March 1, 2026
Russia agreed to security guarantees for Ukraine from the US - Budanov
The Russian Federation has agreed to accept security guarantees for Ukraine from the USA, stated the head of the office of the Ukrainian president, Kirill Budanov, writes "Ukrainska Pravda". According to him, the Russian and Ukrainian delegations also agreed on control over the demilitarized zone in case of a cessation of hostilities. "Regarding the issue of territories – we are looking for a compromise between two absolutely polar positions. We have not fully found it yet. I hope we will find it. We don't have much time. In the end, it will be necessary to state: either we have found a solution and are ending this war, or we will continue to kill each other, which we are doing quite qualitatively and professionally," he said. The day before, Bloomberg, citing sources, reported that Russia might withdraw from peace talks if Ukraine does not cede the entire Donetsk region to it. Kyiv, meanwhile, insists on a ceasefire along the front line, provided that security guarantees are given by the USA and Europe. One of Bloomberg's sources claims that Russia is allegedly ready to withdraw troops from Sumy, Dnipropetrovsk, and Kharkiv regions, and will not insist on new territorial demands in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions. It is also said that Moscow could agree to a US-led ceasefire monitoring and abandon the demand to limit the size of the Ukrainian army. However, the Kremlin is not ready to accept the deployment of foreign troops in Ukraine.

TL;DR
- Russia has agreed to accept security guarantees for Ukraine from the USA.
- Delegations discussed control over a demilitarized zone.
- Compromises are being sought on territorial issues, with no final agreement yet.
- Russia may withdraw from peace talks if Ukraine does not cede all of the Donetsk region.
- Kyiv insists on a ceasefire along the front line with security guarantees from the US and Europe.
- Russia might withdraw troops from Sumy, Dnipropetrovsk, and Kharkiv regions.
- Moscow could agree to US-led ceasefire monitoring and abandon demands to limit the Ukrainian army.
- The Kremlin is unwilling to accept the deployment of foreign troops in Ukraine.
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