kayhan.ir

News ID: 76073
Publish Date : 12 February 2020 - 22:22

Ukraine Hints at Compromises in Talks With Russia

KIEV (Dispatches) -- The Ukrainian president’s new chief of staff on Wednesday stuck to Kiev’s existing positions on ending the war against Russian-backed forces in the eastern Donbass region but said there could be compromises during negotiations with Moscow.
Andriy Yermak was speaking a day after his appointment by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, which coincided with Russia installing a new point person on Ukraine who is seen as less hawkish than his predecessor.
Yermak’s appointment sparked criticism from opposition lawmakers in Ukraine, who said he might be too soft on Russia, prompting Zelenskiy to issue a statement denying there would be any political shift with Yermak in charge.
Relations between Kiev and Moscow collapsed after 2014 when Crimea joined Russia in a referendum and a war broke out in the Donbass region, which killed more than 13,000 people.
There are still regular casualties despite a ceasefire struck in Minsk in 2015.
Yermak rehearsed Zelenskiy’s existing positions: that ending the war was Ukraine’s priority, but that there could be no elections in the Donbass if Kiev did not control the restive region.
He signaled there could be some wiggle room in talks with Russia but did not spell out what that might be.
"There can certainly be compromises during the negotiations,” Yermak said. "But we have talked about this many times, and I also want to add that I am ready and will continue to do this: speak with all patriotic, competent, reasonable forces in this country.”
The leaders of Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany held a peace summit in Paris in December in the so-called Normandy format. Yermak said Ukraine was willing to carry out the agreements made there.
There have been some signs of a thaw in relations, including prisoner swaps last year that Yermak worked to bring about in his previous role as a presidential aide.
Asked about Russia’s new point person on Ukraine, Dmitry Kozak, Yermak said:
"I have not spoken to Mr Kozak since his appointment and my appointment.”
"But regardless of who represents the Russian Federation in the negotiations in Minsk or in the Normandy format, the principles declared by President Zelenskiy are unchanged.”