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Russian President Vladimir Putin said on May 9 he believed the war in Ukraine was "coming to an end" after presiding over a markedly scaled-down Victory Day parade in Moscow.
The Red Square event â stripped of tanks and heavy hardware for the first time in nearly two decades and shortened amid heightened security â coincided with a U.S.-brokered three-day ceasefire from May 9-11 that President Donald Trump helped publicise.
Moscow and Kyiv traded accusations of violations during the pause, though both sides confirmed an agreed swap of 1,000 prisoners each.
Putin said he would be willing to sign a final peace deal with Ukraine only after terms were settled and suggested he could negotiate new European security arrangements â naming former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder as a preferred interlocutor.
The parade featured foreign contingents from close allies, including North Korean troops; mobile internet restrictions and other security measures were imposed across Moscow.
Analysts and Western officials have voiced scepticism about how durable any pause or Putin's overtures might be given ongoing strikes, frontline clashes and strained diplomacy.
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đ°ď¸ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Monday, May 11, 2026 11:04 UTC
Putin signals Ukraine war 'coming to an end'
Saturday, May 9, 2026 10:52 UTC
Putin oversees scaled-back Victory Day parade





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