Putin’s line should be read cautiously. It may signal that Moscow wants to frame the next phase of the war as diplomatic, but the available reporting does not show a durable ceasefire, accepted peace terms or a clear path to ending the conflict.
What Putin actually said
On May 9, Vladimir Putin told reporters, “I think that the matter is coming to an end,” referring to the Russia-Ukraine war [3]. Reuters reported that the comment came only hours after he had vowed victory in Ukraine at Moscow’s most scaled-back Victory Day parade in years [
3].
That context matters. A Moscow Times report said Putin also told soldiers that Russia was fighting an “aggressive force” in Ukraine backed by NATO and described Russia’s war aims as “just” [1]. In other words, the message was not simply a peace overture. It combined talk of an ending with language that can also justify continued fighting.
Why the ceasefire picture is so murky
The reported ceasefire diplomacy is real, but it is not clean or stable. Several short ceasefire efforts and proposals appeared close together:
- Ukraine proposed a ceasefire beginning May 6 in response to Putin’s Victory Day pause; Zelenskiy later accused Russia of carrying out assaults, air strikes and drone attacks, saying Moscow had committed 1,820 violations by late morning [
30].




