Russia says it agreed to pause strikes on Kyiv until Sunday at Trump’s request
By Donald Judd, Kevin Liptak, Hira Humayun, Sophie Tanno, CNN
(CNN) — US President Donald Trump claimed his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin agreed to a week-long pause in attacks on major Ukrainian cities, including the capital, Kyiv, as the country grapples with plummeting winter temperatures, with the Kremlin appearing to at least partially confirm Trump’s words.
Trump made the claim during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Thursday.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists Friday that Moscow had agreed to a “personal request” from Trump to stop striking the capital city of Kyiv until February 1. The US president’s request was made in order to “create favorable conditions for negotiations,” Peskov said.
Trump did not say when the conversation with Putin took place.
There were no strikes on Kyiv overnight into Friday.
Peskov did not elaborate on whether the agreement stretched to other cities in Ukraine, however. He also declined to comment on whether the pause will encompass all strikes, or only those targeting energy infrastructure.
During the Thursday Cabinet meeting, Trump said that he had “personally asked President Putin not to fire into Kyiv and the various towns for a week, and he agreed to do that,” citing the “extreme cold” Ukraine is facing.
Trump’s comments come as Russia stepped up attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, leaving large parts of the country facing power shortages and outages.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked Trump and said a possible temporary halt in attacks during the extreme winter period could help protect Ukraine’s critical energy infrastructure, calling power supply “a foundation of life.”
“We value the efforts of our partners to help us protect lives. Thank you, President Trump,” Zelensky said in a post on X, adding that Ukraine expects the agreement to be implemented.
Zelensky confirmed that discussions about a temporary halt in attacks on energy infrastructure took place during trilateral meetings between US, Ukrainian and Russian officials in Abu Dhabi last week.
A person familiar with the discussions said American officials raised the idea of such a pause in fighting, though it wasn’t clear at the time whether Moscow would agree.
On Friday morning local time, Ukraine’s Air Force said Russia had fired a missile and dozens of drones at targets across the country overnight.
One missile and 25 drones struck in 15 regions and 80 drones were shot down, according to the air force.
Zelensky said Friday that none of the overnight strikes had hit Ukraine’s energy facilities, although energy infrastructure was hit in several regions on Thursday afternoon.
The Ukrainian leader noted a “shift” by the Russian army towards strikes on logistics. He added that drone attacks targeting residential areas in cities was continuing.
Previous attempts at a temporary truce between Russia and Ukraine have all failed to hold. Ukraine accused Russia of violating a planned three-day ceasefire in May of last year, which Moscow announced it would hold for “humanitarian considerations.” While Russian state media said that the ceasefire went into effect, Ukraine’s military said attacks continued throughout the period. But the Russian Ministry of Defense claimed its troops “ceased all hostilities” and accused Ukraine of continuing to strike. It said Russia would “mirror” Ukraine’s actions.
And earlier in the war, Ukrainian authorities had to put plans to evacuate civilians from Mariupol on hold, citing Russian violations of an agreed pause in March 2022.
Status of peace talks
In his post thanking Trump, Zelensky said such “de-escalation steps contribute to real progress toward ending the war.” And Trump’s Special Envoy Steve Witkoff expressed similar optimism, saying on Thursday that the administration was “making a lot of progress” in negotiating a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine, adding that following the Abu Dhabi meeting he believes “the people of Ukraine are now hopeful and expectant that we’re going to deliver a peace deal sometime soon.”
On Wednesday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the “territorial claim on Donetsk” is the key remaining issue in talks to end the war in Ukraine.
“It’s still a gap, but at least we’ve been able to narrow down the issue set to one central one, and it will probably be a very difficult one, but nonetheless, it’s one that work is going on,” he told lawmakers.
But on Thursday, Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov tempered Rubio’s assessment of where negotiations stand.
“I think not,” Ushakov told Rossiya-1 TV in response to Rubio’s remarks, Russian state outlet TASS said. Earlier, Ushakov told Russian media that territory was the biggest of many issues still on the agenda, according to TASS.
The reported pause in Russian attacks comes at a critical time, when Ukraine is facing below freezing temperatures, made worse by repeated Russian attacks on critical infrastructure.
Russian strikes on energy infrastructure have caused significant electricity shortages in Kyiv, according to the country’s energy minister, with multiple other regions including Odesa, Kharkiv and Donetsk also suffering outages.
CORRECTION: This story has been updated with the correct number of missiles Russia is said to have launched into Ukraine overnight into Friday.
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Sebastian Shukla, Daria Tarasova-Markina, Jennifer Hansler, Moriah Thomas, Svitlana Vlasova and Anna Chernova contributed to this report.