Russian President Vladimir Putin has revived a controversial narrative, claiming that theoretically "all of Ukraine is ours." He also sparked more immediate concerns with comments about seizing Ukraine's city of Sumy.
Putin said the Russian and Ukrainian people were one and that, as such, so were both countries
Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared that Russians and Ukrainians are "one people" and that, in that sense, "all of Ukraine is ours."
The assertion underscores Moscow's continued underlying rejection of Ukrainian sovereignty and raises renewed alarm over Russia's territorial ambitions.
What did Putin say about Ukraine's sovereignty?
Speaking at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday, Putin issued a series of provocative remarks, notably stating: "We have a saying… where the foot of a Russian soldier steps, that is ours."
He was responding to a question about Russia's objectives for its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, launched in February 2022.
The Russian leader emphasized that while Russia "never doubted" Ukraine's sovereignty after its 1991 independence, it had declared itself a neutral state — a stance he accused Ukraine of having abandoned.
Reiterating a longstanding narrative, he said Russians and Ukrainians were essentially the same nation — a position Kyiv and its Western allies categorically reject.
"I have said many times that I consider the Russian and Ukrainian peoples to be one people. In this sense, all of Ukraine is ours," Putin said.
Ukraine said Putin's comments showed his "disdain" for the peace process.
"Putin's cynical statements demonstrate complete disdain for US peace efforts," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga said in a post on X. "The only way to force Russia into peace is to deprive it of its sense of impunity."
What did Putin say about Sumy?
Among the key developments, Putin said he did not "rule out" the capture of the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy, which lies roughly 30 kilometers (just over 18 miles) from the Russian border.
"We have no objective to take Sumy but, in principle, I do not rule it out," he said, accusing Ukrainian forces of persistently shelling Russian border areas. He added that Russian troops had already penetrated up to 12 kilometers into Ukrainian territory in the Sumy region to create what he called a protective "buffer zone."
Sumy, though not among the five Ukrainian regions Moscow claims to have annexed — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Crimea — has been a frequent target of Russian attacks. It also served as a launching point for a Ukrainian counteroffensive into Russia's western Kursk region last August, during which Kyiv's forces briefly captured dozens of settlements before being pushed back by Russian troops — bolstered by thousands of North Korean soldiers, according to reports.
Putin's remarks come amid growing skepticism over the viability of peace negotiations, with Moscow continuing to demand further Ukrainian territorial concessions as a precondition for any ceasefire.
Edited by Sean Sinico
"Ukraine is ours" Putin tells deleages at SPIEF

“Ukraine is part of Russia,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said in his keynote address at this year’s St Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) plenary session on June 20, putting the cat amongst the pigeons.
Putin repeated that he considered Russians and Ukrainians to be “one people” and "in that sense the whole of Ukraine is ours" (video), causing outrage amongst Ukraine’s supporters and a round of applause from the delegates at SPIEF.
"We have a saying, or a parable," Putin said during the plenary panel session. "Where the foot of a Russian soldier steps, that is ours."
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha shot back: "Putin's cynical statements demonstrate complete disdain for U.S. peace efforts," in a post on social media. “Wherever a Russian soldier sets foot, he brings along only death, destruction, and devastation.”
The Russian president added the caveat that he was not questioning Ukraine's independence or its people's striving for sovereignty, but he went on to point out that when Ukraine declared independence as the Soviet Union fell in 1991 it had also declared itself as a neutral power. Russia’s key demand in the conflict is that Ukraine return to neutrality and give up its Nato ambitions which were written into the constitution in 2014.
After initially indicating last November there was “limited wiggle room” for concessions on the Kremlin’s maximalist demands for territorial claims to the five regions Russia has annexed, including the Crimea, Putin has since hardened his position and gone back to what is tantamount to Ukraine’s capitulation with the main points: no Nato for Ukraine and a return to neutrality; conceding Russia's de jura control over occupied territory; and strict limits on the size of Ukraine’s military.
In response to the idea that the war in Ukraine is “killing” the Russian economy, Putin quote Mark Twain, saying, “As a well-known writer once said: ‘The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.’”
Best offer Ukraine can get
At a parallel United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting on June 20, Russia’s ambassador Vasily Nebenzya said the Kremlin’s current offer that “takes the realities on the ground” into account is “the best offer Ukraine can get today,” referring to the terms outlined at a meeting in Istanbul on June 3.
"During the direct Russian-Ukrainian talks that were held, we presented our memorandum on a peaceful settlement. It consists of two parts: conditions for a comprehensive long-term peace and conditions for a ceasefire," Nebenzya said. "This is the best offer Ukraine can get today. We advise accepting it as things will only get worse for Kyiv, from here on out.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has referred to the new Istanbul terms as nothing as an “ultimatum” and rejected them out of hand, calling instead for Russia to respect the 30-day ceasefire proposal floated by the Trump administration in March.
Putin said that he is still willing to meet with Zelenskiy personally and Nebenzya noted that the two sides should resume direct peace talks in Turkey after June 22, despite Russia's intensified drone and missile attacks on Ukraine, The Kyiv Independent reports.
Other delegates at the UNSC meeting repeated calls for Russia to halt the increased missile barrage on Ukraine.
"We call on Russia to agree to an unconditional ceasefire. Russia initiated this war; we call on Russia to end it," Barbara Woodward, the UK's Permanent Representative to the UN, said.
Despite the hopes that a ceasefire deal could be done, brokered by US President Donald Trump, those hopes have been quashed by the widening positions between the two sides and as bne IntelliNews opined recently, the ceasefire talks are currently dead in the water.
Attendance down
Putin used the speech to reiterate his standard motives of restructuring the Russian economy and the creation of a multipolar world order. His speech was followed by a panel discussion with several other political leaders, including Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang, Bahraini Prince Nasser bin Hamad Al-Khalifa, and South African Deputy President Paul Mashatile, highlighting Putin’s big bet on the Global South Century where he is counting on the world’s emerging markets to replace the West as Russia’s main trading and investment partner.
The forum runs between June 18 and 21 but attendance at Russia’s premier investment confab has dropped considerably in recent years. Western guests were few and far between, replaced by delegates from the Global South and the Middle East in particular.
This year, the Kingdom of Bahrain and the Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, who declined an invitation to this week’s G7 Summit and chose to attend SPIEF instead, were the forum’s guest of honour, with delegates mostly arriving from China, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, African countries where Russia has a military presence, and Taliban-administered Afghanistan.
The Kremlin has expended significant diplomatic efforts to improve relations with the Trump administration, and the hope was that US guests would showcase how the country’s international isolation is easing. It didn’t happen. The head of AmCham Robert Agee was there, and a “Russia-USA” panel was organized with American participants, but no heavyweight business figures, that used to be a regular feature at SPIEF, bother to show up.
Economy in trouble?
Apart from the usual announcements of regional investment projects with the participation of state-owned companies timed to coincide with the forum, little of note was actually announced.
Foreign investment has fallen off to next to nothing and that is causing economic problems as the economic management team debated on its closely watched annual panel is Russia’s economy cooling or falling into recession.
Tellingly, a week before SPIEF kicked off presidential advisor Maxim Oreshkin, one of Russia’s economic policy leading lights, said Russia's current economic model has exhausted its capacity to drive growth and must be restructured to ensure future development.
In a bid to save money, several governors chose not to attend the forum at all and scale down their region’s representative pavilions, BMB Russia reported




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