Late-night Kremlin talks between Putin and U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff clarified Moscow’s firm stance on Ukraine. Russia insists territorial control is non-negotiable and says military operations will continue without a political settlement. Despite diplomatic engagement, peace remains elusive.
Putin told U.S. envoy Witkoff Russia won’t compromise on territory in Ukraine. Talks were “frank,” high-trust, but yielded no deal. Moscow says peace requires recognition of its gains—and until then, fighting continues. #Putin #UkraineWar pic.twitter.com/ZRFYxdhNAG
— Matthew Brady (@mattbrady775) January 23, 2026
- Vladimir Putin met for roughly four hours at the Kremlin with a U.S. delegation led by White House envoy Steve Witkoff ahead of planned Abu Dhabi talks on ending the Ukraine war.
- Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov described the talks as “frank,” “substantive,” and unusually high-trust, signaling hard realities were discussed.
- Jared Kushner accompanied Witkoff after attending the World Economic Forum in Davos.
- Russia reaffirmed that territory is a non-negotiable red line, rejecting Ukraine’s proposal to freeze current front lines.
- Moscow insists on full recognition of its control over four eastern Ukrainian territories and says no long-term deal is possible without it.
- Ushakov stated Russia will continue military operations while maintaining the strategic initiative.
- Talks also touched on President Donald Trump’s proposed “Board of Peace”, with Russia offering to fund its $1B membership using frozen Russian assets held by the U.S.
- The meeting clarified positions but produced no breakthrough, underscoring stalled peace efforts despite a year of U.S. pressure.



