Istanbul peace talks¹

Zelensky’s interview with the Economist in March 2022, before the US and UK sabotaged the Istanbul peace talks²:

– “There are those in the West who don’t mind a long war because it would mean exhausting Russia, even if this means the demise of Ukraine and comes at the cost of Ukrainian lives”¹ https://x.com/i/status/2020087211832598918

² The Istanbul Peace Talks (primarily those held in March 2022) represent the closest the Russian Federation and Ukraine have come to a negotiated settlement since the full-scale invasion began. While the talks ultimately collapsed, they established a framework often referred to as the “Istanbul Communiqué.”  

​As of early 2026, the legacy of these talks has resurfaced in new diplomatic efforts (often dubbed “Istanbul 2.0”), though the geopolitical landscape has shifted significantly.  

​1. The 2022 Framework (The “Istanbul Communiqué”)

​In late March 2022, negotiators met in Turkey and produced a draft treaty focused on the following pillars:

​Permanent Neutrality: Ukraine would become a “permanently neutral” state, enshrining this in its constitution. This meant no NATO membership, no foreign military bases, and no foreign troops on Ukrainian soil.  

​Security Guarantees: In exchange for neutrality, Ukraine would receive “Article 5-style” security guarantees from a group of nations (including the US, UK, France, China, Turkey, and Russia). If Ukraine were attacked, these guarantors would be legally obligated to provide military assistance.  

​EU Membership: Crucially, Russia initially signaled it would not object to Ukraine joining the European Union.  

​Territorial “Status Quo”: The status of Crimea was to be settled through a 15-year period of bilateral negotiations, while the status of the Donbas regions would be decided in a direct meeting between Presidents Zelenskyy and Putin.  

​Military Constraints: Limits were proposed on the size of the Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU), though the specific numbers (e.g., whether the army would be capped at 85,000 or 250,000 troops) remained a major point of contention.  

​2. Why the 2022 Talks Collapsed

​Several factors led to the breakdown of the March/April 2022 negotiations:

​The Bucha Revelations: The discovery of mass atrocities in Bucha after the Russian withdrawal from northern Ukraine hardened Ukrainian public opinion and political resolve against concessions.  

​The “Veto” Clause: Russia demanded a “veto” over the security guarantees, insisting that any military response to a future attack must be agreed upon by all guarantors (including Russia), which Ukraine viewed as a trap.  

​Western Skepticism: Some Western allies expressed concern that the deal would leave Ukraine defenseless.  

​Military Shift: Ukraine’s success in pushing Russian forces away from Kyiv led to a belief that a better deal could be won on the battlefield.

​3. Current Status (Early 2026)

​Following a period of relative diplomatic silence, recent reports (February 2026) indicate a return to the “Istanbul Format” under new mediation:

​Trilateral Engagement: New rounds of talks involving the US, Ukraine, and Russia have occurred in Istanbul and Abu Dhabi.  

​The “Energy Truce”: Recent discussions have focused on localized “truce” agreements regarding energy infrastructure and prisoner exchanges (such as the 1,200-for-1,200 swap discussed in late 2025).  

​New Obstacles: While 2022 was about neutrality, 2026 negotiations are heavily bogged down by Russia’s demand that Ukraine recognize the annexation of four additional regions (Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia).

​Key References

​Minsk Dialogue (Jan 2026): Peace Initiatives for Ending the War in Ukraine – Provides a technical breakdown of the 18 articles in the original draft.  

​Kyiv Post (May 2025/Jan 2026): Return to Peace Talks in Turkey: What’s Changed? – Analyzes the shift from military limits to territorial disputes.

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​Institute for the Study of War (ISW): Fact Sheet: Istanbul Protocol Draft Document – Detailed analysis of the Russian demands regarding “denazification” and demilitarization.

​Responsible Statecraft (2026): Istanbul 2.0 – Discusses the role of the new US administration in reviving the Istanbul framework.

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