Kremlin: ‘No specifics yet’ on possible Trump-Putin meeting

Above, newspapers with covers, dedicated to the recent phone call of Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, in a street in Moscow on Feb.13, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 21 February 2025
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Kremlin: ‘No specifics yet’ on possible Trump-Putin meeting

  • Mutual understanding about the need for a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin

MOSCOW: The Kremlin said on Friday that there was a mutual understanding about the need for a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, but that the details of such an encounter had yet to be worked out.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the two sides agreed at talks in Riyadh this week — their first on how to end the Ukraine war before more formal negotiations — that the two leaders should meet, but “there are no specifics yet.” He noted that both men had said they were keen to talk in person.

“There is a desire of the two presidents, which they expressed, and there is also an instruction to prepare this meeting well so that it will be as productive as possible. It is during the preparation that all the nuances will be discussed,” Peskov said.

Trump said after the Saudi meeting on Tuesday that he would probably meet Putin before the end of the month.

Putin said on Wednesday that the meeting needed to be carefully prepared in order to achieve results.

On Thursday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said a Putin-Trump meeting would largely depend on whether progress could be made on ending the war, and Trump wanted to know if Putin was serious about that.

Peskov restated that Putin was open to negotiating a settlement to the conflict.

“We have our goals, connected with our national security, with our national interests, and we are ready to achieve these goals by means of peace talks,” he said.

He denied a Financial Times report that Russia, at the talks in Saudi Arabia, had demanded the withdrawal of NATO forces from eastern Europe — something it sought in negotiations with the United States in the months before the start of the war, whose third anniversary falls on Monday.

Asked about that milestone, Peskov said it was too early to sum up the results of what Moscow calls its special military operation.

“The special military operation continues. All the goals set by the head of state and the supreme commander-in-chief must be achieved,” he said.


Filmmakers defend Berlin festival chief in Gaza row

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Filmmakers defend Berlin festival chief in Gaza row

  • Actors and filmmakers rushed to defend the head of the Berlin film festival Thursday following a media report that her job was on the line over a director’s anti-Israel speech at the event
BERLIN: Actors and filmmakers rushed to defend the head of the Berlin film festival Thursday following a media report that her job was on the line over a director’s anti-Israel speech at the event.
Syrian-Palestinian filmmaker Abdallah Al-Khatib kicked off a controversy during Saturday’s closing ceremony by accusing Germany of being complicit in genocide in Gaza through its support for Israel.
German tabloid Bild had reported that Tricia Tuttle was due to be dismissed at an emergency meeting on Thursday, citing sources close to state-owned KBB, the company that runs the festival.
Culture minister Wolfram Weimer’s office confirmed the meeting had taken place but made no mention of Tuttle being sacked, stating that discussions had been “constructive and open” and would “continue in the coming days.”
A group of cinema luminaries including Tilda Swinton, Todd Haynes, Sean Baker and Tom Tykwer signed an open letter defending the Berlinale as a forum for free expression.
“As filmmakers in Germany and beyond, we are following the debates surrounding the Berlinale and the discussion about the dismissal of Tricia Tuttle with great concern,” they wrote. “We defend the Berlinale for what it is: a place of exchange.”
Angry rows over the Israel-Palestinian conflict have repeatedly rocked the Berlinale, held every February as Europe’s first major film festival of the year.
Environment Minister Carsten Schneider walked out of Saturday’s closing ceremony, labelling Khatib’s remarks “unacceptable.”
Germany, as it has sought to atone for the horrors of the Holocaust, has been a steadfast supporter of Israel, and criticism of Israel’s conduct in Gaza has been more muted than in many other countries.
Conservative lawmaker Ellen Demuth was among those who condemned the “antisemitic incident” at the awards ceremony and urged “a fresh start at the top of the film festival.”
The Berlinale Team in an Instagram post meanwhile defended Tuttle, praising her “clarity, integrity and artistic vision.”
The writers’ association PEN Berlin said Khatib’s comments were protected by freedom of expression and that if Tuttle were to be sacked over them, it would cause “immense damage” to the festival.
“Such wanton destruction of the German cultural scene, such self-inflicted insularity, must not be allowed to happen,” it said.
The backdrop of the Middle East conflict led to a tense 76th edition of the festival from the start.
More than 80 film professionals criticized the Berlinale’s “silence” on the Gaza war in an open letter, accusing the festival of censoring artists “who reject the genocide” they believe Israel has committed in Gaza.
Award-winning Indian writer Arundhati Roy withdrew from the festival after the jury president, German director Wim Wenders, said cinema should “stay out of politics” when asked about Gaza.