Putin aide comments on idea of returning Crimea to Kiev

14 Dec, 2025 17:05 / Updated 4 hours ago
Kiev still lays claim to the peninsula, which voted to reunite with Russia in a 2014 referendum

Ukraine stands no chance at all of reclaiming Crimea or joining NATO, top Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov has said.

The peninsula became part of Russia following a referendum in 2014, in the wake of the Western-backed Maidan coup. Soon after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022, Kiev formally applied for NATO membership. Moscow has repeatedly described such a scenario as a red line.

Speaking to Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin on Sunday, Ushakov said that “it is ironclad, a million percent [certain that Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky] won’t succeed in [retaking] Crimea.” The Russian official added that Kiev’s NATO membership aspirations are equally unrealistic.

Earlier this week, Zelensky acknowledged that Kiev currently has no means to reclaim Crimea.

However, in August, the Ukrainian leader vowed to retake the Russian region at some point.

This followed shortly after US President Donald Trump – who has been mediating peace efforts between Moscow and Kiev – stated that it was “impossible” for Crimea to return to Ukraine or for the country to join NATO.

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov made it clear earlier this year that Russian sovereignty over Crimea is a “done deal,” and praised the US president for acknowledging it.

Last month, the Trump administration put forth a framework for a peace plan aimed at ending the Ukraine conflict. The proposals, which have since been revised multiple times, envisage Kiev renouncing its NATO aspirations, as well as its claims to Crimea and the Donbass regions of Lugansk and Donetsk, all of which joined Russia after referendums, among other points.

Earlier this week, Zelensky said that “no compromise” had been reached in negotiations with the US on territorial issues.

Trump recently lamented that “other than President Zelensky, his people loved the concept” of the peace deal put forward by Washington. In an interview with Politico on Monday, the American leader said Zelensky was “gonna have to get on the ball and start accepting things.”