In another clear sign aimed at pacifying Moscow, Zelensky said he was ready to “compromise” on the situation in the two separate pro-Russian regions that President Vladimir Putin It was recognized as independent just before launching the invasion on 24 February.
“I understood the question long ago that … NATO is not ready to accept Ukraine,” Zelensky said in an interview aired Monday night on ABC News.
“The alliance is afraid of controversial things and a confrontation with Russia,” the president said.
Referring to NATO membership, Zelensky said through an interpreter that he does not want to be the president of a country that is begging on its knees.
Russia has said it does not want neighboring Ukraine to join NATO, the transatlantic alliance created at the start of the Cold War to defend Europe from the Soviet Union.
In recent years the coalition has expanded further and further east, angering the Kremlin for taking over former Soviet bloc countries.
Russia sees NATO expansion as a threat, as it carries the military posture of these new Western allies at its doorstep.
Shortly before he surprised the world by ordering an invasion of Ukraine, Putin Two separatist pro-Russian “republics” recognized as independent in eastern Ukraine – Donetsk and Lugansk – have been at war with Kyiv since 2014.
Putin now wants Ukraine to recognize him as sovereign and independent.
When ABC asked him about this Russian demand, Zelensky said he was open to talks.
“I’m talking about security guarantees,” he said.
He added that these two regions are “recognized by none other than Russia, these pseudo-republics. But we can discuss and come to an agreement on how these regions will remain.”
“It’s important to me how people from those regions who want to be part of Ukraine will live, who will say in Ukraine that they want to keep them in,” Zelensky said.
“So the question is more difficult than simply accepting them,” the president said.
“This is another ultimatum and we are not ready for an ultimatum. What does President Putin need to do to start a dialogue, start a dialogue, rather than live in an informational bubble without oxygen.”