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US envoy highlights need to take into account positions of all parties to Ukraine conflict

"Once we get to have these face-to-face discussions, then you can really kind of work on concessions," Keith Kellogg said

NEW YORK, February 6. /TASS/. A plan on resolving the conflict in Ukraine should take into account the positions of all parties and be discussed face-to-face, US Presidential Envoy for Russia and Ukraine Keith Kellogg said.

"As you develop the plans to end this carnage, you have to make sure that you've got the feel of everybody in play," he told Fox News.

"Once we get to have these face-to-face discussions, then you can really kind of work… on concessions," Kellogg added, as cited by the broadcaster.

The US presidential envoy also said that he would attend the Munich Security Conference, set to be held on February 14-16, in order to discuss the prospects for resolving the conflict in Ukraine with world leaders. "That’s one of the reasons I’m going next week to Europe, to actually see them face-to-face," Kellogg noted, adding: "I can bring that back to the president and say, ‘OK, Mr. President, this is their concern. This is what the issues are.’"

US President Donald Trump earlier expressed hope that an agreement on resolving the conflict in Ukraine would be reached soon. On June 14, 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin set forth the conditions for resolving the situation in Ukraine at a meeting with senior Foreign Ministry officials. His terms included Ukraine withdrawing troops from Donbass and Novorossiya and abandoning plans to join NATO. In addition, Moscow said that all Western sanctions must be lifted and Ukraine’s non-bloc and non-nuclear status must be guaranteed, while Ukraine must ensure the rights, freedoms and interests of its Russian-speaking citizens.

Western media outlets have increasingly reported that a solution to the Ukraine issue will be discussed by the Russian and US leaders on a bilateral basis, while Europe would be excluded from the process and Kiev’s participation will be nothing but a formality.