The Kremlin has detailed the make-up of the Russian delegation that will take part in trilateral peace talks in Geneva later this week with US and Ukrainian officials.
Moscow’s chief negotiator on the Ukraine conflict, presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky, will head the delegation due to the broadened focus of the talks, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has explained.
Medinsky was absent from the two most recent Russia-US-Ukraine rounds in Abu Dhabi, where Admiral Igor Kostyukov, chief of Russian military intelligence, headed the delegation.
Speaking to reporters on Monday, Peskov said Medinsky skipped those sessions because they largely focused on military logistics, such as prisoner exchanges.
“The discussion centered on security issues, issues that directly affected the military. That is why Kostyukov led our group there,” Peskov said.
For the Geneva talks, scheduled for February 17-18, Peskov noted, the agenda will expand.
“This time, we intend to discuss a broader range of issues, including the main questions concerning territories... and those related to the demands we have. The presence of the chief negotiator, Medinsky, will be necessary,” he said, stressing that Medinsky “remains” the official head of the Russian negotiating team.
The delegation will include Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin and Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev, who also heads Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, Peskov added.
“Dmitriev is working on a separate track, a working group on economic cooperation. It continues to work actively, and we expect that these meetings within this group will also take place in Geneva,” he stated.
Peskov previously noted that no Western European nations will be represented at the Geneva negotiations. He described the last trilateral round as “constructive but difficult.”
Moscow maintains that any sustainable settlement requires Ukraine to withdraw from the areas still under its control in Donbass – which voted to join Russia in 2022 – remain outside NATO, and commit to demilitarization and denazification. Russia also demands Kiev recognize its new borders, including Crimea. Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky has repeatedly rejected territorial concessions.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday confirmed that Geneva talks will include American envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, neither of whom attended the previous round. Ukraine’s delegation will be led by national security chief Rustem Umerov.