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US security guarantees are 100 per cent ready: Ukraine

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy says security guarantees will be signed and ratified by legislatures. (EPA PHOTO)

A US document on security guarantees for Ukraine is completely ‍ready and officials in Kyiv are waiting for a time and place for it to be ​signed, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy says, indicating that weekend talks with Russia in Abu ⁠Dhabi made some progress.

"For us, security guarantees are first and foremost guarantees of security from the United States. The document is 100 per cent ready, and we are waiting for our partners to confirm the date and place when we will sign it," ‌Zelenskiy told a ​news conference during a visit to the Lithuanian capital Vilnius.

"The document ‍will then be sent for ratification to the US Congress and the Ukrainian parliament," he said.

On Friday and Saturday, Ukrainian and Russian negotiators held their first trilateral meeting including US mediators in Abu Dhabi to discuss the US framework for ending the almost four-year-old ​war, but no deal emerged.

Ukrainian soldiers
Ukrainian authorities say the country's territorial integrity must be upheld. (EPA PHOTO)

However, Russia and Ukraine both said they were open to further dialogue and more discussions were expected next Sunday in ​Abu Dhabi, a US official told reporters immediately after the weekend talks.

"(In Abu ‍Dhabi) the 20-point (US) plan and problematic issues are being discussed. There were many problematic issues but now there are fewer," Zelenskiy said.

He said Russia ​wants ​to do everything possible to ​get Ukraine to abandon eastern regions Russian forces have been unable to capture since its full-scale invasion that triggered the war.

But Ukraine, he said, had not budged from its position that its territorial integrity must be upheld.

"These are two fundamentally different positions – Ukraine's and Russia's. The Americans are trying to find a compromise," Zelenskiy said, adding that all sides must be prepared to compromise, including the ‍US.

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