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Putin orders 3-day truce in Ukraine next month

Damage in a parking lot struck in a Russian attack in Sumy, Ukraine, April 14, 2025. (Tyler Hicks/The New York Times)
Damage in a parking lot struck in a Russian attack in Sumy, Ukraine, April 14, 2025. (Tyler Hicks/The New York Times)
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Resident Vladimir Putin of Russia ordered a three-day unilateral ceasefire in Ukraine next week, the Kremlin said Monday, soon after President Donald Trump reiterated his frustration with Russia’s refusal to stop the war.


The Kremlin said Russian forces would stop fighting May 8 for 72 hours to mark the May 9 celebration of the Soviet Union’s victory in World War II, a major holiday in Russia. The announcement was the second time in two weeks that Russia promised a temporary pause in the fighting.


“During this period, all hostilities will cease,” the Kremlin said in a statement. “Russia believes that the Ukrainian side should follow this example.”


Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said the declaration “underlines our willingness to get on the path toward a peaceful resolution.”


However, Andrii Sybiha, Ukraine’s foreign minister, responded to the Kremlin statement by saying that “if Russia truly wants peace, it must cease fire immediately.” He added that Ukraine remained ready for a 30-day halt in the fighting, something Putin has thus far rejected.


“Why wait until May 8th?” Sybiha wrote on social platform X, “Ukraine is ready to support a lasting, durable, and full ceasefire.”


The Kremlin’s announcement came just days after Trump urged Putin, in a social media post, to “STOP!” bombarding Ukraine amid U.S.-backed efforts to broker a truce. After meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine on Saturday, Trump said that he questioned whether Putin truly wanted peace.


“Maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently,” Trump wrote in a social media post.


Russia has refused to abide by a 30-day unconditional ceasefire that Ukraine previously agreed to at the urging of the Trump administration. A one-day truce announced by Putin for Easter did not hold, though both sides said it brought a reduction in hostilities.


Putin’s declaration Monday appeared to be his latest attempt to placate Trump’s oft-stated desire to end the war in Ukraine, while holding out for an agreement that would allow the Russian leader to do so on his terms.


When asked about the Kremlin’s announcement, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that Trump “has made it clear he wants to see a permanent ceasefire.”


“While he remains optimistic he can strike a deal, he’s also being realistic as well, and both leaders need to come to the table to negotiate their way out of this,” Leavitt added.


The Kremlin’s statement announcing the ceasefire said Russia was ready “for peace negotiations without preconditions.” But it added that those talks should be “directed at eliminating the root causes of the Ukrainian crisis,” a reference to Putin’s sweeping demands for change in Russia’s favor in Ukraine and Europe.


Putin appears convinced that he would give up negotiating leverage if he were to stop fighting without securing major concessions first, Russian analysts and people close to the Kremlin say. His demands go well beyond claims on Ukraine’s territory, extending to limits on its future military capability and a ban on admitting it to the NATO alliance.


The Trump administration has largely gone along with Putin’s narrative, dangling the possibility of lifting sanctions on Russia while blaming Ukraine for a war that Russia started in 2022. It has been pushing Ukraine to accept a peace plan that would force it to abandon its aspirations of joining NATO, provide it with only vague security guarantees, and have the United States officially recognize Crimea as Russian. Ukraine has rejected that deal, which the Trump administration described as its final offer.


But Putin appears to be holding out for even more. In the meantime, his refusal to make a quick deal, accompanied by recent Russian missile strikes on civilian targets, has increasingly frustrated the Trump administration.


On Sunday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at Lavrov’s request, according to a spokesperson for the State Department, Tammy Bruce. “The United States is serious about facilitating an end to this senseless war,” she said in a statement.


This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


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