RIYADH: US President Donald Trump
will see his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Saudi Arabia
for their first meeting since taking office in January.
Trump's announcement came after an almost 90-minute phone conversation with the Russian leader, where they discussed in ending the nearly three-year Moscow offensive in Ukraine
.
"We ultimately expect to meet. In fact, we expect that he'll come here, and I'll go there, and we're gonna meet also probably in Saudi Arabia the first time, we'll meet in Saudi Arabia, see if we can get something something done," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.A date for the meeting "hasn't been set" but it will happen in the "not too distant future," the US president said.
He suggested the meeting would involve Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. "We know the crown prince, and I think it'd be a very good place to meet."
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov earlier announced that Putin had invited Trump and officials from his administration to visit Moscow to discuss Ukraine.
"The Russian president invited the US president to visit Moscow and expressed his readiness to receive American officials in Russia in those areas of mutual interest, including, of course, the topic of the Ukrainian settlement," Peskov said.
The invitation followed Trump's announcement Wednesday that peace talks would start "immediately" and that Ukraine would probably not get its land back, causing uproar on both sides of the Atlantic.There appears to be a clear rationale behind why Riyadh is seen as the most suitable place to initiate a practical peace process between Russia and Ukraine and bring an end to the war.
This conflict has claimed about 12,500 civilian lives, according to the Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights
(OHCHR), leaving more than 28,000 injured including many permanently disabled, and caused the destruction of infrastructure worth billions of dollars. Most critically, neither Moscow nor Kyiv seems to have a clear path toward ending it.
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