Russia, Ukraine and the US met for a second time this week for trilateral talks to debate a potential cessation of hostilities. As soon as once more little was resolved other than a prisoner swap, one thing that has occurred a number of instances over the 4 years of the full-scale battle between the 2 nations.
The shortage of any substantive breakthrough was pretty predictable, given the circumstances. This week’s assembly acquired off to the identical miserable begin as the primary one had the week earlier than. On February 3, the evening earlier than the three sides gathered in Abu Dhabi, an enormous barrage of 521 drones and cruise missiles as soon as once more focused vital civilian infrastructure in Ukrainian cities, together with the capital, Kyiv.
And whereas the talks have been in full swing, Russia adopted up on its nighttime strikes by deploying cluster munitions in opposition to a market in Druzhkivka, one of many embattled cities in what stays of Ukraine’s fortress belt within the Donetsk area.
Not probably the most auspicious begin to talks that goal to cease preventing between the 2 sides. Add to that the truth that the essential negotiating positions of Moscow and Kyiv stay as far aside as ever, and any prospect of an imminent breakthrough to peace in Ukraine shortly evaporates.
The extra technical discussions on navy points, together with specifics of a ceasefire and the way it will be monitored, look like typically extra constructive. Other than a prisoner alternate, no additional settlement was reached. However even such small confidence-building steps are helpful. And even the place no settlement is possible for now, figuring out probably points and mapping options which are doubtlessly acceptable to Moscow and Kyiv is essential preparatory work for a future settlement.
Nonetheless, with out a breakthrough on political points it doesn’t get the battle events nearer to a peace deal. These political points stay centred on the query of territory. Russia insists on the so-called “Anchorage method”. Ukraine withdraws from these areas of Donetsk it nonetheless controls and Russia agrees to freezing the frontlines elsewhere.
Kyiv has repeatedly made clear that that is unacceptable. US mediation efforts, up to now, have been unable to interrupt this impasse.
The political deadlock, nevertheless, clearly extends past territory. With out naming any particular blockages to a deal, Yury Ushakov, a key advisor to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, just lately famous that there have been different contested points holding up settlement. Very probably amongst them are the safety ensures that Ukraine has been demanding to guarantee that Russia won’t renege on a settlement.
These future safety ensures seem to have been agreed between Kyiv and its European and American companions. They contain a gradual escalating response to Russian ceasefire violations, in the end involving direct European and US navy involvement.
Potholes within the street to peace
The Kremlin’s opposition to such an association is hardly stunning. Nevertheless it casts additional doubt on how honest Putin is a couple of sturdy peace settlement with Ukraine. In flip, it explains Kyiv’s reluctance to make any concessions, not to mention these on the present scale of Russian calls for.
WAM/Handout through Xinhua
What complicates these discussions additional is the truth that the US is linking the supply of safety ensures for Kyiv to Ukrainian concessions on territory alongside the strains of the Moscow-endorsed Anchorage method.
This may appear a smart and honest compromise, however there are some apparent issues with it. First, it depends on the dependability of the US as an final safety backstop. However (significantly European) confidence in how reliable US pledges really are has been severely eroded throughout the first 12 months of Donald Trump’s second time period within the White Home.
Second, Europe is transferring painfully slowly to fill the void left by the US resolution to halt funding to Ukraine. The main points of a €90 billion (£78 billion) mortgage agreed in precept by EU leaders in December, have solely simply been finalised.
Doubts – as voiced by Nato secretary-general, Mark Rutte – additionally persist about whether or not, even in the long run, Europe has a reputable prospect of growing sufficiently unbiased navy capabilities exterior the transatlantic alliance.
Few incentives to succeed in a deal
Because of this, there are few incentives for Kyiv to bow to US strain and quit extra territory to Russia in alternate for safety ensures that might not be as ironclad in actuality as they seem on paper. Likewise, it makes little sense for Moscow to simply accept even a hypothetical western safety assure in alternate for territory that the Kremlin stays assured it could take by drive if vital.

Institute for the Examine of Conflict, FAL
Following Xi Jinping’s public affirmation of Chinese language assist for Russia in a video name between the 2 nations’ presidents on the anniversary of the declaration of their “no-limits partnership” in February 2022, Putin is unlikely to really feel any actual strain to alter his place.
Putin will really feel additional reassured in his place by the truth that there’s nonetheless no progress on a brand new sanctions invoice within the US senate – 4 weeks after Trump allegedly “greenlit” the laws. As well as, Trump’s high Ukraine negotiators – Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner – at the moment are additionally engaged in negotiations with Iran. This additional diminishes US diplomatic capability and is simply going to bolster Moscow’s intransigence.
Any claims of progress within the negotiations in Abu Dhabi are due to this fact at greatest over-optimistic and at worst self-deluding. And if such claims come from Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev, they as soon as extra underscore that US mediation between Russia and Ukraine serves the first objective of restoring financial relations between Moscow and Washington. Like Kushner and Witkoff, Dmitriev is at the start a businessman.
Not solely does this parallel observe of Russia-US financial talks clarify Trump’s reluctance to place any significant strain on Putin, it additionally betrays the deep irony of the US strategy to ending the battle. As Europe painfully realized over greater than twenty years of engagement with Putin’s Russia, financial integration doesn’t curb the Kremlin’s expansionism however allows it.




















