Putin quips ‘whole of Ukraine is ours’, eyes ‘buffer zone’

Published June 21, 2025
Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto (left), Russian President Vladimir Putin, Bahrain’s National Security Adviser Sheikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa and South Africa’s Deputy President Paul Mashatile attend a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday.—Reuters
Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto (left), Russian President Vladimir Putin, Bahrain’s National Security Adviser Sheikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa and South Africa’s Deputy President Paul Mashatile attend a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday.—Reuters

ST PETERSBURG: Russian President Vladimir Putin quipped on Friday that in his view the whole of Ukraine was “ours” and cautioned that advancing Russian forces could take the Ukrainian city of Sumy as part of a bid to carve out a buffer zone along the border.

Putin, who ordered troops into Ukraine in 2022 after eight years of fighting in the country’s east, also said he was not seeking the capitulation of Ukraine or denying its sovereignty, but that Ukraine had to be neutral.

Russia currently controls about a fifth of Ukraine, including Crimea, more than 99 per cent of the Luhansk region, over 70pc of the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, and fragments of the Kharkiv, Sumy and Dnipropetrovsk regions.

Asked about fresh Russian advances, Putin told the St Petersburg International Economic Forum that he considered Russians and Ukrainians to be one people and “in that sense the whole of Ukraine is ours”.

Kyiv and its Western allies say Moscow’s claims to four Ukrainian regions and Crimea are illegal, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has repeatedly rejected the notion that Russians and Ukrainians are one people.

He has also said that Putin’s terms for peace are akin to capitulation.

Putin said on Friday he was not questioning Ukraine’s independence or its people’s striving for sovereignty, but he underscored that when Ukraine declared independence as the Soviet Union fell in 1991, it had also declared its neutrality.

Published in Dawn, June 21th, 2025

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