âYour country will pay dearly because it will end up as an isolated country, weakened and under sanctions for a very long time,â Macron told Putin, according to a French official, who added that Macron âcalled on Vladimir Putin to not lie to himself.â
The conversation, which the French presidency said was initiated by Putin, came as Ukrainian officials were set to hold talks with a Russian delegation, according to Russian and Ukrainian officials. But based on the two leadersâ exchange, there was no indication on Thursday that a diplomatic solution could be in sight, according to French officials.
The Kremlinâs news service cited Putin as having told Macron that the objectives âof the special military operationâ â the term the Kremlin has used to refer to Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine â âwill be fulfilled in any case.â
âAttempts to gain time by dragging negotiations will only lead to additional requirements for Kyiv in our negotiating position,â Putin told Macron, according to the readout.
A senior French official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because it is French government practice, said Putinâs remarks reflected a âdetermination to continue the military operation, and to continue it to the end.â
According to the Kremlinâs news service, Putin also took issue with an address to the nation Macron had given on Wednesday evening, in which he had condemned Putinâs âbrutal attackâ on Ukraine and said âPutin chose the war.â
In his speech, Macron had also said Putinâs claims that he wants to âdenazifyâ Ukraine are âa lieâ and âan insult to the history of Russia and Ukraine, to the memory of our elders who fought side by side against Nazism.â
Responding directly to those comments on Thursday, the Kremlin news service said Putin disagreed âwith many pointsâ raised in Macronâs address, and he denied that Russia was behind the shelling of major Ukrainian cities â despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Macron is the only Western leader who has been in consistent public contact with Putin since the invasion of Ukraine, in an effort the French presidency has described as an attempt to keep the doors to meaningful negotiations open. Putin and Macron also spoke on Monday, and last Thursday.
Before the invasion, Macron had led Western efforts to prevent an escalation of the crisis through diplomatic channels, traveling to Moscow last month to keep Putin engaged. Since mid-December, the two leaders have spoken over a dozen times, according to the French presidency. Macron has also been in frequent contact with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky â the last time on Thursday, following his call with Putin.
Robyn Dixon contributed to this report from Moscow and Claire Parker contributed from Washington.