Talking to Putin is ‘frustrating’ – Scholz

12 Dec, 2024 08:24 / Updated 2 hours ago
The Russian president refuses to change his position on Ukraine, but the German chancellor is willing to engage with him again

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has said that while Russian President Vladimir Putin’s refusal to change his position on the Ukraine conflict is “frustrating,” he is willing to talk to him again.

Last month, Scholz had his first phone call with the Russian leader since December 2022, during which he reiterated Berlin’s unwavering support for Kiev.

The chancellor was asked about his diplomatic engagement with Russia during a review of the year on RTL on Wednesday evening, in which he appeared as a special guest.

”It was frustrating,” Scholz said of the phone call with Putin, as quoted by the news agency dpa, “because he just kept repeating all his formulas.”

If Scholz speaks with Putin again, it would be to repeat Berlin’s demands, even though Putin is unlikely to comply, the chancellor added.

Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky criticized Scholz after being informed about the call with Putin. He claimed that the chancellor was opening “Pandora’s box,” since “more conversations” may follow, thus undermining Western attempts to isolate Russia. Kiev insists on “real peace” rather than a compromise-based settlement, Zelensky added.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described the conversation as frank, if fruitless, and complimented Scholz for his willingness to speak to Putin directly. The Russian president said the call had brought “nothing new for me and, I believe, for him. He stated his position and I stated mine.”

Scholz’s leadership is currently at risk, after his three-party coalition collapsed in early November. On Wednesday, he formally called for a confidence vote in parliament, which is expected to take place next Monday. Unless MPs allow him to remain as the head of a minority government, Germany will hold a snap federal election next year.

There is widespread expectation of a shift in the Western approach to the Ukraine conflict, after US President-elect Donald Trump assumes office in January. He claimed durung the campaign that he could end the hostilities “in 24 hours” if given a mandate by US voters. After winning a second term in early November, Trump said he will “probably” cut aid to Kiev.

Moscow says Kiev’s refusal to negotiate is standing in the way of peace and claims that for three years the West has been pushing for the continuation of the hostilities “to the last Ukrainian.”