‘Secret’ talks with Kiev, Zelensky’s letter, China and economic resilience: Putin at SPIEF

Russian President Vladimir Putin has taken part in a plenary session at this year’s St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, where he revealed that Kiev requested talks with a Russian envoy, only to kill dozens of Russian teenage girls.
In a questions and answers session after his plenary speech, Putin spoke for the first time about an "open letter" by Vladimir Zelensky in which an array of insults were levied at the Russian president, Russia was threatened with drone strikes, before a request to meet for peace talks in a third country was tabled.
Putin rejected the idea of “meeting just for the sake of meeting,” revealing for the first time that he sent an informal envoy to Ukraine last month at Kiev’s request, only for Zelensky’s forces to repeatedly bomb a college dormitory in Lugansk the following day, killing 21 people, mostly teenage girls.
The letter is either “a means to create an environment for a personal meeting, or maybe is this letter meant to make sure that no personal meetings can take place at all,” he remarked, concluding: “I think it's the second.”
During the opening speech of the session, Putin drew a sharp contrast between the Russia of the past – dependent on Western currencies, institutions, and trade arbitrators – and the Russia of today: subjected to “sanctions and basically the theft” of its assets, but sovereign, self-sufficient, and building parallel institutions and trade networks with its BRICS partners.
“Sovereignty implies being smarter and being stronger,” and not just “the capability to oppose external pressure,” Putin said. “This is about the quality of the government, the economy, and society.”
The plenary session is the main event of the forum, and Putin appears alongside Uzbekistani President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan, Chinese Vice President Han Zheng.
05 June 2026
17:57 GMTAfter three hours, that's a wrap on the plenary session. Live updates are now finished, but stay with RT for more news, updates, and analysis from the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.
- 17:55 GMT
Sovereignty wins on the battlefield too, Putin reminds Ukraine:
”You have to have your own industrial base for a defense industry. You have to have your own scientific base and your own resource base,” he says. “Russia has all of that. So the sooner those who are fighting us understand that, the better it's going to be for them.”
- 17:50 GMT
Putin has said that if US President Donald Trump had been in office in 2022, the situation in Ukraine “would have turned out differently,” adding that he respects Trump and is grateful for his efforts to bring an end to hostilities. Key issues, however, “must still be resolved directly between Russia and Ukraine,” while the US and other countries can help create conditions and act as guarantors, according to the Russian president.
Trump has repeatedly blamed the Ukraine conflict on his predecessor, Joe Biden, and claimed during his 2024 campaign that he could end it quickly.
- 17:43 GMT
Drones are the “new reality” of warfare, but Putin points out one key weakness in Ukraine’s drone-reliant military: “they are supplied to Ukraine from the Western states. In Ukraine, they are only assembled.”
“Although it seems that they try to engineer some of these drones themselves. They're not very successful in that.”
Ukraine’s domestic drone industry has scaled up dramatically since 2022, but it’s also a hotbed of corruption, run by companies that over-promise, under-deliver, and enrich Zelensky’s inner circle. RT covered some of the graft at the country’s biggest defense contractor, Fire Point, in our ‘ State of Corruption’ series.
- 17:20 GMT
Putin has accused Ukrainian forces of having “completely lost their minds” by striking the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant, saying they hit “right at the reactor,” which is currently shut down. The damage to spent‑fuel storage could spread radiation and it is “by no means certain” any fallout would drift toward Russia, Putin said, warning it could instead reach the EU and that the bloc’s member states backing Kiev “should think carefully about their own security.”
Europe’s largest nuclear plant has come under fire multiple times since Russia took control of the facility in March 2022., including a recent drone hit on the sixth unit’s machine hall that Rosatom called Kiev’s first “deliberate attack” on key equipment – an incident Ukraine denies.
- 16:59 GMT
Russia must keep strengthening its air defenses to protect its territory, Putin says, adding: “we have to do everything to ensure the security of the Russian Federation.” He noted that, unlike Ukraine, Russia has the full capabilities to develop its own systems, while the country’s industry and defense science are able to fully equip the military with the tools to counter Ukraine’s drones.
- 16:44 GMT
Putin says he has not seen any provocations from Iran that would justify US strikes, adding that Russia hopes the current truce between Washington and Tehran will lead to a lasting peace. He stressed that Moscow is ready to work with all sides to help move toward a settlement, adding that Russia’s earlier proposal to remove enriched uranium from Iran remains on the table.
- 16:36 GMT
Putin is bullish on trade with New Delhi, announcing that Russian oil giant Rosneft has invested around $25 billion into a refinery, a port, and gas stations in India. Russia is also working on new technology sharing agreements, he adds.
Russia’s relations with India are “trust-based, brotherly relations in all senses of the word,” Putin says. “We know how talented the Indian people are, how well educated. Indians have great competencies which have achieved world renown, especially in coding and in other fields.”
- 16:01 GMT
The West called the idea of denazifying Ukraine “ridiculous,” but Zelensky’s reburial with honors of Nazi collaborator Andrey Melnik proves that the idea is “not ridiculous at all,” Putin says.
Melnik, who co-founded the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), was reburied in Ukraine with full state honors last month, in a ceremony attended by Zelensky and his top officials. The OUN and its armed wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), massacred around 100,000 Poles and Jews in what is now western Ukraine during the Second World War.
“Just think about it,” Putin tells the audience. “Millions of children and women were killed, burned alive, and those criminals are getting their reburial ceremony with all the owners, and the head of Kiev regime is present there, saluting them, turning the Nazi criminals into heroes. This is what we are fighting against.”
- 15:49 GMT
Putin says he won’t be meeting Zelensky, and he shouldn’t even be addressing him. “The ones to be addressed are our combatants, our soldiers at the line of contact,” he says, telling them “the country is proud of you and places its hopes on you.”
Putin ends with an iconic Russian military catchphrase: “Работайте, братья!” (“Work, brothers!”)











