine if Russia is treated with respect – and claims that Moscow is planning to attack European countries are “nonsense”.

In a marathon televised event lasting almost four and a half hours, he was asked by the BBC’s Steve Rosenberg whether there would be new “special military operations” – Putin’s term for the full-scale war.

“There won’t be any operations if you treat us with respect, if you respect our interests just as we’ve always tried to respect yours,” he asserted.

His remarks were in line with a recent comment in which he said Russia was not planning to go to war, but was ready “right now” if Europe wanted to.

He also added the condition,”if you don’t cheat us like you cheated us with Nato’s eastward expansion”.

He has long accused Nato of going back on an alleged 1990 Western promise before the fall of the Soviet Union. It was denied years afterwards by late Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

The “Direct Line” marathon combined questions from the public at large and journalists from across Russia in a Moscow hall, with Putin sitting beneath an enormous map of Russia that encompassed occupied areas of Ukraine, including Crimea.

Russian state TV claimed more than three million questions had been submitted.

EPA Russian President Vladimir Putin (C) attends his annual live broadcast press conference with Russian federal, regional, and foreign media at the Gostiny Dvor forum hall in Moscow, Russia, 19 December 2025EPA

Although it was largely choreographed, some critical comments from the public appeared on a big screen, including one that referred to the event as a “circus”, another bemoaning internet outages and one that highlighted poor-quality tap water. Mobile internet outages have been blamed by authorities on Ukrainian drone attacks.

Putin also addressed Russia’s faltering economy, with prices rising, growth on the slide and VAT going up from 20 to 22% on 1 January. One message to the president read: “Stop the crazy rise in prices on everything!”

The Kremlin regularly uses the end-of-year event to highlight the resilience of the economy and, as Putin spoke, Russia’s central bank announced it was lowering interest rates to 16%.

Foreign policy issues were mixed with musings about the motherland, praise for local businesses, fish prices and the importance of looking after veterans.

But the issue of almost four years of full-scale war in Ukraine was never far away and it was often in the background of many of the questions.

Putin again claimed to be “ready and willing” to end the war in Ukraine “peacefully” but offered little sign of compromise.

He repeated his insistence on principles he had outlined in a June 2024 speech, when he demanded that Ukrainian forces leave four regions Russia partially occupies and that Kyiv gives up its efforts to join Nato.

Chief among Russia’s demands is full control of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas, including about 23% of Donetsk region which Russia has not been able to occupy.

Map of Ukraine

Putin argued Russian forces were making advances across the front line in Ukraine and he ridiculed Volodymyr Zelensky’s visit to the front line at Kupiansk last week, when the Ukrainian leader was able to refute Russia claims that it had captured the town.

Putin has also demanded new elections in Ukraine to be included in the peace proposals that US President Donald Trump has submitted as part of his efforts to bring the conflict to an end. At his news conference, Putin offered to stop bombing Ukraine when voting took place.

Ukraine’s SBU security service said on Friday it had for the first time hit an oil tanker operating as part of Russia’s “shadow fleet” in the Mediterranean. Putin said it would not lead to the result that Kyiv wanted and would not disrupt Russian exports.

Most of the questions from Russian media or from the public made little attempt to challenge Putin, but two were allowed from Western correspondents, Keir Simmons of US network NBC and the BBC’s Steve Rosenberg.

When Simmons asked if Putin would feel responsible for the deaths of Ukrainians and Russians if he rejected the Trump peace plan, Putin praised the US president’s “sincere” efforts to end the war, but said it was the West not Russia that was blocking a deal.

“The ball is in the hands of our Western opponents,” he said, “primarily the leaders of the Kyiv regime, and in this case, first and foremost, their European sponsors.”

Trump has said a peace deal is closer than ever and, despite Putin’s apparent refusal to compromise, the US president has said he hopes “Ukraine moves quickly because Russia is there”.

A Ukrainian delegation is holding talks in Miami on Friday with Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. German, French and British officials are also there, days after they met the US officials in Berlin.

Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev is also expected in Miami over the weekend, according to reports.

Putin told the BBC’s Russia Editor: “We are ready to work with you – with the UK and with Europe in general and with the United States, but as equals, with mutual respect to each other.

“We are ready to cease these hostilities immediately, provided that Russia’s medium- and long-term security is ensured, and we are ready to cooperate with you.”

