Bloomberg reported on 28 February that Russia is considering suspending peace negotiations unless Ukraine pre-commits to formally ceding the four partially occupied oblasts — Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson 1. A March trilateral involving the United States, Russia, and Ukraine had been expected at Abu Dhabi.
The demand follows Abu Dhabi Round 2 in February, which produced technical progress on Ceasefire monitoring mechanics but deadlocked on territory 2. Three unresolved questions remain unchanged: territorial status, security guarantees for Ukraine, and who deploys Ceasefire monitors. On guarantees, Zelenskyy has stated the US text is "essentially ready"; on territory, neither side has moved.
Russia has issued structurally identical ultimatums before every major negotiating round since the Istanbul talks collapsed in March 2022. The sequence is established: Moscow sets maximalist preconditions, gauges the degree of Western pressure on Kyiv to accept them, then attends regardless. Until Russia formally recalls its Abu Dhabi delegation, this is more consistent with tactical positioning than genuine withdrawal.
The timing, however, is not incidental. Ukraine recaptured an estimated 300–400 sq km in the Zaporizhzhia–Dnipropetrovsk sector during February, reducing Kyiv's incentive to concede territory at the table. Russia's oil revenues fell 65% year-on-year in January 2026 3, eroding Moscow's fiscal capacity to sustain the war's expenditure rate indefinitely. Trump told Zelenskyy on 25 February that he wants the war ended "in a month"; Russia's stated position remains "no deadlines." Both sides face pressure to negotiate and reasons to delay — Ukraine because the battlefield has improved, Russia because conceding flexibility on territory would contradict four years of stated war aims.
