Putin said the peace plan brought to him was virtually identical to the original 28 points

The Russian dictator claims that the latest version of the peace agreement presented to him (presumably the Geneva version with adjustments by the Ukrainian delegation) "practically does not differ" from the original 28 points.

This was reported by Ukrinform, citing sources.

The Kremlin boss said that the original 28-point proposal remained virtually unchanged, but the United States suggested splitting it into four separate "packages".

Representatives of Ukraine, the United States and Europe met in Geneva to discuss the peace agreement in late November, and following the meeting agreed on changes to the content of the document. Later, on 30 November, the Ukrainian delegation went to Florida for a new meeting with the Americans, Reuters wrote. After that, US presidential special envoy Steve Witkoff and Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner demonstrated the draft peace plan to Putin at a meeting in Moscow.

Putin said the peace agreement brought by Witkoff and Kushner for talks in Moscow was "in one way or another" based on agreements reached during the Russian dictator's meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska. This he said to Indian journalists, writes the BBC. Putin himself called the meeting with the Americans "very useful".

According to media reports, Russia still expects Kiev to give up Ukrainian-controlled areas of Donbass, reduce the AFU, give up a significant part of its armaments, and fulfil other Kremlin demands. The plan envisages that the transfer of Donbas territories to the Russians will take place in exchange for security guarantees from the USA for Kiev and Europe. The guarantees themselves and the mechanism for their fulfilment have not yet been clearly defined.

It all boils down to this. Either we will liberate these territories by armed means, or Ukrainian troops will leave these territories and stop fighting there," Putin asserted.

Earlier, Socialportal wrote that the media called the 28-point peace agreement "Putin's wish list".