'Dialogue is always better than confrontation': Putin on cancelled Budapest meeting with Trump
By IANS | Updated: October 24, 2025 01:35 IST2025-10-24T01:31:51+5:302025-10-24T01:35:10+5:30
Moscow, Oct 24 Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke on his cancelled meeting with US President Donald Trump, which ...

'Dialogue is always better than confrontation': Putin on cancelled Budapest meeting with Trump
Moscow, Oct 24 Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke on his cancelled meeting with US President Donald Trump, which was initially planned to be taking place in Budapest, Hungary, in the coming weeks.
Emphasising on the importance of continued diplomacy to end the war in Ukraine, Putin on Thursday said: "Well, what can one always say? Dialogue is always better than confrontation, than disputes, or even more so than war."
"That is why we have always supported the continuation of dialogue, and we continue to support it now," he added.
"It would be a mistake for both me and the US President to approach this lightly and come away from this meeting without the expected result," Putin said, emphasising that the meeting was originally proposed by the US side.
The Russian leader said Washington had proposed the summit but was now "postponed".
Now, Trump has decided to "postpone" the meeting, Putin said.
Putin also dismissed Washington's latest sanctions on Russia's oil sector, calling them a futile attempt to strong-arm Moscow into compliance.
"No self-respecting country ever does anything under pressure," Putin said, after the US imposed sweeping restrictions on Rosneft and Lukoil -- Russia's largest oil producers.
The sanctions were announced after the Kremlin rejected calls for an immediate ceasefire in its ongoing war with Ukraine.
Putin said he had cautioned US President Trump that the sanctions could disrupt global energy markets and lead to rising oil prices worldwide.
"We said very clearly that this would affect global oil prices, including the US," he added.
The US Treasury Department said the measures were intended to "limit Russia's ability to finance its aggression".
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed the move, calling it a step that would "weaken the Kremlin's capacity to wage war".
Russian Foreign Ministry on Thursday called the US sanctions against two Russian oil companies "counterproductive" and stressed that Moscow would not face any issue due to the sanctions as it has "strong immunity" to Western sanctions.
Commenting on US Treasury Department's sanctions against Lukoil and Rosneft, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, "We consider this step to be exclusively counterproductive," Russia's leading Tass news agency reported.
Zakharova's statement comes after US President Donald Trump has imposed new sanctions on Russia, targeting its two largest oil companies, in his latest bid to end the conflict in Ukraine.
The US Treasury Department targeted Russian companies -- Rosneft and Lukoil, and their subsidiaries, warning that a future action could not be ruled out.
On dialogue with the US, Zakharova said that Russia sees "no significant obstacles" in continuing the process initiated by Russian President Putin and his US counterpart Trump to agree on the political framework for a settlement in Ukraine and "to fill it with concrete results".
She said that Russian Foreign Ministry is "open to continuing contacts" with the US State Department, Tass reported.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson said that purpose of these contacts is "to specify the parameters of the Russia-US dialogue on various aspects of bilateral relations and further joint steps in the Ukrainian settlement process".
While meeting NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the White House on Wednesday, Trump said he hoped that the "war will be settled".
"These are tremendous sanctions. These are very big against their two big oil companies. And we hope that they won't be on for long. We hope that the war will be settled," he added.
Trump also noted his previous conversations with Russian President Putin had not led to any breakthroughs.
"Every time I speak with Vladimir, I have good conversations, and then they don't go anywhere. They just don't go anywhere. He's fighting a war. He's in a war. It's two very competent sides, and that's the way war is. You never know with war, but I would say that it's time to make a deal," he emphasised.
Trump, on Tuesday, cancelled his proposed meeting with Putin in Budapest in Hungary, saying he doesn't "want to have a wasted meeting".
"We cancelled the meeting with President Putin. It just didn't feel right to me. It didn't feel like we were going to get to the place we have to get. So, I cancelled it, but we'll do it in the future," he noted.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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