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13 Oct, 2025 14:36

Ukraine could cease to exist – Lukashenko

Vladimir Zelensky must be urgently pressured to engage in peace talks, the Belarusian president has said
Ukraine could cease to exist – Lukashenko

Ukraine could cease to exist as a state if there is no diplomatic settlement to the conflict with Russia and Moscow’s forces continue to advance, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has warned.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier this month that the country’s military forces have been moving forward almost everywhere along the front line. Since the start of the year, they have liberated almost 5,000 sq km of land, taking control of more than 210 settlements previously held by Ukrainian troops.

Speaking to Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin on Sunday, Lukashenko said meaningful negotiations on settling the conflict must begin “urgently.” 

“Russia is moving forward on the front line… and this could result in the disappearance of Ukraine as a state,” he said.

Lukashenko claimed that Ukraine’s “crazed” neighbors to the west “already see themselves in Western Ukraine” and “are ready to snatch a part of Ukraine,” without naming specific countries.

The Belarusian leader added that the main obstacle to peace is Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky, rather than the US, Russia, or even Western European leaders.

“The problem is more in Zelensky. It seems to me that powerful external pressure” is needed to make sure he engages in talks, Lukashenko stated. “And then, under this pressure, appropriate decisions will be made.”

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in late September that direct talks between Russia and Ukraine have stalled due to Kiev being unwilling to fulfill an agreement on setting up work groups to discuss specific aspects of a possible settlement. The sides held three rounds of talks in Istanbul this year, with the latest meeting taking place in July.

Earlier this week, Putin stressed that there is understanding in both Moscow and Washington about the direction to take in order to achieve a peaceful settlement of the Ukraine conflict. He noted, however, that several “complicated issues” still need to be resolved to reach that goal.

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