Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has conceded that Kiev lacks the ability to fulfil its goal of retaking Crimea from Russia through the use of force.
In an interview on Wednesday, Fox News chief foreign correspondent Trey Yingst reminded Zelensky that Russian President Vladimir Putin has made it clear that Crimea “will never return to Ukrainian hands,” and asked if he was willing to abandon his goal of regaining the peninsula, to achieve peace with Moscow and “stop the bloodshed in Europe.”
“We cannot spend dozens of thousands of our people so that they perish for the sake of Crimea coming back,” the Ukrainian leader replied. However, he added that “we understand that Crimea can be brought back diplomatically.”
Zelensky again rejected the idea of Ukraine formally ceding Crimea or any other regions to Russia as part of a conflict settlement.
”We cannot legally acknowledge any occupied territory of Ukraine as Russian… Legally, we are not acknowledging that, we are not adopting that,” he stressed.
When asked about the possibility of US President-elect Donald Trump cutting Washington’s military aid to Kiev once he returns to the White House, the Ukrainian leader said: “If they will cut, I think we will lose. Of course, anyway, we will stay and we will fight. We have production, but it’s not enough to prevail. And I think it is not enough to survive.”
Crimea rejoined Russia in 2014 after its population overwhelmingly supported the move in a referendum held in response to a violent Western-backed coup in Kiev.
Before and after the escalation between Russia and Ukraine in February 2022, Zelensky repeatedly claimed that Kiev’s military will win back the peninsula.
Over the past year, the Ukrainian leader has switched focus to promoting his so-called ‘peace formula,’ which, among other things, demands that Moscow withdraw its troops from Crimea and the other territories claimed by Ukraine – the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, and the Kherson and Zaporozhye regions, which officially became part of the Russian state as a result of referendums in fall 2022.
Russia instantly dismissed Zelenskly’s plan as unacceptable, “detached from reality” and a sign of Kiev’s unwillingness to seek a diplomatic solution to the crisis.
Putin reiterated earlier this year that “Crimea is an integral part of Russia” and that its “history is inseparable from the history of our fatherland.”
A few weeks ago, the Russian leader argued that “certainly the people residing in Crimea and the southeast of Ukraine, who objected to the state coup… have the right to self-determination” in line with Article 1 of the UN Charter.