Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko says the US could order Zelensky to suspend strikes if it truly seeks to end the conflict
The US could pressure Ukraine into halting long-range strikes against Russian territory as a first step toward achieving a comprehensive ceasefire, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said on Tuesday.
Lukashenko recently met with Keith Kellogg, a special envoy for US President Donald Trump. The meeting marked a rare diplomatic engagement between Washington and Minsk after years of limited contact.
The Belarusian leader said he shared his views with Kellogg on how the Ukraine conflict could be resolved, which he said were based on conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
According to Lukashenko, Putin wants an end to Ukrainian drones and Western-supplied cruise missiles being launched at Russian cities. “Let them tell their client [Vladimir] Zelensky to stop strikes against Russia. Then we could agree,” Lukashenko stressed, characterizing Moscow’s stance.
Read more One step forward, two steps back: The illusion of a Russian-American thaw”That’s the position I relayed to the American and asked him, ‘Is there something wrong with it?’ He said, ‘We are working in that direction.’ You do that. That would be a good first step toward stopping this fratricidal war,” he added. “But I don’t believe they want to end this war.”
Kellogg later said on X that “at no point did I make comments related to Ukraine’s prosecution of the war outside of a total ceasefire.”
Kiev has pushed for more US sanctions on Russia to punish Moscow for rejecting its calls for a comprehensive truce. Russia has accused Kiev of trying to stall and regroup its forces, and has stated its own conditions for ending hostilities. It has said Kiev can either withdraw troops from disputed territories or suspend mobilization and Western arms shipments. Zelensky has rejected both proposals.
Moscow has proposed several temporary de-escalation measures this year, including a one-month pause in attacks on energy infrastructure, a three-day ceasefire for Easter, and a ceasefire in commemoration of the end of World War II. Kiev refused some of the proposals and failed to fully honor the terms of others, according to Russia.
Belarus remains a key ally of Russia and a target of Western sanctions, which Lukashenko describes as a form of economic warfare aimed at a sovereign nation resisting long-standing external pressure.
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