Is There Really No Urgency for a Putin-Trump Meeting?
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- No immediate need for a Putin-Trump meeting, says Kremlin.
- Focus shifts to meticulous work on Ukraine settlement.
- Trump canceled the Budapest meeting, citing concerns.
- Last in-person meeting was in August 2025.
- Future interactions depend on US actions.
Moscow, Nov 3 (NationPress) There is no immediate requirement to swiftly arrange a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, stated Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov during an interview.
Peskov mentioned on Sunday that while organizing such a meeting quickly is feasible, it is not deemed necessary, as reported by Xinhua news agency quoting TASS.
"What is essential right now is careful attention to the specifics of the (Ukraine) settlement issue," Peskov emphasized.
Following a phone conversation with Putin on Oct. 16, Trump indicated that a meeting between the two leaders would take place soon in Budapest, Hungary. However, on October 22, Trump announced the cancellation of the planned meeting, stating it "didn't feel right to me," and remarked that "it didn't seem like we were heading towards a productive outcome."
Putin had previously suggested that the Budapest meeting was more likely postponed than canceled, noting that the summit was initiated by the United States.
On October 26, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov commented that the future of high-level personal interactions would rely on the actions of the US.
The last in-person meeting between the two leaders occurred on August 15, 2025, at Joint Base Elmendorf–Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. That summit concluded without reaching a significant agreement on a ceasefire or a resolution to end the conflict, marking their first face-to-face meeting since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.