Desk Report
Publish: 10 Mar 2022, 04:58 pm
Photo: Reuters
Foreign ministers from Russia and
Ukraine will meet in Turkey on Thursday in the first high-level talks between
the two countries since Moscow invaded its neighbor, with Ankara hoping they
could mark a turning point in the raging conflict.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro
Kuleba has tempered expectations for a ceasefire agreement or other results
from the meeting with Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, on the sidelines of a
diplomacy forum in Turkey's southern province of Antalya.
Russia's invasion has uprooted
more than 2 million people in what the United Nations calls the fastest
humanitarian crisis in Europe since World War Two.
NATO member Turkey had repeatedly
offered to mediate between the sides and will host their top two diplomats after
weeks of mediation attempts by world powers.
Kuleba urged Lavrov to approach
the talks "in good faith, not from a propagandistic perspective".
"I will say frankly that my
expectations of the talks are low," Kuleba said in a video statement on
Wednesday. "We are interested in a ceasefire, liberating our territories
and the third point is to resolve all humanitarian issues."
Moscow has said it is ready for
talks with Ukraine, but that all of its demands - including that Kyiv takes a
neutral position and drops aspirations of joining the NATO alliance - must be
met to end its assault.
Delegations from the two
countries have held three rounds of talks previously, two in Belarus and one in
Ukraine. Despite some positive signs on humanitarian arrangements, those
negotiations have had little impact.
Moscow calls its incursion a
"special military operation" to disarm Ukraine and dislodge leaders
it calls "neo-Nazis". Kyiv and its Western allies dismiss that as
baseless pretext for an unprovoked war against a democratic country of 44
million people.
Turkey's balance
Bringing Lavrov and Kuleba
together marks "a step forward" and could escalate diplomacy at
higher levels in Moscow, said Mustafa Aydin, professor at Kadir Has University
in Istanbul.
"Russia is not yet close to
entertaining peace, though it is slowly changing its stance," he said.
"Its initially uncompromising posture is slowly giving way to a
negotiation stance though not yet enough for a concrete outcome."
Turkey shares a maritime border
with Russia and Ukraine in the Black Sea and has good ties with both. Ankara
has called Russia's invasion unacceptable and appealed for an urgent ceasefire,
but has opposed sanctions on Moscow.
While forging close ties with
Russia on energy, defence and trade, and relying heavily on Russian tourists,
Turkey has also sold drones to Ukraine, angering Moscow. It also opposes
Russian policies in Syria and Libya, as well as its 2014 annexation of Crimea.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut
Cavusoglu said both Lavrov and Kuleba had requested that he attend the talks on
Thursday, adding he wished the meeting could be a "turning point".
At the weekend, Turkey and Israel
ramped up their push for mediation. Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan urged
Russian President Vladimir Putin to declare a ceasefire in a call on Sunday.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali
Bennett held talks with Putin in Moscow at the weekend, and later spoke to
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
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Topic : Russia Ukraine Turkey Diplomatic Talks
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