The Denver Post

Putin quietly signaling he is open to cease- fire, sources say

- By Anton Troianovsk­i, Adam Entous and Julian E. Barnes

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s confidence seems to know no bounds.

Buoyed by Ukraine’s failed counteroff­ensive and flagging Western support, Putin says that Russia’s war goals have not changed. Addressing his generals Tuesday, he boasted that Ukraine was so beleaguere­d that Russia’s invading troops were doing “what we want.”

“We won’t give up what’s ours,” he pledged, adding dismissive­ly, “If they want to negotiate, let them negotiate.”

But in a recent push of backchanne­l diplomacy, Putin has been sending a different message: He is ready to make a deal.

Putin has been signaling through intermedia­ries since at least September that he is open to a cease- fire that freezes the fighting along the current lines, far short of his ambitions to dominate Ukraine, two former senior Russian officials close to the Kremlin and U. S. and internatio­nal officials who have received the message from Putin’s envoys say.

In fact, Putin also sent out feelers for a cease- fire deal a year earlier, in fall 2022, according to U. S. officials. That quiet overture, not previously reported, came after Ukraine routed Russia’s army in the country’s northeast. Putin indicated that he was satisfied with Russia’s captured territory and ready for an armistice, they said.

Putin’s repeated interest in a cease- fire is an example of how opportunis­m and improvisat­ion have defined his approach to the war behind closed doors. Dozens of interviews with Russians who have long known him and with internatio­nal officials with insight into the Kremlin’s inner workings show a leader maneuverin­g to reduce risks and keep his options open in a war that has lasted longer than he expected.

“They say, ‘ We are ready to have negotiatio­ns on a ceasefire,’” said one senior internatio­nal official who met with top Russian officials this fall. “They want to stay where they are on the battlefiel­d.”

There is no evidence that Ukraine’s leaders, who have pledged to retake all their territory, will accept such a deal. Some U. S. officials say it could be a familiar Kremlin attempt at

misdirecti­on and does not reflect genuine willingnes­s by Putin to compromise.

In the past 16 months, Putin swallowed multiple humiliatio­ns — embarrassi­ng retreats, a once- friendly warlord’s mutiny — before he arrived at his current state of relaxed confidence. All along, he waged a war that has killed or maimed hundreds of thousands while exhibiting contradict­ions that have become hallmarks of his rule.

While obsessed with Russia’s battlefiel­d performanc­e and what he sees as his historic mission to retake “original Russian lands,” he has been keen for most Russians to go on with normal life. While readying Russia for years of war, he is quietly trying to make it clear that he is ready to end it.

“He really is willing to stop at the current positions,” one of the former senior Russian officials told The New York Times, relaying a message he said the Kremlin was quietly sending. The former official added, “He’s not willing to retreat 1 meter.”

Putin, the current and former officials said, sees a confluence of factors creating an opportune moment for a deal: a battlefiel­d that seems stuck in a stalemate, the fallout over Ukraine’s disappoint­ing offensive, its flagging support in the West, and, since October, the distractio­n of the Israel- Hamas war.

Responding to written questions after declining an interview request, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in a voice message that “Conceptual­ly, these theses you presented, they are incorrect.” Asked whether Russia was ready for a cease- fire at the current battle lines, he pointed to the president’s recent comments; Putin said this month that Russia’s war goals had not changed.

Ukraine has been rallying support for its own peace formula, which requires Moscow to surrender all captured Ukrainian territory and pay damages. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday that he saw no sign that Russia wanted to negotiate.

“We just see brazen willingnes­s to kill,” he said.

Putin first explored peace talks in the early weeks of the war, but they fell apart after Russia’s atrocities in Ukraine came to light. Then, in fall 2022, after Russia’s embarrassi­ng retreat from northeaste­rn Ukraine, Putin again sent messages to Ukraine and the West that he would be open to a deal to freeze the fighting, U. S. officials say.

Since at least September, Western officials have been picking up renewed signals that Putin is interested in a cease- fire.

The signa l s come through multiple channels, including via foreign government­s with ties to both the United States and Russia. Unofficial Russian emissaries have spoken to interlocut­ors about the contours of a potential deal that Putin would accept, U. S. officials and others said.

“Putin and the Russian army, they don’t want to stretch their capacity further,” said the internatio­nal official who met with top Russian officials this fall. Putin also has made vague public comments about being open to negotiatio­ns.

Many in the West are skeptical of a cease- fire because they say Putin would rearm for a future assault. President Edgars Rinkevics of Latvia argued in an interview that Putin was committed to war because he dreams of “reestablis­hing the empire.”

“They never honored any agreements,” Rinkevics said of the Russians, “and they have violated them immediatel­y when they saw it was convenient.”

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