He accused the West of creating an enemy out of Russia. Skating over his decision to mount a full-scale invasion in February 2022, he said: “You are waging a war against us with the hands of Ukrainian neo-Nazis,” he added, repeating his regular diatribe against Ukraine’s democratically elected leaders.

European intelligence agencies have warned that Russia is only a few years away from attacking Nato. The Western defensive alliance’s chief Mark Rutte said this month that Russia was already escalating a covert campaign and the West had to be prepared for war.

While many of the questions were benign, including several from children, from a one reporter from Yakutia in north-eastern Siberia highlighted a tenfold increase in energy prices in the past four years. Putin told her that his team would look into alternative sources of energy and “keep Yakutia in mind”.

Towards the end of the TV marathon, Putin was asked a series of quickfire questions, touching on his views on friendship, religion, the motherland and love at first sight. He said he believed in love at first sight – then added that he himself was in love, without divulging any more details.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Rahul Gandhi calls G RAM G bill anti-rural poor, vows to force government to withdraw it

NEW DELHI: Raising the battle stakes over MGNREGA with the BJP, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi Friday said Congress will force the Modi govt to withdraw the disbanding of the job guarantee scheme, with the party warning that farmers& Read More

Amit Shah chairs meet on setting up port security agency

NEW DELHI: Home minister Amit Shah chaired a meeting in Friday for the constitution of Bureau of Port Security (BoPS), an overarching agency responsible for regulation and oversight functions related to the security of ships and port Read More

Madhuri: ‘Ryan is not interested in films, Arin works at Apple’

As her web series Mrs. Deshpande releases, Madhuri Dixit has opened up about her sons’ career interests, revealing that neither Arin nor Ryan is keen on entering the film industry. Read More

At Speaker’s chamber, a rare show of government-opposition bonhomie

Modi, Priyanka At Post-Session Tea Meeting NEW DELHI: Rancour and blame game inside Parliament made way for conviviality and cordiality at a customary post-parliamentary session get-together of govt functionaries, including PM Nare Read More

‘Fits the pattern’: Ex-immigration official says Trump could permanently end Green Card program

A former immigration official said it would not be surprising if the Donald Trump administration permanently ends the Green Card program altogether, after it stopped the Green Card lottery citing the bad actor of Brown University shoo Read More

Topics

Rahul Gandhi calls G RAM G bill anti-rural poor, vows to force government to withdraw it

NEW DELHI: Raising the battle stakes over MGNREGA with the BJP, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi Friday said Congress will force the Modi govt to withdraw the disbanding of the job guarantee scheme, with the party warning that farmers& Read More

Amit Shah chairs meet on setting up port security agency

NEW DELHI: Home minister Amit Shah chaired a meeting in Friday for the constitution of Bureau of Port Security (BoPS), an overarching agency responsible for regulation and oversight functions related to the security of ships and port Read More

Madhuri: ‘Ryan is not interested in films, Arin works at Apple’

As her web series Mrs. Deshpande releases, Madhuri Dixit has opened up about her sons’ career interests, revealing that neither Arin nor Ryan is keen on entering the film industry. Read More

At Speaker’s chamber, a rare show of government-opposition bonhomie

Modi, Priyanka At Post-Session Tea Meeting NEW DELHI: Rancour and blame game inside Parliament made way for conviviality and cordiality at a customary post-parliamentary session get-together of govt functionaries, including PM Nare Read More

‘Fits the pattern’: Ex-immigration official says Trump could permanently end Green Card program

A former immigration official said it would not be surprising if the Donald Trump administration permanently ends the Green Card program altogether, after it stopped the Green Card lottery citing the bad actor of Brown University shoo Read More

24,000 Pakistanis deported from Saudi Arabia, 6,000 sent back from Dubai over ‘begging’: Report

Saudi Arabia deported around 24,000 Pakistanis over allegations of begging, while the United Arab Emirates (UAE) sent back 6,000 on similar grounds, according to a report by Geo News that cites Pakistani officials. Read More

Russia will target Poland if Ukraine is defeated: Zelenskyy

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday urged unity between Ukraine and its ally Warsaw and warned that Moscow would attack Poland if Russia’s invasion was not stopped. Read More

Asking wife to keep expense sheet not cruelty, rules SC

NEW DELHI: A man asking his wife to maintain an Excel sheet for all the household expenses cannot be termed as cruelty to initiate criminal proceedings, Supreme Court on Friday said while quashing an FIR registered by the wife against Read More

Related Articles