"There remains a group of countries [in the West] that rather constitute the 'party of war,' which declare their readiness to further support Ukraine in terms of supporting the war and ensuring the continuation of hostilities," Peskov told reporters, commenting on an informal summit of some European leaders on Ukraine held in London on Sunday.
"There were still statements there about the urgent need for increased funding for Ukraine. This is clearly not for a peace plan, but probably for continued fighting. That is our understanding. And the rest will depend on what peace plans are drawn up and what peace plans are already on the table," he noted.
"And also [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin has repeatedly said that when we talk about a possible basis for dialogue in the form of the Istanbul agreements, which were drafted, agreed and initialed. But since then, in two and a half years, the situation on the ground has changed. And only a blind man cannot see it, and a deaf man cannot hear it," the spokesman explained, when asked how the Kremlin took Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky's statement that he did not intend to cede any territories under Russian control.