
Kremlin says Russia has invited Ukraine's Zelenskiy to come to Moscow for peace talks
The Hindu
Kremlin invites Ukraine's Zelenskyy to Moscow for peace talks amid ongoing conflict and U.S.-led negotiation efforts.
The Kremlin said on Thursday (January 29, 2026) that Russia had reiterated its invitation for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to come to Moscow for peace talks, as U.S.-led efforts to reach a deal to end the nearly four-year war in Ukraine intensify.
The Kremlin made its statement as the two countries carried out their latest exchange of war dead, and hours after it declined to comment on rumours that Moscow and Kyiv have agreed to stop striking each other's energy infrastructure.
Washington-mediated peace talks in Abu Dhabi last weekend have injected some new momentum into efforts to clinch a peace deal, but profound differences persist between the Russian and Ukrainian negotiating stances. Fierce fighting is still raging, while Kyiv battles debilitating power outages caused by recent missile strikes.
An unnamed U.S. official told Axios on Saturday that Mr. Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin were "very close" to setting up a meeting after the U.S.-mediated talks.
A new round of Abu Dhabi talks between Russian and Ukrainian negotiating delegations is scheduled for Sunday (January 31), and U.S. President Donald Trump — who is pushing for a deal to end Europe's biggest conflict since World War Two — said on Tuesday that "very good things" were happening in the process.
Major disagreements remain though, including over who gets what territory in any deal, the potential presence of international peacekeepers or monitors in post-war Ukraine, and the fate of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.













