US special envoy Steve Witkoff met Russian President Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg on Friday, as US President Donald Trump urged Putin to "get moving" on a ceasefire in Ukraine.
The Kremlin said the meeting lasted for more than four hours and focused on "aspects of a Ukrainian settlement". The talks, Witkoff's third with Putin this year, were described by special envoy Kirill Dmitriev as "productive", BBC reported.
Trump has expressed frustration with Putin over the state of talks. On Friday, he wrote on social media: "Russia has to get moving. Too many people ere [sic] DYING, thousands a week, in a terrible and senseless war."
It comes as Trump's Ukraine envoy Keith Kellogg denied suggesting the country could be partitioned.
The Times said that, during an interview with the paper, Kellogg had proposed British and French troops could adopt zones of control in the west of Ukraine as part of a "reassurance force".
Russia's army, he reportedly suggested, could then remain in the occupied east.
"You could almost make it look like what happened with Berlin after World War Two", the paper quoted him as saying.
Kellogg later took to social media to say the article had "misrepresented" what he said.
"I was speaking of a post-ceasefire resiliency force in support of Ukraine's sovereignty," he wrote on X, adding: "I was NOT referring to a partitioning of Ukraine."
Neither the White House nor Kyiv reacted to the comments immediately. The BBC has asked the Times for its response.
bd-pratidin/GR