Putin agrees to 30-day halt on energy facility strikes but no full Ukraine ceasefire

Experts said Putin avoided making significant concessions in what could be a play for time as Russian troops advance in eastern Ukraine. Picture: AP
Russian president Vladimir Putin agreed on Tuesday evening to stop attacking Ukrainian energy facilities temporarily but declined to endorse a full 30-day ceasefire that US president Donald Trump hoped would be the first step toward a permanent peace deal.
Ukraine said it would support the scaled-back agreement, which would require both countries to hold off firing on each other's energy infrastructure for about a month.
Experts said Putin avoided making significant concessions in what could be a play for time as Russian troops advance in eastern Ukraine.
The White House said talks on a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea as well as a more complete ceasefire and a permanent peace deal would begin immediately, following a lengthy call between Trump and Putin on Tuesday.
It was unclear whether Ukraine would be involved in those talks, which Trump envoy Steve Witkoff said will take place in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on Sunday.
"Up until recently, we really didn't have consensus around these two aspects - the energy and infrastructure ceasefire and the Black Sea moratorium on firing - and today we got to that place, and I think it's a relatively short distance to a full ceasefire from there," Witkoff told Fox News "Hannity" program.
The Kremlin did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment, outside business hours, on Witkoff's remarks.
Putin ordered the Russian military to stop attacks against energy sites after speaking with Trump, the Kremlin said.
But he raised concerns that a temporary ceasefire might allow Ukraine to rearm and mobilize more soldiers, and doubled down on his demand that any resolution required an end to all military and intelligence assistance to Ukraine, according to a Kremlin statement.

Trump told Fox News aid to Ukraine did not come up in the conversation.
Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country would support the proposal to stop strikes on energy facilities and infrastructure for 30 days.
He said Russia launched more than 40 drones late on Tuesday, hitting a hospital in Sumy and other areas, including the Kyiv region that surrounds the Ukrainian capital.
"Today, Putin de facto rejected the proposal for a complete ceasefire. It would be right for the world to reject in response any attempts by Putin to drag out the war," Zelenskiy said in a post on the Telegram messaging app.
Trump, who has had a complicated relationship with Zelenskyy, spoke positively of his call with Putin.
"We had a great call. It lasted almost two hours," Trump said on Fox News's "The Ingraham Angle" show.
But the US president did not get what he wanted. Ukraine, which Trump had previously described as being more difficult to work with than Russia, had agreed to the US proposal for a full 30-day ceasefire. Putin did not.
"This call brought to light how difficult of an interlocutor Russia is going to be and the general unwillingness of Russia to talk about making real progress in stopping this war," said Kristine Berzina, a managing director at the German Marshall Fund think tank. She called the limited ceasefire "a very small step forward."