Russia rejects pullout from Ukraine as condition for talks - Los Angeles Times
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Russia rejects pullout from Ukraine as a condition for peace talks

Ukrainian soldiers carrying a wounded comrade
Ukrainian soldiers carry a wounded comrade into a hospital in Bakhmut, in Ukraine’s Donetsk region.
(Libkos via Associated Press)
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Russia said Friday that Western demands for it to pull out completely from Ukraine as part of any future peace talks have the effect of ruling out any such negotiations, as Russian strikes continued and a Ukrainian official set his country’s battle losses at up to 13,000 troops.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov reiterated that Russian President Vladimir Putin remained open to talks but that the Western demands for a complete troop pullout was unacceptable.

Peskov’s comments came as Putin spoke on the phone Friday with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Scholz’s office said he made clear to Putin “that there must be a diplomatic solution as quickly as possible, which includes a withdrawal of Russian troops.”

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On Thursday, President Biden also indicated that he would be willing to talk with Putin if the Russian leader demonstrated that he seriously wanted to end the invasion and pull out of Ukraine.

A statement issued by the Kremlin after the phone call with Scholz said Putin again blamed the West for encouraging Ukraine to prolong the war by supplying it with weapons.

Putin also said recent crippling Russian strikes on Ukraine’s infrastructure were “forced and inevitable” after Ukraine allegedly bombed a key bridge to the Crimean peninsula — which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014 — and energy facilities.

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Russian forces have been bombarding Ukraine’s critical infrastructure since October, leaving millions without electricity amid cold weather. Scholz’s office said that, in the phone conversation with Putin, he “condemned in particular the Russian air attacks on civilian infrastructure” in Ukraine and said Germany was committed to continuing to help Ukraine defend itself.

Russian forces kept up rocket attacks on infrastructure and airstrikes against Ukrainian troop positions along the contact line, the Ukrainian military’s General Staff said Friday, adding that Moscow’s military push has focused on a dozen towns, including Bakhmut and Avdiivka.

A top advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, citing military chiefs, said that, since Russia invaded Feb. 24, 10,000 to 13,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in action. It was a rare comment on Ukraine’s military casualties and far below estimates from Western leaders.

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“We have official figures from the General Staff, we have official figures from the top command, and they amount to between 10,000 and 12,500 to 13,000 killed,” the advisor, Mykhailo Podolyak, said late Thursday on Channel 24 TV. He also said civilian casualties were “significant.”

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The Ukrainian military has not confirmed such figures, and it was a rare instance of a Ukrainian official providing such a count. The last dates to late August, when the head of the armed forces said that nearly 9,000 military personnel had been killed. In June, Podolyak said that up to 200 soldiers were dying each day in some of the most intense fighting and bloodshed.

On Wednesday, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Union’s executive arm, said 100,000 Ukrainian troops had been killed, but her office then corrected her comments, calling them inaccurate and saying that the figure referred to killed and injured.

Zelensky’s office reported Friday that at least three civilians were killed and 16 wounded in Ukraine in the last 24 hours. Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the office’s deputy head, said on Telegram that Russian forces had attacked nine southeastern regions with heavy artillery, rockets and aircraft.

Ukrainians have been bracing for freezing temperatures as Russia’s campaign has recently hit infrastructure such as power plants and electrical transformers, leaving many residents without heat, water and electricity.

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Ukraine has faced a blistering onslaught of Russian artillery fire and drone attacks since early October. The shelling has been especially intense in the southern Kherson region since Russian forces withdrew and Ukraine’s army reclaimed Kherson city almost three weeks ago.

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Kherson’s regional governor said Friday that three people were killed and seven injured in shelling Thursday. The Russian army hit residential areas of Kherson city, part of which remained without electricity after power was knocked out by Russian strikes Thursday.

In the eastern region of Donetsk, Ukrainian Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said Russian shelling had intensified significantly. The Russian army is seeking to encircle the key town of Bakhmut by capturing surrounding villages and cutting off an important road.

Russian strikes targeting towns located across the Dnieper River from the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant also were reported. And in northeastern Kharkiv province, officials said that Russian shelling injured two women.

In a news briefing in Kyiv on Friday, United Nations-backed human rights investigators called for the creation of a “victims registry” that could help people affected by the war to receive help quickly. Pablo de Greiff, a member of the team charged with looking into rights abuses by the Human Rights Council, said that “victims have needs that require immediate attention.”

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