Putin Says Russia Will Defeat Ukraine

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, June 4 (Reuters) – ⁠President ⁠Vladimir Putin said on ⁠Thursday that Russia would defeat Ukraine on the battlefield ​if necessary, but was ready to end the war via diplomacy and honour ‌unspecified compromises he said ‌had been agreed with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Speaking to foreign media ⁠editors on ⁠the sidelines of Russia’s annual economic forum, Putin showed no ​signs of changing his stance that Ukraine must surrender the rest of its eastern Donbas region which Russia does not yet control for the war to ​end.

“The offensive is ongoing on a daily basis. At present, the Russian ⁠Federation ⁠has taken full control ⁠of the ​Luhansk People’s Republic – 100 percent. And it has brought over 85 percent ​of the territory of ⁠the Donetsk People’s Republic under its control,” said Putin.

“We are certainly prepared and willing to reach an agreement with Ukraine through peaceful means. Specifically, on the basis we discussed during our meeting with President Trump ⁠in Anchorage. Russia agrees to those compromises we discussed in Anchorage. The ⁠Ukrainian side must also agree to these compromises. Then the conflict will quickly come to a natural conclusion.”

Putin also said that Russia had not yet used its Oreshnik hypersonic missile against Ukraine in real combat conditions, but had only test fired it to observe the results in order to make decisions about the full-scale future use of the Oreshnik, including against urban targets.

The Oreshnik, ⁠which Russia first fired against Ukraine in 2024, is a nuclear-capable missile with a range of over 5,000 km (3,100 miles). Putin has said before that it is impossible to intercept, though Western experts ​have questioned that assertion.

(Reporting by Reuters; Wriitng by Andrew ​Osborn Editing by Mark Trevelyan/Guy Faulconbridge )

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – April 2026

Dancers rehearse before an audition for the Radio City Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall in New York, on Wednesday, April 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Leave a Comment