French President Emmanuel Macron has said the coming days will be crucial to de-escalating the Ukraine standoff, after a meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
Mr Putin hinted that progress had been made during his first Moscow summit with a Western leader since Russian troops massed on Ukraine’s borders.
Moscow has denied any plans to invade.
However, Western powers have become increasingly concerned by the possibility of a conflict.
US officials said on Sunday that Russia has assembled 70% of military forces needed for a full-scale invasion.
On Monday, President Joe Biden met German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Washington and threatened to shut down a key Russian gas pipeline to Germany if Moscow invaded Ukraine.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has also indicated his support for sanctions. Writing in The Times newspaper on Tuesday, he added that the UK was considering deploying Royal Air Force fighters and Royal Navy warships “to protect south-eastern Europe”.
Western countries have already rejected a number of Moscow’s demands, including that the Nato defence alliance rule out Ukraine becoming a member, and that it reduce its military presence in eastern Europe.
They have instead suggested other areas of negotiation, for example talks on cutting back nuclear weaponry.
Mr. Macron, who spoke with Mr Putin over a five-hour dinner which included reindeer with sweet potatoes and blackberries, told reporters the coming days would be “decisive” and “require intensive discussions which we will pursue together”.
The Russian president said that some of Mr Macron’s proposals “could form the basis of further joint steps”, stating that they were “probably still too early to talk about”.
The pair are due to speak again after the French president meets Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Tuesday. Mr. Putin said after the French leader’s talks in Kyiv, “we shall determine our own further steps”.
President Macron will then travel to Berlin for talks with the German chancellor and Polish President Andrzej Duda.
During a tense news conference in Moscow, Mr Putin repeated earlier warnings that should Ukraine join the Western military alliance Nato and attempt to take back Crimea – which Russia annexed eight years ago – Europe could get sucked into a major conflict.
“Do you want France to fight with Russia?” he asked French reporters. “That’s what will happen. And there will be no winners.”
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