Russian airstrikes pound Ukraine amid U.S.-brokered peace talks in Abu Dhabi

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Ukraine said Russia had launched 375 drones and 21 missiles, which once again targeted energy infrastructure, knocking out power and heat for large parts of Kyiv.
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Ukrainian and Russian negotiators began a second day of U.S.-brokered talks in Abu Dhabi on Saturday after an overnight wave of Russian airstrikes that knocked out power for millions of people amid freezing winter temperatures.

The strikes by hundreds of Russian drones and missiles on Kyiv and Ukraine's second largest city Kharkiv prompted Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha — who was not present at the talks — to accuse Russian President Vladimir Putin of acting "cynically."

"This barbaric attack once again proves that Putin's place is not at the board of peace, but at the dock of the special tribunal," he wrote on X.

A source familiar with the situation told Reuters that the talks —which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said were the first trilateral meetings under the U.S.-mediated peace process — had resumed on Saturday morning.

Kyiv is under mounting Trump administration pressure to make concessions to reach a peace deal in the war triggered by Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Zelenskyy had said on Friday that it was too early to draw conclusions from the first day of meetings in Abu Dhabi, and he had urged Russia to show it was ready to end the war. The talks were expected to resume for a final day on Saturday morning.

Image: TOPSHOT-UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-WAR
Ukrainian emergency personnel work to extinguish a fire at the site of an air attack in Kyiv on Saturday.Oleksandr Magula / AFP - Getty Images

Although U.S. peace envoy Steve Witkoff struck an upbeat tone at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos this week, saying that only one sticking point remained in the talks, Russian officials have sounded more skeptical.

Ahead of the talks, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday that Russia had not dropped its insistence on Ukraine yielding all of its eastern area of Donbas — Ukraine's industrial heartland grouping the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's demand that Ukraine surrender the 20% it still holds of Donetsk — about 1,900 square miles — has proven a major stumbling block to any deal.

Zelenskyy refuses to give up land that Russia has not been able to capture in four years of grinding, attritional warfare. Polls show little appetite among Ukrainians for territorial concessions.

Russia says it wants a diplomatic solution but will keep working to achieve its goals by military means as long as a negotiated solution remains elusive.

Rustem Umerov, the secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council and the head of its delegation, said in a statement late on Friday that the first day of talks had discussed parameters for ending the war and the "further logic of the negotiation process."

Ukraine's air force said Russia had launched 375 drones and 21 missiles in the overnight salvo, which once again targeted energy infrastructure, knocking out power and heat for large parts of Kyiv, the capital. At least one person was killed and 23 injured.

Before Saturday's bombardment, Kyiv had already endured two mass overnight attacks since the New Year that knocked out power and heating to hundreds of residential buildings. Ukraine's deputy prime minister said on Saturday that 800,000 people in Kyiv — where temperatures were around -10 Celsius — had been left without power after the latest Russian assault.

Zelenskyy said on Saturday that Russia's heavy overnight strikes showed that agreements on further air defense support made with Trump in Davos this week must be "fully implemented."

Both leaders described their talks on the sidelines of the Davos gathering of the world's political and business elite on Thursday as positive but declined to provide further details.

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