
Peskov says Trump, Putin likely spoke more than twice
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov claimed that Russia's Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump may have had more contact than the two publicly announced phone calls in recent months
He made this statement in an interview with Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin.
In response to Zarubin's question about Trump's comments suggesting there may have been more than two calls, Peskov said that only the calls they were aware of had been made public.
"Listen, we inform you about the conversations we know about. But we can't rule out the possibility of others," said the Kremlin spokesman.
When Zarubin asked if "various nuances" were possible, Peskov replied, "Well, I would answer your question this way."
Trump-Putin conversation: what is known
According to official information, Putin and Trump had two phone calls this year — on February 12 and March 18.
On March 18, U.S. President Donald Trump had a phone conversation with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin that lasted about two hours. The sides agreed that the path to peace would begin with a halt to attacks on energy infrastructure, and Moscow demanded a stop to Ukraine's mobilization and rearming of its armed forces during a potential ceasefire.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said after the talks between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin that the Kremlin leader effectively rejected the proposal for a full ceasefire.
On Sunday, March 23, U.S. and Russian representatives will meet in Saudi Arabia to discuss the details of halting attacks on energy and civilian infrastructure in the Russian-Ukrainian war.
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